Book World Washington Post
A shy man, Young deflected interviewer's questions with dry wit. Lester Leaps In gives fans a first look behind the mask. With thoughtful use of scanty sources, Daniels unfolds Young's life as he lived it. . . . A poignant story emerges, the life of a man who was as tender as his music.
Publishers Weekly
Saxophonist Young dodged most everyone and made a sport of eluding interviewers and outsiders with his brand of elliptical jazz slang (one club owner cranked up a fan after Young said, "You're smotherin' me"). As a writer for Jet wrote just after Young's death in 1959: "No one really knew the true Lester." This makes Daniels's book all the more impressive. By interviewing for the first time many of Young's relatives, friends and band mates, while also examining and challenging virtually everything written about the man, Daniels (Pioneer Urbanites: A Social and Cultural History of Black San Francisco) adds a layer of understanding to an enigmatic figure. Throughout, the author, a professor of black studies and history at the University of California, Santa Barbara, offers a balanced portrait of a shy, sensitive man whose relaxed onstage persona masked an uneasy loner. The first two-thirds of the book focuses on Young's rise, beginning with his strict musical training and upbringing in his father's traveling minstrel show to his mythic duel against heavyweight Coleman Hawkins in a Kansas City nightclub and landing the lead tenor spot in Count Basie's Orchestra. The remainder is dedicated to Young's life post-1945, the year in which he was dishonorably discharged from the army for marijuana possession. While many critics nail this as the turning point in Young's career, Daniels encourages the reader to revisit the later works, which kept changing and drawing more fans until his death, at age 49, from drinking. This is a wonderful writing of his life. (Feb.) Forecast: Twenty years in the making, this is the most thorough and penetrating book on the President of the Tenor Saxophone to date. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
Library Journal
This biography of one of jazz's major innovators and iconoclasts places Young's music in the context of African American culture. While both Lewis Porter's Lester Young (o.p.) and Frank Buchman-Moller's You Just Fight for Your Life (1990) offer fine overviews of the tenor saxophonist's life, Daniels (history and black studies, Univ. of California, Santa Barbara) delves deeply into the mores and culture surrounding his subject as a child in Louisiana and then his stretch playing for his father's musical entourage. He then attacks the thorny issues of Young's desire to provide for his family while contending with strong urges to travel and play. Young's contradictory actions reveal a sensitive observer of life bedeviled by various personal and social problems, including chronic alcoholism and a hypersensitivity to racism. Daniels also shows that Young's music didn't deteriorate after his disastrous World War II army experiences but rather continued in fresh, invigorating ways. Although the author sometimes makes claims about Young's thoughts and feelings with little supporting evidence, this is nonetheless a worthwhile purchase for music, academic, and large public libraries. William G. Kenz, Minnesota State Univ., Moorhead Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
Booknews
Daniels (history, U. of California at Santa Barbara) presents the story of the legendary jazz figure, Lester Young. Drawing on interviews with his relatives and fellow musicians, he discusses Young's artistry in light of his roots in Louisiana and the influence of Black music traditions and cultural heritage. He presents a portrait of his musical development from when he was schooled in the fundamentals of music by his bandleader father through the time when he became famous as a tenor soloist. He also describe's Young's hard times and private demons, including the many ways that racism affected his career, his Army court martial, his depression and alcoholism, and other difficulties. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
Kirkus Reviews
A sympathetic and revealing portrait of the great jazzman.