[Dixielandjazz] Norman Granz biography reviewed - JazzTimes.com, October 21, 2011

Robert Ringwald rsr at ringwald.com
Sat Oct 22 11:51:04 PDT 2011


When forwarding any email, please use "Netiquette." Delete all names, email addresses,
forwarding tags, etc. Just forward the content.


Norman Granz Bio 'The Man Who Used Jazz for Justice'
Tad Hershorn's comprehensive bio of an epic career
by Matt R. Lohr
JazzTimes.com, October 21, 2011
The subtitle of Tad Hershorn's biography of jazz impresario Norman Granz, "The Man
Who Used Jazz for Justice," is slightly misleading. As the force behind the legendary
concert series Jazz at the Philharmonic, Granz was instrumental in mainstreaming
integrated audiences and mandating equal treatment for all musicians. But the book
itself is less a treatise on civil rights than a straightforward chronicle of a singularly
important jazz career, and true music fans will find this colorful, well-written
bio more than sufficient to suit their interests.
The son of Russian Jewish immigrants, Granz knew the outsider's life from the start,
but Hershorn chooses not to belabor this spiritual connection to disenfranchised
black Americans. Nor does he simplify Granz by cherrypicking a moment to mark his
"conversion" to the civil rights cause. Granz simply seems to be one of those individuals
who saw black America's circumstances, realized something was wrong and found a way
to do something about it. The means of his rebellion were provided when he heard
Coleman Hawkins's seminal recording of "Body and Soul" and realized that jazz musicians
could change the culture simply by doing what they did best in front of anyone who
wanted to hear them.
Hershorn's biography, like Granz's career, spans decades and continents. Granz revolutionized
concert promotion with Jazz at the Philharmonic, presenting musicians in an organized
jam-session format that drove audiences wild, even as it garnered the ire of "serious"
music scholars. His record labels, especially Verve and Pablo, contributed numerous
classics to the canon, most notably Ella Fitzgerald's songbook series, a monument
to the artistry of America's greatest songwriters and to Fitzgerald herself. Granz
managed Fitzgerald for much of her career, providing the introverted, insecure singer
with the perfect framing for her musical tapestries, and he brought Canadian pianist
Oscar Peterson to the American audience, spearheading one of the most-recorded careers
in jazz history. From Lester Young to Fred Astaire, Granz's gift for understanding
the perfect presentation for the artists with whom he worked allowed him to carve
out one of the most comprehensive discographies in jazz. It's an epic career, and
Hershorn gets it all in without short-shrifting any important aspect of Granz's work.
Of course, you can't assemble a resume this impressive without ruffling feathers,
and Hershorn provides plenty of details about the numerous conflicts that marked
Granz's path. He was a man whose mind was not easily changed, who did not suffer
fools or critics gladly, and his prickly personality led to clashes of both ideology
and individuals. Often, Granz was on the side of the angels, as when he fought a
trumped-up 1955 gambling charge against JATP musicians in Houston, an arrest obviously
carried out to prevent Granz's concert from playing before a precedent-setting integrated
crowd. But just as often, these conflicts were brought on by simple personality differences,
and Hershorn spares nothing in detailing battles with luminaries such as Frank Sinatra,
Duke Ellington and even Peterson, whose gratitude to Granz could not keep him from
occasionally locking horns with the man who introduced him to America.
Granz's reluctance to share certain aspects of himself also means that, despite extensive
interviews Hershorn conducted prior to his subject's death in 2001, the coverage
of Granz's personal life is often cursory at best. There is little detail about his
three marriages, and almost nothing about his developmentally disabled daughter Stormont.
Nevertheless, the public man, warts and all, is on vivid display throughout Hershorn's
book, and any fan of jazz owes a debt to the author for detailing this essential
chapter of the music's rich and rollicking history.
-30



--Bob Ringwald
www.ringwald.com
Fulton Street Jazz Band
530/ 642-9551 Office
916/ 806-9551 Cell
Amateur (Ham) Radio K6YBV

"All the problems we face in the United States today can be traced to an unenlightened
immigration policy on the part of the American Indian."  Pat Paulsen





More information about the Dixielandjazz mailing list