The credit belongs to an anonoous friend who sent the URL to me.
One could spend a week with that picture.
With the book, one can corelate biographical comments on musical styles with what one hears.
That has to be the greatest thing ever put on the interwebs! Thanks so much for posting that!
Thanks for that link David, just fascinating!
Good old New York Daily News!
Comment from a friend:
Dave, your thread has everything except Art Kane's iconic photo itself. The Daily News has the best version online, "interactive," identifying who by clicking on any individual in the photo.
http://interactive.nydailynews.com/2016/08/story-behind-great-day-in-harlem-photo/ http://interactive.nydailynews.com/2016/08/story-behind-great-day-in-harlem-photo/
I just love that piano jazz sound, especially Marian McParlands!
I don't know about you, but it fills my mind with an image of a big-city cocktail lounge, filled with mature sophisticated men and women, highball and martini glassware clinking in the background, and a slight smoky haze just under the ceiling. "Smoky haze!" you ask. Well, that was back in the days before everyone knew it was bad for you!
His New York Times obiturary:
https://www.nytimes.com/1995/02/24/obituaries/art-kane-69-photographer-of-jazz-stars.html
Art Kane talks about the photo in documentary film "A Great Day in Harlem."
For more on Art Kane, photographer:
https://unitednationsofphotography.com/2016/01/24/art-kane/
Marian McPartland will be familiar to generations of NPR listeners for the series 'Piano Jazz'. Here are a couple of interviews:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kjyJ6r_5Ltg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bkwGcCJou3s
And to get a poignant bit of the flavor:
And a sampling of Mary Lou Williams:
I know I've posted this before, but I'm sure there's no harm in posting it again.
Duke Ellington's classic "Take the 'A' Train." OK, it's not on the subway, but I think we can live with that.
You're right, NKP Guy, there were giants in those days!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cb2w2m1JmCY
And more proof of Jazz jumping borders (peerhsaps true of good music in general?)
From Jack May's Southern Europeqn - Vienna, Brtislava - Ukrain trip. Lviv, the Ukrain:
And the advertizing poster with Uncle Sam is for a real-estate company that is named the American real-estate company, without any known connection to the USA or Canada or other American country.
Thanks for posting this, daveklepper; it was most interesting to read the story behind that famous and powerful photograph. What giants roamed the land in those days!
I love New York. When I go, I often stay at the New Yorker Hotel, which sits atop the 8th Avenue subway at 34th Street, almost catty-corner to Penn Station. Talk about convenient for a railfan!
Can you recall that well-known nighttime photo of Penn Station taken from above, with every bit of the glass lit up? By my reckoning, that photo was taken from suite 4005 at the New Yorker...my room, as it were. Needless to say, the current view of Madison Square Garden isn't nearly as impressive, although they do illuminate it at night with colorful lights, which is a nice touch.
But I never go to New York without hearing in my mind "Take the A train," and to me it is the quintessential song about that great city.
Thanks again, and l'shanah tovah!
The Great Jazz Day
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SoB-a3U9jxE
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