Skip to content
Scan a barcode
Scan
Paperback Eric Dolphy: A Musical Biography and Discography Book

ISBN: 0306801078

ISBN13: 9780306801075

Eric Dolphy: A Musical Biography and Discography

Select Format

Select Condition ThriftBooks Help Icon

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Like New

$20.79
Almost Gone, Only 1 Left!

Book Overview

"In his tragically short life (1928-1964), Eric Dolphy was a titanic force in the development of the sixties avant-garde (or ""new thing"") from the hard bop of the late fifties. The searing intensity an"

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

ERIC DOLPHY: A Free Singing Bird

Eric Dolphy, whom Charles Mingus once called a "saint," claims that when he lived in LA, as a young muscician, he used play his horns with the birds, and that the birds would play back with him. Call it an early form of collective improvisation. A form of "inter-being," as Zen thinkers might designate it. Later, Dolphy focused on marvellous collective free improvisations with other creative early avant-garde jazz muscicians like John Coltrane and Charles Mingus. This intelligent book, an important second edition of an original 1970 text revised in 1992, emerged out of correspondence between authors Simosko (at the time a curator of Jazz) and Tepperman (a medical doctor), on the relevance of Dolphy's substantial contribution to jazz. An incredible set of indexs of Dolphy performances, discography, and songs follows the text. A must for jazz lovers who will fly to free spaces.

E Dolphy was my hero. I was at the Wuppertal concert in 64.

I have been a professional jazz musician for as long as I remember. But it wasn't untill the concert in 1964 just before Eric Dol;phy died that I became serious in my approach to practice. The concert took place in Wuppertal in Germany with Charles Mingus. Johnny Coles was on Trumpet, Jacky Byard on piano. The others I forget. Danny Richmond on drums. The audience was so jammed into the town hall that everybody was standing for the entire performance. It was such a moving experience that there was almost no applause. This must have been very disturbing to the musicians. At one point Erics Bass Clarinet fell off its stand and he spent no little time examining it to make sure it was ok. The concert was an experience that I will never forget because it quite literaly changed my life. This was because of one tune that Dolphy and Mingus played as an encore , also as a duet on flute and arco bass. This was "what love" So wonderful was this presentation that people where openly crying with emotion. It is perhaps difficult to explain the impact of musicians who can bring about such feelings in an audience. and it is indeed a rare thing to experience within any artistic performance. To listen to artists on record does not do the true greats justice. Suffice to say that for me I became a serious jazz musician from that day forward. People. myself included where still choked up even after leaving the town hall and walking out into the afternoon sunshine. Little did we know how prophetic our tears were because less than one month later Eric Dolphy died in Berlin. I can only owe this wonderful human being, Eric Dolphy a reason and a shape for all of my life. from that day untill whenever. Grahame Rhodes Jazz Musician Sat 13 march 1999
Copyright © 2024 Thriftbooks.com Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information | Cookie Policy | Cookie Preferences | Accessibility Statement
ThriftBooks® and the ThriftBooks® logo are registered trademarks of Thrift Books Global, LLC
GoDaddy Verified and Secured