russell wrote:Any opinions on "Swing: Third Ear - The Essential Listening Companion" by Scott Yanow?
Yes! It's incredibly good, both for listening and for dancing. Yanow evaluates the CDs (1500 of them) on a scale of 1 to 10 based on not whether it's good JAZZ necessarily -- although that, of course, helps -- but whether it SWINGS. Therefore Bing Crosby, George Gee, late Stephane Grapelli -- the kind of artists who would be excluded from a jazz book for not moving along towards more "advanced" music -- are all in Yanow's SWING with high ratings. Also highly regarded are the critic-approved jazz artists like Berigan, Ellington, early Armstrong, etc. Yanow definitely has a dancer's ear for the music. Also, each artist is listed with "LPs to look for" and "Movie appearances," very cool.
The book is divided into
BIG BANDLEADERS -- the biggest section, and probably the most valuable. includes lots of bands i've never heard
SIDEMEN (swing era) -- listed by instrument, and alphabetically. some people just have bios and some people have CDs listed also
SWING AFTER 1943 -- includes lots of our groovier and bluesier friends, as well as people who just wanted to play the stuff after the swing era ended, like john pizzarelli. this is also a very big section
RETRO SWING -- in the back is an interview and a smaller section on the current swing bands
the guy knows his shit.
PITFALL OF THIS BOOK: it was published in 1999. therefore lots of current reissue projects are missing, most noticeably the works of the budget-priced, perfectly-done PROPER RECORDS and JSP labels. For a lot of artists in the SWING book, six or eight recordings are listed as recommended but you could probably just do with the proper box.
Another caveat is that the TOC is really lousy (i wrote one in mine), and there's no cross referencing. Oh well.
some of the big bandleaders listed are: louis armstrong, charlie barnet, count basie (part 1; the other part is in "swing after 43"), bunny berigan, will bradley, randy brooks, les brown, willie bryant, blanche calloway, cab calloway, benny carter, casa loma orch, bob chester, dorsey bros orch, jimmy dorsey, tommy dorsey, duke ellington, benny goodman, lionel hampton, erskine hawkins...
from the sidemen section... some of the trumpeters listed: heny red allen, cat anderson, shorty baker, dud bascombe, billy butterfield, buck clayton, bill coleman, harry sweets edison, roy eldridge, ziggy elman, pee wee erwini, nat gonella, bobby hackett, freddie jenkins, taft jordan, al killian, yank lawson...
some of the post 1943 artists: howard alden, harry allen, ernie andrews, ray anthony, harold ashby, george barnes, dan barrett, count basie (II), louis belleson, tex benecke, bill berry, ruby braff, charles brown, milt buckner, john bunch, sam butera, lee castle, matt catingub...
the retro swing section interviews lavay smith and peggy cone, and reviews: blue plate special, the blue saracens, blues jumpers, shelly burns and avalon swing, cherry poppin' daddies (they get a hilariously negative review), chevalier brothers, peggy cone, cresent city maulers, chris daniels, the delegates, 8 1/2 souveniers, eric ekstrand, bill elliot...
also: there are a lot of lesser-known european artists. did you know Oscar Aleman was playing badass gypsy jazz guitar in france a year before Django?
yeah, so, i like this book.
-yakov.