STRIDE!

Fats, Jimmy, Lion, Lamb and the Other Ticklers
Scarecrow Press
John L. Fell and Terkild Vinding
No Image Available
star star star star star Be the first to write a review!
Comments:

Cat #: 0810835630

$46.00

This item usually ships within 5 to 7 business days.

 

Questions?

Please call +1-518-587-1102 or email us.

Edition: Hardcover, January 1999

Description: 224 Pages Stride! traces the stride piano style from its roots in minstrel shows and ragtime, through the contributions of itinerant entertainers, to its joyful birth in Harlem, where it became known as Harlem Piano. Stride developed over a period spanning World War I to the depression years, though younger players maintain its traditions today. It is a musical style marked by friendly rivalry and shared pleasures. Drawing on the authors' personal interviews and biographies, the book traces stride from generation to generation, from the originators Eubie Blake, Luckey Roberts, and James P. Johnson, through a succession of pianists like Willie the Lion Smith. Fell and Vinding also examine its influence on Duke Ellington, Fats Waller, Joe Sullivan, and Johnny Guarnieri, concluding with third and fourth generations that include Ralph Sutton, Dick Hyman, and Dick Wellstood. The authors describe the exceptional Donald Lambert from personal experience. Throughout, influences are traced and documented by way of CD and LP citations. "Stride!" finishes the tune with appendixes that itemize the compositions of Luckey Roberts, Fats Waller and Willie the Lion Smith.

ABOUT THE AUTHORS:
John L. Fell (Ph.D., New York University) is Professor Emeritus at San Francisco State University. His articles and reviews have appeared in "Film Quarterly" and the "Village Voice", and he is the author of numerous books on film including "Film and the Narrative Tradition" (University of California Press). The late Terkild Vinding was trained at Copenhagen University's Medical School, where he specialized in psychiatry. He was a trained pianist, music collector, jazz enthusiast, and researcher, and counted a host of jazz artists among his friends.