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Hardcover The House That Trane Built: The Story of Impulse Records Book

ISBN: 1862076464

ISBN13: 9781862076464

The House That Trane Built: The Story of Impulse Records

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

$13.39
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Book Overview

Noted jazz author Ashley Kahn brings to life the behind-the-scenes story of Impulse Records, one of the most significant record labels in the history of popular music. "Kahn mingles engaging stories... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Daddy, what is an Impulse

Why was the ABC Impulse! album spine black and orange? How did Coletrane get to make so many albums? How come Mingues and so many otherr artists from so many other labels had one or two albums on this wonderful label? Why where the labals different every few years? When did Shirley Scott............ For years, questions about Impulse! records were shrouded in mystrey, like myths from the distant past. Ashley Khan has answered many of these in this wonderful book. He brings together all the information about the biggest Impulse! gods to the one off artists that are buried in jazz distrographies. Khan tells the Impulse story cronologically, comprehensively. You get the overall narrative of the rise and diminishing of the label, and the little stories about the little artists you thought you would never hear. What happened to Dewey Johnson after he played on Coltrane's Assention. Who the hell WAS Dewey Johnson anyway? Coltrane, Archie Shepp, Duke, Mingus--all our old friends are here. And you are going to make some new ones. (If you are not hip to Mel Brown's Chicken Fat album, you should be.) In the back of the book, you get a full listing of every album ever made on Impulse. Most of this is great music, and, bleleive me, there is enough to keep any collector spending and busy for a long time. I don't agree with every conclusion Khan comes to (he makes it look like Impulse was about the avant gaurde exclusively, but the distography does not bare this out,) but his research and grasp of detail is just impecable, and you really do get that fly-on-the-wall feeling, as if your with Trane and Bob Thiele in Rudy Van Gelders studio in summer, 1965, recording the next masterpiece. Khan's writting is as viceral as it is accurate. This book is a must, if you are an expert, or someone who knows nothing about jazz but is ready to find out

Kahn delivers the jazz goods again

Having read the other two jazz books by Ashley Kahn," Kind of Blue: The Making of the Miles Davis Masterpiece" and " A Love Supreme: The Story of John Coltrane's Signature Album ," I was eager to read his keen insights into Impulse Records. The way he titled it further inticed me as I am a big John Coltrane fan, going back to when the master was alive and I was just a pup. I'm listening to one of those beautiful Impulse records as I write, it is gorgeous in presentation, an aqua blue cover, rendering a shadowy image of Trane blowing and simply entitled Coltrane. The CD release is nowhere as awesome as the original 1962 recording version on Lp but that is another story. The point is, Ashley Kahn demosnstrates in his book, that the people who ran Impulse were masterminds in presenting their records and artists to the public. The album covers were works of art, matching the virtuosity of Trane and the artists that followed. The book begins slowly, almost to most of boring, with background information on Creed Taylor the man behind the signature look and artists of Impulse. Here the author covers the early artists like Ray Charles, Sarah Vaughn and Oliver Nelson. When Bob Thiele is introduced in the book it gets more interesting . Enter John Coltrane and the book has any jazz fan captivated at this point. He relies heavily on John Coltrane information, which is just fine. Give credit where credit is due. With the inclusion of Rudy Van Gelder, the engineer responsible for creating the magic in his New Jersey studios and you've got history unveiling itself. Although the author gives full credit to Trane as being the foundation and reponsible for the success of Impulse, he also gives credit to others. He details the contributions of the other artists, the former Trane protege and star in his own right, Pharoah Sanders Tauhid, Hungarian guitarist Gabor Szabo Spellbinder, wife of John Coltrane and bearer of the Trane legacy Alice Coltrane The Impulse Story and sax legends Sonny Rollins Sonny Rollins on Impulse!, Gato Barbieri, The Impulse Story, Albert Ayler, The Impulse Story and Archie Shepp Four for Trane, amongst others. One of the more interesting aspects of the book is the details revealed about certain recordings. Ashley Kahn takes a particular album like the collaborative John Coltrane and Johnny Hartman, highlights the two pages in grey and delves into a sidebar that just deals with aspects surrounding the recording. This is pretty cool as it breaks up the reading but more importantly sheds some light on little known aspects of the recording. teh author takes the mundane business world of records and sprinkles enough tid bits to keep the readers interest. Mr. Kahn supplements his readers knowledge with original thought , artwork of covers, offbeat releases, newsclips from various newspapers, excellent photographs, copies of letters, notes, musical notation and the poem for Trane's remarkable suite A Love Supreme. The book i

No jazz library would be complete

This is the 45th anniversary of the Impulse record label, and to mark the occasion is a powerful review THE HOUSE THAT TRANE BUILT: THE STORY OF IMPULSE RECORDS - which is, concurrently, a story of the roots of jazz recording. Paired with a 10 'best of Impulse' cd collection plus a 4-cd companion to the book, THE HOUSE THAT TRANE BUILT has also become a radio program and provides a close analysis of the relationship between jazz great John Coltrane and Impulse Records. Nearly two decades of artistic creation are chronicled from marketing wins and insider experiences - derived from interviews with over fifty musicians, industry executives and producers - to other powerful artists and recordings to evolve from the Impulse record label. In its heyday Impulse fostered new technologies, new sounds, and new artists: no jazz library would be complete without THE HOUSE THAT TRANE BUILT, which shows how all this was achieved. Diane C. Donovan California Bookwatch

Finally a history of Impulse Records

For years I wondered why no one had written a history of Impulse Records - now I am indeed very happy to see it in my hands. It does a very good job of trailing the road to one of the greatest achievements in the history of modern jazz, and it is a good read for anyone interested in the music of Albert Ayler, John Coltrane, Pharoah Sanders and Archie Shepp and other icons of jazz.

Kahn builds on prior Love Supreme work

Ashley Kahn is carving out a serious niche for himself as a fans' chronicler of classic jazz CDs. I've found his works on "Kind of Blue" and "Love Supreme" helpful, and "House that Trane Built" expands the interviews and research he did for "Love Supreme" into a history that jazz fans will find insightful. It's hard to move beyond Trane on Impulse. I've got most of his stuff for the label, and I'm hard pressed to think of albums that I listen to regularly outside of Trane from Impulse. Blues and the Abstract Truth comes to mind. Some Pharoah Sanders. I've been meaning to get Gil Evans Out of the Cool for awhile. But I haven't been collecting jazz much lately, and this book will inspire me to pick up some more stuff. The story of this book is as much the producers of Impulse as it is 'Trane's work. I did not realize how Impulse differed from Blue Note in that it was born with the cash to make an immediate impact. Not only was it born with cash, but it was also born with an artist: Ray Charles, who hit with "One Mint Julep" on his album "Genius + Soul = Jazz". Creed Taylor, he of the more popular oriented CTI Records, shows a true heart for the music in his initial choices for impulse artists. Bob Thiele, however, is the costar of this book. Kahn goes through great pains to show how Thiele's opening up to Coltrane and avant-garde music helped give him the latitude and the courage to work with some of the more "out" artists like Archie Shepp and Albert Ayler. For those readers who are new to jazz, a good way to decide whether you want to purchase the book would to be focus on the album sketches that are interspersed throughout the book. In the first two-thirds of the book, most of these are titles that jazz fans will recall with fondness. But there are some examples of albums that fell by the wayside like a Curtis Fuller orchestral session and some of the rock experiments that formed a small but significant part of Impulse's later years. I dig this book. As a former musician, I'm always looking for background that helps to ground musicians in the history and tradition of the music. This book will help jazz fans understand how a jazz label can exist within a major conglomerate and still produce risk-taking music. One can only hope that somewhere someone can figure out to find similarly breathtaking music that can function as both commerce and art. 5 stars --SD
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