Sugar Free Saxophone

John Lenwood McLean – sugar free saxophonist from Sugar Hill, Harlem – is widely known as one of the finest, most consistent soloists in jazz history. From early in his career Jackie’s powerful, unsentimental, sometimes astringent sound and inventive style made audiences and critics sit up and listen. Steeped in – but eventually moving well beyond – the influence of his mentor and friend Charlie Parker, he built an attractive, instantly recognisable musical

As author Derek Ansell says, his career trajectory is far from the typical jazz story of the tragic artist in which early brilliance leads to later decline. McLean’s story is one of glorious triumph over the drug addiction that affected so many of his friends and might have destroyed him. Able to produce uniformly fine recordings through the darkest periods of his personal life, he saw his reputation as a musician steadily grow and became not only a living legend as an improviser but a much respected educator whose students carry on his legacy. Fortunately, McLean’s discography is large and Derek Ansell is a surefooted guide through the recordings, presenting them in the context in which they were made and indicating the special gems among a vast body of recorded work that is one of jazz’s greatest treasures.

Derek Ansell writes regular reviews of live jazz and classical music for magazines and newspapers and has contributed more than two hundred articles and numerous interviews, record and book reviews to Jazz Journal International. He is the author of Workout: The Music of Hank Mobley (Northway Publications) and a book about the music of John Coltrane (forthcoming). He has also written three novels (two published and one forthcoming).

"McLean never completed his autobiography, but this respectful, perceptive study goes some way towards compensating his many admirers for this loss."
Read the LondonJazz review here: http://londonjazz.blogspot.co.uk/2012/06/derek-ansell-sugar-free-saxophone-life.html

1112441976
Sugar Free Saxophone

John Lenwood McLean – sugar free saxophonist from Sugar Hill, Harlem – is widely known as one of the finest, most consistent soloists in jazz history. From early in his career Jackie’s powerful, unsentimental, sometimes astringent sound and inventive style made audiences and critics sit up and listen. Steeped in – but eventually moving well beyond – the influence of his mentor and friend Charlie Parker, he built an attractive, instantly recognisable musical

As author Derek Ansell says, his career trajectory is far from the typical jazz story of the tragic artist in which early brilliance leads to later decline. McLean’s story is one of glorious triumph over the drug addiction that affected so many of his friends and might have destroyed him. Able to produce uniformly fine recordings through the darkest periods of his personal life, he saw his reputation as a musician steadily grow and became not only a living legend as an improviser but a much respected educator whose students carry on his legacy. Fortunately, McLean’s discography is large and Derek Ansell is a surefooted guide through the recordings, presenting them in the context in which they were made and indicating the special gems among a vast body of recorded work that is one of jazz’s greatest treasures.

Derek Ansell writes regular reviews of live jazz and classical music for magazines and newspapers and has contributed more than two hundred articles and numerous interviews, record and book reviews to Jazz Journal International. He is the author of Workout: The Music of Hank Mobley (Northway Publications) and a book about the music of John Coltrane (forthcoming). He has also written three novels (two published and one forthcoming).

"McLean never completed his autobiography, but this respectful, perceptive study goes some way towards compensating his many admirers for this loss."
Read the LondonJazz review here: http://londonjazz.blogspot.co.uk/2012/06/derek-ansell-sugar-free-saxophone-life.html

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Sugar Free Saxophone

Sugar Free Saxophone

by Derek Ansell
Sugar Free Saxophone

Sugar Free Saxophone

by Derek Ansell

Hardcover

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Overview

John Lenwood McLean – sugar free saxophonist from Sugar Hill, Harlem – is widely known as one of the finest, most consistent soloists in jazz history. From early in his career Jackie’s powerful, unsentimental, sometimes astringent sound and inventive style made audiences and critics sit up and listen. Steeped in – but eventually moving well beyond – the influence of his mentor and friend Charlie Parker, he built an attractive, instantly recognisable musical

As author Derek Ansell says, his career trajectory is far from the typical jazz story of the tragic artist in which early brilliance leads to later decline. McLean’s story is one of glorious triumph over the drug addiction that affected so many of his friends and might have destroyed him. Able to produce uniformly fine recordings through the darkest periods of his personal life, he saw his reputation as a musician steadily grow and became not only a living legend as an improviser but a much respected educator whose students carry on his legacy. Fortunately, McLean’s discography is large and Derek Ansell is a surefooted guide through the recordings, presenting them in the context in which they were made and indicating the special gems among a vast body of recorded work that is one of jazz’s greatest treasures.

Derek Ansell writes regular reviews of live jazz and classical music for magazines and newspapers and has contributed more than two hundred articles and numerous interviews, record and book reviews to Jazz Journal International. He is the author of Workout: The Music of Hank Mobley (Northway Publications) and a book about the music of John Coltrane (forthcoming). He has also written three novels (two published and one forthcoming).

"McLean never completed his autobiography, but this respectful, perceptive study goes some way towards compensating his many admirers for this loss."
Read the LondonJazz review here: http://londonjazz.blogspot.co.uk/2012/06/derek-ansell-sugar-free-saxophone-life.html


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780955788864
Publisher: Northway Publications
Publication date: 10/15/2012
Pages: 207
Product dimensions: 5.60(w) x 8.60(h) x 0.90(d)

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements ix

1 Time Warp One: Sitting in for the Bird 1

2 Sugar Hill, Harlem 5

3 Out of the Blue 12

4 Starting as he Meant to Go On 19

5 Isn't Jackie Mclean in there Somewhere? 25

6 The Jazz Life 33

7 The Shaping of a Major Soloist 40

8 Blue Note Beginnings 46

9 The Connection 52

10 Bluesnik 59

11 New Directions and Old Standbys 63

12 One Step Forward, One Step Back 71

13 One Step Beyond 79

14 Destination - Out 87

15 Action 94

16 New and Old Gospel 104

17 Teaching 110

18 Musician, Soloist, Educator, Activist 117

19 The Artists Collective 126

20 Late Flourishes 132

21 Time Warp Two: Parker's Mood 138

22 Rhythm of the Earth 142

23 Working Musician 151

24 The Sound of Jazz 155

25 Time Warp Three: Farewell One 162

26 Farewell Two 166

27 Farewell Three 172

28 The Legacy One: The Records 177

29 The Legacy Two 189

30 Notes 193

31 Recommended Records 199

31 Index 203

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