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Bill Evans; How My Heart Sings by Peter Pettinger
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Bill Evans: How My Heart Sings

by Peter Pettinger

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Yale University Press (1998), Hardcover

Member:danrebo
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Tags:biography, jazz, music
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La literatura jazzística en España nunca ha tenido la brillantez de otros lugares. El aficionado español tenía que conformarse con una vieja edición del Diccionario del Jazz para las obras de referencia, y algún título ramplón dedicado a músicos célebres. Para lo demás, acudía al mercado anglosajón (Penguin, New Grove) para completar su formación. Editoriales como Global Rhythm presentan por fin excelentes ediciones de títulos acreditados sobre jazz, de los que es un buen ejemplo esta biografía del pianista norteamericano promovida por la Universidad de Yale..
  Pfanner | Dec 31, 1969 |
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Wikipedia in English (4)

Bill Evans

Earl Zindars

Fate Marable

George Russell (composer)

Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0300071930, Hardcover)

Perhaps it was a white jazz musician's need to negate his very ordinary American boyhood, or maybe it was in the genes he inherited from his alcoholic father--no one can be quite sure--but Bill Evans, one of the most influential American jazz pianists ever, was a drug addict. He picked up his habit shortly after joining the Miles Davis Sextet in the 1950s, but it took Evans more than 20 years to be swallowed by the abyss of heroin, methadone, and cocaine. Sitting at the piano in the shadow of Davis, John Coltrane, Cannonball Adderley, Paul Chambers, and Philly Joe Jones--the era's paragons of cool--could not have been easy for the retiring musician who suffered harsh ribbing at the hands of both bandmates and fans. Ironically, as the drugs distorted Evans's body and soul, his fingers coaxed ever more sublime music from his keyboard. Biographer Peter Pettinger was himself a professional pianist and a longtime listener of Evans, so he is expert at articulating the nuances of the music. He is perceptive too in exploring the forces that imbued in one life so much beauty and so much pain. The result is a book that is both a memorial to a burdened man and an homage to his transcendent music.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:16 -0400)

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