Dancing in Your Head: Jazz, Blues, Rock, and Beyond

Front Cover
Oxford University Press, 1995 - Music - 308 pages
As music columnist for The Nation, Gene Santoro has established himself as an important new critical voice, able to write well on a broad spectrum of popular music and jazz without losing touch with the cutting edge of today's music scene. About Nat "King" Cole, Santoro comments: "adjectives can't describe the swinging, ingratiating self-confidence laced with tenderness that colors Nat "King" Cole's singing. His baritone/tenor is so airy and elemental, so palpably physical, it invites you in, then surrounds you glowingly..." And on the highly successful rock band Living Colour, Santoro is no less evocative: "hardcore metal raveups slam into bluesy ballads and psychedelicized pop, lilting Caribbean inflections collide with hiphop scrambles of prerecorded material and touches of funk."
Dancing in Your Head gathers Santoro's liveliest reviews and essays for the first time, introducing a fresh and provocative perspective on several decades of musicians and their work. Santoro covers a wide musical vista, from the legendary blues singer Robert Johnson to Public Enemy's controversial rap lyrics, from the long running clash between blues and African American gospel to the rock iconoclast Neil Young, from the great James Brown to George Hay, the founder of the Grand Ole Opry. Documenting the evolution of jazz, rock and roll, and rap, Santoro's observations are incisive, honest, and reflective. Of his early exposure to Jimi Hendrix, John Coltrane and Bela Bartok, Santoro remarks, "That sense of wonder and discovery is what happens when you've been hit by art's immediate vatic power. It has never left me, has been touched and renewed by each encounter I've valued." Santoro examines the staying power of music legends Lou Reed, Eric Clapton, the Grateful Dead, and Sun Ra, the freewheeling jazz artist who prefers to call himself a tone artist rather than a musician. Special highlights include several pieces on Miles Davis; book reviews, including one on Gunther Schuller's two-volume History of Jazz; a lively and detailed profile of the Neville Brothers; and a discussion of jazz great Ornette Coleman that compares him to Orson Welles and Charles Ives.
Taken together the pieces in Dancing In Your Head examine the historical roots of today's popular music while offering insight into performers and trends that dominate the current scene. Balancing a critical and historical sensibility with an unharnessed enthusiasm for all forms of music, Santoro is an ideal guide to the old and new.
 

Contents

1 Phonograph Blues
3
2 Hellhound on His Trail
9
3 Lift Every Voice and Sing
12
4 Doing It to Death
18
5 Take It to the River
24
6 Born on the Bayou
28
7 New Orleanss Hidden Treasures
31
8 Soul Queen of New Orleans
33
35 Hidden Histories
179
36 Gunther Schullers Memory Palace
185
37 Preservation Hall Comes to Carnegie
192
38 Nature Boy
194
39 The Two Oscars
198
40 The Gypsy King
204
41 The Wizard of Waukesha
206
42 A Box of Mr Overdub
211

9 Uptown
36
10 Country Comforts
48
11 Androgyne with a Lariat
54
12 Even Cowgirls Get the Blues
56
13 Austins Eraserhead
58
14 The Layla Sessions
60
15 Beckology
70
16 Rockin in the Free World
85
The Grateful Dead
89
18 New York Lou
91
19 On the Border
95
20 Payola Guys
97
21 Turn On Your Love Light
99
22 Rock Vaudeville
103
23 Good Day at Black Rock
108
24 The Godfathers of Rap
112
25 Dont Believe the Hype
117
26 Mr Ambience
125
27 Them Ol Bahamas Blues
128
28 Dancing in Your Head
131
29 The Blackwell Project
138
30 ESP
144
31 Rolling with the Tape
150
32 The Serpents Tooth
160
33 Prince of Darkness
163
34 Notes from Underground
172
43 Colliers Ellington Follies
214
44 Epitaph
218
45 Minguss Sancho Panza
220
46 Rahsaan to the Moon
225
47 Space Is the Place
228
48 Surfing on the Keys
234
49 Music by Association
237
50 Unplugging the Enlightenment
243
51 Child Is Father to the Music
248
52 In and Out of the Tradition
254
53 The Knitting Factory
258
54 Monk Goes Downtown
260
55 The Nurturer
267
56 The Clark Kent of the Electric Guitar
270
57 Downtown Scenes
273
58 Fractured Fairy Tales
277
59 Caos Totale
278
60 On the Street Where You Live
279
61 East Village Jumpcuts
281
62 Naked City
286
63 A Star Is Made
287
64 Master of Tributes
295
65 The Big Apple Avantgarde
298
Index
305
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About the author (1995)

Gene Santoro is music columnist for The Nation, covers music for The New York Daily News, and is a regular contributor to The Atlantic Monthly and People.

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