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Jazz on the Road: Don Albert's Musical LIfe (Music of the African Diaspora)
 
 
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Jazz on the Road: Don Albert's Musical LIfe (Music of the African Diaspora) [Paperback]

Christopher Wilkinson (Author)
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Book Description

Music of the African Diaspora June 4, 2001
Christopher Wilkinson uncovers a fascinating and unexplored side of American musical and social history in this richly detailed account of Don Albert's musical career and the multicultural forces that influenced it. Albert was born Albert Dominque in New Orleans in 1908. Wilkinson discusses his musical education in the Creole community of New Orleans and the fusion of New Orleans jazz and the Texas blues styles in the later 1920s during his tenure with Troy Floyd's Orchestra of Gold. He documents the founding of Albert's own band in San Antonio, its tours through twenty-four states during the 1930s, its recordings, and its significant reputation within the African American community. In addition to providing a vivid account of life on the road and imparting new insight into the daily existence of working musicians, this book illustrates how the fundamental issue of race influenced Albert's life, as well as the music of the era.
Albert's years as a San Antonio nightclub owner in the 1940s and 1950s saw the rise in popularity of rhythm and blues and the decline of interest in jazz. There was also increasing racial animosity, which Albert resisted by the successful legal defense of his right to operate an integrated establishment in 1951. In the two decades before his death in 1980, his performances in Dixieland jazz bands and interviews with oral historians concerning his own career were the fitting climax to a multifaceted musical life. Albert's voice and personality, his feelings and opinions about the music he loved, and the obstacles he faced in performing and promoting it, are artfully conveyed in Wilkinson's fluid, accessible, and erudite narrative. Jazz on the Road shows the importance of live performance in bringing jazz to America, and succeeds brilliantly in depicting an era, a locale, and a way of life.

Editorial Reviews

Review

"Wilkinson is the first to admit that Albert's is neither 'a hero's life' nor the account of an innovative jazz performer, but as a model of enthusiasm and tenacity it is, in many ways, exemplary."--"Times Literary Supplement

About the Author

Christopher Wilkinson is Associate Professor in the Division of Music at the College of Creative Arts at West Virginia University.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 279 pages
  • Publisher: University of California Press; 1 edition (June 4, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0520229835
  • ISBN-13: 978-0520229839
  • Product Dimensions: 7.7 x 4.7 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,423,948 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars excellent book on a New Orleans trumpet player, the musician, December 2, 2001
By 
jempi (denderleeuw Belgium) - See all my reviews
Let me begin to say that an immensely hours on research must have been put in this book. One can almost follow Don Albert and his band day by day. The result is beautiful image of a reasonable successful territory band and the day tot day worries of an bandleader to keep his band going.

The autor has based his research in the first place on the Tulane Jazz Archive interviews with Don Albert and his musicians, Alvin Alcorn and Louis Cottrell jr. Next to it he sifted out national and regional newspapers looking for articles on and adverts for the Don Albert band. With these, The Chicago Defender was a primory source of information. This is a job every (New Orleans music) researcher is dreaming of. In 1982, in New Orleans, I went to the offices of the Louisiana Weekly somewhere on South Rampart Street, leaf through some back volumes of the periodical (everything is on microfilm). I found a treasure on information on bands from the 1910's and 1920's. The only problem, you got to have time and patience to go through all that. If only because of this, this book deserves a recommandation.

There are two chapters I found even more interesting than those dealing with the good and the bad days of the band during their touring, namely chapter one : 'A Musical Education in Creole New Orleans', and chapter eleven : 'The Second Keyhole, and a Fight for Social Justice'. It is very interesting following Don Albert during his youth in the ethnic and cultural very divers New Orleans. The account gives a more objectif image of the life in the Creole part of the city, the merge of the 'French-European' values of the Creoles with the 'American' of the poeple living Uptown, than what Sidney Bechet described in his autobiography, 'Treat It Gentle' or what Jelly Roll Morton told Alan Lomax. For some one who loves New Orleans music this chapter alone is a sufficient reason to buy this book. Chapter eleven on the other hand, tells the about the hard reality of Don Albert's return to New Orleans and the opposition he encountered in this town of the South of the US in the fifties to open a club. Until then, in Sanb Antonio, Don Albert had developed 'The Keyhole' into a modern, succesful nightclub with known acts and where White as well as Colored were welcome. Back in New Orleans, it was Don's intention to buy the 'Gipsy Tearoom' and to bring to the same level as 'The Keyhole'. But Don had not taken into account the laws of the South. On which Don returned to San Antonio to start a second Keyhole. But also there he had to deal with the same narrow minded mentality. Very interesting is also the story of Don Albert's return as a musician. It will not surprise you Bill Russell played a very important part in it.

I heard Don Albert twice during the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Jazzfestval (with Manny Crusto, Wendeel Eugene and Manny Sayles) in 1976 and 1979. He appeared to be a very comlpetent musician, although he did not had that inspiring hot style of Kid Howard, DeDe Pierce or Kid Thomas, but he rather fitted in the category of a Peter Bocage and Charlie Love. Even if his style is not one of the most exciting, the account of his life, as a musician, bandleader, clubowner and as a product of the amny cultures of his native city, reads as a novel. And this is not the sole merit of the writer. Once you start reading, you will not stop. A Very lovely book.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
As someone whose life and musical career compelled him to negotiate numerous and varied American subcultures, Don Albert had a head start in dealing with ethnic, racial, and cultural diversity. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
servant room blues, greatest swing band, eleventh tour, superstitious blues, venue unknown, fifth tour, third chorus, muted brass, reed section, dance dates, extended engagement, sax solo, trumpet solo, band business, single engagement
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
San Antonio, Don Albert, New Orleans, Ten Pals, New York, Albert Dominique, Alvin Alcorn, Seventh Ward, North Robertson, Troy Floyd, Lloyd Glenn, Richard Allen, Louis Cottrell, Tip Top, Pittsburgh Courier, West African, Wabash Blues, Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong, Mardi Gras, Andy Kirk, Billy Douglas, Crescent City, Ferdinand Dejan, Hiram Harding
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