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Jazz - General & Miscellaneous, Bop/Hard Bop Jazz, Saxophone, Jazz & Blues Musicians - Biography
Chasin' the Bird by Brian Priestley — book cover

Chasin' the Bird

by Brian Priestley
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Overview

Charlie Parker has been idolized by generations of jazz musicians and fans. Indeed, his spectacular musical abilities—his blinding speed and brilliant improvisational style—made Parker a legend even before his tragic death at age thirty-four.
Now, in Chasin' The Bird, Brian Priestley offers a marvelous biography of this jazz icon, ranging from his childhood in Kansas City to his final harrowing days in New York. Priestley offers new insight into Parker's career, beginning as a teenager single-mindedly devoted to mastering the saxophone. We follow Parker on his first trip to New York, penniless, washing dishes for $9.00 a week at Jimmy's Chicken Shack, a favorite hangout of the great Art Tatum, whose stunning speed and ingenuity were an influence on the young musician. Priestley sheds light on Parker's collaborations with Dizzy Gillespie, Max Roach, Bud Powell, Mary Lou Williams, and Thelonious Monk, and he illuminates such classic recordings as "Salt Peanuts" and "A Night in Tunisia" and Parker's own compositions "Shaw 'Nuff" and "Yardbird Suite"—music which defined an era. Priestley also gives us an unflinching look at Parker's dark side—the drug abuse, heavy drinking, and tangled relations with women and the law. He recounts the death of Parker's daughter Pree, who was only two-and-a-half years old, and Parker's own death at thirty-four, in such wretched condition that the doctor listed his age as fifty-three.
With an invaluable discography that lists every recording of Charlie Parker that has ever been made publicly available, here is a must-have biography of a true jazz giant, one that helps us penetrate the dazzling surface to grasp the artistry beneath.

About the Author, Brian Priestley

Brian Priestley is the co-author of The Rough Guide to Jazz, now in its fourth edition, and the biographer of Charles Mingus and John Coltrane. He is also a noted jazz pianist, specializing in the Ellingtonian repertoire, and has recorded several CDs. He is also a critic and reviewer for numerous magazines, including Jazzwise, and a regular broadcaster on BBC Radio 3.

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Editorials

Library Journal

As one pillar upon which jazz was built, Charlie Parker (1920-55) deserves a comprehensive biography. The need is doubly important owing to the myths and misconceptions surrounding the saxophonist's life and career. Here, British jazz critic Priestley has updated and, more valuably, expanded his fine but rather brief Charlie Parker (1984), drawing on much new archival material that includes essential interviews located since the 1980s. The author has always shown a flair for cutting through the haze and cogently relaying crucial information, and he continues that habit here. The book's first quarter naturally covers Parker's earliest years, which for many may be a revelation; but the coverage of Parker's first hesitant forays into studio and stage performance-complete with analysis of creatively crafted solos, plus a fine section on recordings-and his premature death at 34 is the real cornerstone of this work. For newbies and seasoned listeners alike, an easy-to-decipher discography demonstrates Parker's breadth of recordings. Numerous Parker bios exist, mostly written from a fan's viewpoint and sometimes verging on hokiness; the only book that compares with Priestly's is Carl Woideck's Charlie Parker. Recommended for all libraries with music holdings, especially for jazz.-William G. Kenz, Minnesota State Univ. Lib., Moorhead Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
December 13, 2005
Publisher
New York : Oxford University Press, 2006.
Pages
256
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780195304640

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