
"No jazz musician has ever played with the same daring and nakedness and intuition," Whitney Balliett wrote in a New Yorker profile of Pee Wee Russell. "He took wild improvisational chances, and when he found himself above the abyss, he simply turned in another direction, invariably hitting firm ground." Gunther Schuller, America's preeminent jazz historian, also had high praise for Russell, saying that "he defined and exemplified what it is to be a true jazz musician.... The unorthodox tone, the halting continuity, the odd note choices--are manifestations of a unique, wondrously self-contained musical personality.... He was also one of the most touching and human players jazz has ever known." Clarinetist Pee Wee Russell was indeed one of the great innovators in jazz history. Now, in Jazzman, Robert Hilbert provides the first full-length biography of this unique jazz stylist.Based on hundreds of interviews with musicians and friends, Pee Wee Russell fills in much that was not known about Russell's life, illuminating his fifty year career from his early days as a teenage dance band musician, to his final work with musicians such as Thelonious Monk and Gerry Mulligan. Hilbert draws a vivid portrait of Pee Wee's early friendship with legendary Bix Beiderbecke (fond of Stravinsky, Debussy, and Ravel, both Bix and Pee Wee delighted in the new techniques of modern composers--dissonance, whole-tone scales--and their styles reflected this). The author describes Russell's early work in Chicago and Hollywood, his first taste of the big time in New York as a member of Red Nichols's band, Pee Wee's success as one of the first stars on "Swing Street" (52nd Street in New York City), as a member of Louis Prima's band, and his decade-long association with Nick's, a famous Greenwich Village jazz spot. In addition, Russell lived a bohemian existence, and Hilbert does an excellent job of capturing his colorful life and times. But we also see the down side of a musician's life--Russell
This biography investigates the life and musical evolution of clarinetist Pee Wee Russell, seeking to define his unique contribution to the history of jazz. Robert Hilbert, a dedicated researcher, utilizes hundreds of interviews with Russell's contemporaries, friends, and fellow musicians to reconstruct the artist's fifty-year career. The book argues that Russell's unorthodox technique and improvisational daring were not mere eccentricities but the hallmarks of a singular, self-contained musical personality that bridged early jazz traditions with modern sensibilities.
What You Will Find
Experts and jazz historians recognize this work as the definitive biographical account of Pee Wee Russell's life and career. Readers frequently note the thoroughness of the research and the author's ability to contextualize Russell's idiosyncratic style within the broader history of American jazz.
Page Count:
336
Publication Date:
1993-03-04
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195074033
ISBN-13:
9780195074031
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