Freedom Is, Freedom Ain’t: Jazz and the Making of the Sixties

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Harvard University Press, Nov 24, 2003 - Art - 394 pages

In the long decade between the mid-1950s and the late ’60s, jazz was changing more than its sound. The age of Max Roach’s Freedom Now Suite, John Coltrane’s A Love Supreme, and Charles Mingus’s The Black Saint and the Sinner Lady was a time when jazz became both newly militant and newly seductive, its example powerfully shaping the social dramas of the Civil Rights movement, the Black Power movement, and the counterculture. Freedom Is, Freedom Ain’t is the first book to tell the broader story of this period in jazz—and American—history.

The story’s central figures are jazz musicians like Coltrane and Mingus, who rewrote the conventions governing improvisation and composition as they sought to infuse jazz with that gritty exuberance known as “soul.” Scott Saul describes how these and other jazz musicians of the period engaged in a complex cultural balancing act: utopian and skeptical, race-affirming and cosmopolitan, they tried to create an art that would make uplift into something forceful, undeniable in its conviction, and experimental in its search for new possibilities. Freedom Is, Freedom Ain’t considers these musicians and their allies as a cultural front of the Civil Rights movement, a constellation of artists and intellectuals whose ideas of freedom pushed against a Cold War consensus that stressed rational administration and collective security. Capturing the social resonance of the music’s marriage of discipline and play, the book conveys the artistic and historical significance of the jazz culture at the start, and the heart, of the Sixties.

 

Contents

Hard Bop and the Impulse to Freedom
xv
BIRTH OF THE COOL The Early Career of the Hipster
29
RADICALISM BY ANOTHER NAME The White Negro Meets the Black Negro
61
RIOT ON A SUMMERS DAY White Youth and the Rise of the Jazz Festival
99
THE RIOT IN REVERSE The Newport Rebels Langston Hughes and the Mockery of Freedom
123
OUTRAGEOUS FREEDOM Charles Mingus and the Invention of the Jazz Workshop
147
THIS FREEDOMS SLAVE CRIES Listening to the Jazz Workshop
180
THE SERIOUS SIDE OF HARD BOP John Coltranes Early Dramas of Deliverance
209
LOVING A LOVE SUPREME Coltrane Malcolm and the Revolution of the Psyche
244
LOVE LIKE JAZZ IS A FOUR LETTER WORD Jazz and the Counterculture
271
THE ROAD TO SOUl POWER The Many Ends of Hard Bop
302
NOTES
339
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
377
INDEX
381
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