A love letter to the birthplace of Jazz New Orleans will never again appear as it does in these rare and stunning photographs by William Claxton taken for the book Jazzlife in 1960. While traveling... This description may be from another edition of this product.
This is one of my favorite photography books of all time. William Claxton was a great fan and chronicler of mid-century jazz and Hollywood. His photographs of Steve McQueen are among the most artful and energetic shots taken of an unguarded celebrity before the poisonous and artificial era of Photoshop took over. Claxton traveled to New Orleans with a German visitor and photographed the city with many of its great singers, musicians and [...] street life, in the era before civil rights came to the South. His Nikon F3, with deeply saturated colors and documentary realism, is a window into an era that has long since passed. Playing, laughing, singing, eating, drinking, marching, crooning, smiling...the old, young and richly varied people of New Orleans are dressed up in costumes, on their way to church, walking in a funeral procession, and happily posing by the mantel. They are in love with life, even the hard life they lead, and Claxton is the man who knows how to aim his lens right at the soul of a city.
Marvelous look back well before Katrina
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
In 1960, noted photographer William Claxton and German musicologist Joachim Berendt travelled the United States to document the American Art Form. The massive coffee table book "JazzLife" was published by Taschen and available in a regular edition which lists for $200 or a deluxe edition with prints and an audio CD for over $1000. It is a 700 page book and weighs over 17 pounds. Did I say coffee table book, the book itself might serve as a coffee table. Ok enough for the poor attempts at humor. From "JazzLife," Taschen has published the portion devoted to the New Orleans, "New Orleans 1960," which is a more manageable 191 pages and has pertinent text portions to explain their trip across the United States and their experiences in the Crescent City and also Angola Penitentiary. It is dedicated to the many souls who lost their lives and the survivors who are rebuilding the city. The selling point for this are the stunning photos of Claxton, who is probably best known for his iconic images of James Dean and Chet Baker. There are many striking images here, mostly of traditional jazz performers including the Eureka Brass Band, the Tuxedo Brass Band, the marvelous clarinet player George Lewis (and one of a marvelous one of Lewis' wife and Lewis 100 + year old mother), Nick LaRocca (who they recall was still claiming to have invented jazz), drummer Paul Barbarin, blues singer Lizzie Miles, trombonist Jim Robinson, Lewis Keppard and so many others. There are a couple images of a picnic in Slidell where Snooks Eaglin and band are seen playing on a truck bed, as well as a marvelous image of the Melvin Lastie Quintet (which included at the time drummer Charles ' Honeyboy' Otis), one of the few representations of modern jazz that they captured. A series of images here also follow a funeral to the cemetery and then back witnessing the second line exploding on the way back. The section on Angola includes marvelous images of Hoagman Maxey and Roosevelt Charles. Text is presented in English, French and German and certainly helps the appreciation of the marvelous images. Certainly this will appeal to lovers of traditional jazz and the Cresent City.
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