Come In and Hear the Truth

Jazz and Race on 52nd Street

Patrick Burke author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:The University of Chicago Press

Published:1st Aug '08

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Come In and Hear the Truth cover

Between the mid-1930s and the late '40s, the center of the jazz world was a two-block stretch of 52nd Street in Manhattan. Dozens of crowded basement clubs between Fifth and Seventh avenues played host to legends such as Billie Holiday and Charlie Parker, as well as to innumerable professional musicians whose names aren't quite so well known. Together, these musicians and their audiences defied the traditional border between serious art and commercial entertainment - and between the races, as 52nd Street was home to some of the first nightclubs in New York to allow racially integrated bands and audiences. Patrick Burke argues that the jazz played on 52nd Street complicated simplistic distinctions between musical styles such as Dixieland, swing, and bebop. And since these styles were defined along racial lines, the music was itself a powerful challenge to racist ideology."Come In and Hear the Truth" uses a range of materials, from classic photographs to original interviews with musicians, to bring the street's vibrant history to life and to shed new light on the interracial contacts and collaborations it generated.

"Burke's social history of New York jazz in a pivotal twenty-year period is at once original, complex, and accessible. He creates a vivid portrait of what it must have been like to live and work in the midst of 52nd Street's rich musical milieu. An excellent book that marks an important new step in jazz historiography." - Jeffrey Magee, author of The Uncrowned King of Swing: Fletcher Henderson and Big Band Jazz"

ISBN: 9780226080710

Dimensions: 23mm x 16mm x 3mm

Weight: 624g

328 pages