[Dixielandjazz] Peggy Lee book reviewed - Newsday, November 13, 2014
Robert Ringwald
rsr at ringwald.com
Fri Nov 14 12:15:53 PST 2014
Peggy Lee Bio by James Gavin Puts Singer in Spotlight
by Gene Seymour
Newsday, November 13, 2014
Peggy Lee fused a minimalist vocal style and an arresting stage presence to transcend
generations as both idol and influence. Jazz-blues giants from Louis Armstrong to
Ray Charles admired her timing and tone, while pop-rockers from Paul McCartney to
Madonna worshipped her calibrated intensity and dramatic instincts.
She wore her yearning for the spotlight with a near-glacial composure that, given
her mercurial temperament and stormy offstage life, may have been an even greater
work of art than all her signature recordings, including the unlikely 1969 hit that
gives James Gavin’s biography its title.
With the same reportorial elbow grease and musical savvy found in Gavin’s biographies
of Lena Horne and Chet Baker, “Is That All There Is?” surges forth as an epic American
saga; it begins on the North Dakota prairie where Norma Delores Egstrom decided at
age 15 that she was a singer good enough to leave behind a troubled childhood for
the life of a big band songbird.
According to Gavin, the teenager who would be Peggy Lee had an uncanny affinity for
black bands such as Count Basie’s, where slick invention sprang from a taut beat.
Her breakthrough came from her association with another white crossover artist, Benny
“King of Swing” Goodman, with whose orchestra she patented what she called her “softly,
with feeling” style capable of handling both rowdy blues and gossamer ballads.
It was in Goodman’s band that Lee also found the love of her life: guitarist Dave
Barbour, for whom she carried a candle even after their tempestuous marriage ended
in 1951. Subsequent marriages and affairs couldn’t dim that flame for Barbour, who
died in 1965.
By that time, Lee’s fame had reached iconic stature, thanks to such 1950s triumphs
as her supporting-actress Oscar nomination for “Pete Kelly’s Blues”; her songwriting
and studio work on Disney’s “Lady and the Tramp” and a streak of hits that included
“Lover,” “Fever” and “I’m a Woman.”
Her professional momentum slowed by the late 1960s after which the setbacks outweighed
the successes. Gavin tabulates both with sometimes numbing thoroughness, citing,
without sensationalizing, her delusions, excessive drinking and drugging, and testiness
with employees, friends and family.
Still, even through debilitating illnesses, Lee continued to stand and deliver her
music until she could no longer stand. And then she would sing sitting down. Peggy
Lee made singing -- and living -- look easier than it actually was.
-30
-Bob Ringwald
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