Waiting for Buddy Guy

UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS PRESSISBN: 9780252081576

Chicago Blues at the Crossroads

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Sale price$43.99
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Out of Stock - Available to backorder

By Alan Harper
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
232

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Description

""Harper's book, packed with interviews with clubowners, musicians and magazine editors, and illuminated throughout by his own thoughtful and sensitive reactions to the many gigs he attends all over the city, is as enlightening as it is racy, as much an unblinking (and often engagingly self-deprecating) eyewitness account, full of telling detail, as an intriguing social history, dealing with such burning issues as authenticity, racial politics, music-industry practices, the difficulties of making a living as a blues player in an increasingly rock-dominated world.""-- London Jazz News ""Part memoir, part history and part. . . bluesological lament for a time and place that we will never see again.""--Goldmine ""A terrific book. Being from Chicago, it brought back a lot of memories.""--Nick Digilio, WGN radio""The author has provided a painstakingly detailed glimpse into an almost forgotten era of the Chicago Blues scene. Reading this book filled in some personal lapses of memory, reminding me of the wonderful musical moments that I shared with some of the greatest musicians that I've ever known.""--Billy Branch ""An absorbing book, combining narrative flair with expertise lightly worn. Alan Harper deals with important subjects, such as the question of authenticity, in a highly readable style.""--Dave Gelly, jazz critic, The Observer ""It captures an era . . . when the blues scene was about midway through its descent. He profiles the players, the promoters, the clubs, the record labels, the disc jockeys, and much more that went into the early 1980s Chicago Blues scene.""--Steve Cushing, author of Pioneers of the Blues Revival ""There is a kind of Kerouacian feel to the storytelling. . . . The stories are vivid and well-drawn . . . and they inevitably generate a feeling of nostalgia in a reader, such as myself, who was on that scene at the time.""--David Whiteis, author of Chicago Blues: Portraits and Stories

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