Going Back to T-Town Volume 2

UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA PRESSISBN: 9780806195445

The Ernie Fields Territory Big Band

Price:
Sale price$56.99


By Carmen Fields
Imprint: UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
240

Description

Carmen Fields is an Emmy Award-winning broadcast news journalist who currently produces and hosts the public affairs program Higher Ground on WHDH-TV, Boston. She co-anchored WGBH's Ten O'Clock News from 1987 to 1991 and wrote the script for the American Experience documentary "Goin' Back to T-Town" (1993).

"This perceptive book is an insightful account, appealing to the aficionado and scholar alike, of the career and musical journey of bandleader Ernie Fields."-Todd Wright, Professor and Director of Jazz Studies, Hayes School of Music, Appalachian State University, Boone, North Carolina "In piecing together her father's musical journey, Carmen Fields highlights an important untold story, but also paints a fuller picture of the strength that emanated from the much talked about Tulsa, Oklahoma, of twentieth-century America."-Wil Haygood, author of Colorization: One Hundred Years of Black Films in a White World "Carmen Fields has written a feast of a book about the pioneering work of her father, a talented and entrepreneurial jazzman back when jazz was coming into its own. We learn what Tulsa was like in its heyday, what touring the South was like for a Black orchestra, and how a passionate, tenacious, and enormously likable man built a nationally respected orchestra. This is a marvelous story, told authoritatively and with great humanity."-Geneva Overholser, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, former editor of the Des Moines Register, and director of the Annenberg School of Journalism (2008-2013) "Carmen Fields's book is ripe with little-known Black music history and heartfelt vignettes of how Black folks make life 'do what it do' when the odds are against them. But most of all, it is an apt tribute to her father."-Betty BayE in Morgan Global Journalism Review "Despite the brevity of this book, it is obvious that a lot of work has gone into its production over . . . the past half century, and the names that have been interviewed for inclusion are, frankly, mind-blowing. . . . An entertaining read and, I'm sure, a useful research tool for future discographers and music historians."-Blues & Rhythm

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