Jazz in the Hill


Nightlife and Narratives of a Pittsburgh Neighborhood

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By Colter Harper
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY PRESS OF MISSISSIPPI
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Format:
HARDBACK
Pages:
277

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Description

Colter Harper is an ethnomusicologist and musician whose creative and scholarly work explores jazz, American nightlife, and the music of West Africa. Harper served as a Fulbright Scholar at the University of Ghana from 2018 to 2020 and has performed as a guitarist, including with the rock band Rusted Root. He is currently a teaching assistant professor in the Department of Music at the University at Buffalo.

Preface Introduction: Jazz, Nightlife, and the Hill District Part I: Dangerous Ground: Black and Tan Clubs, Vice, and Prohibition (1920-1934) Chapter 1: Racial and Sexual Politics of Black and Tan Nightlife Chapter 2: Claiming a Place for Jazz: The Collins and Paramount Inns Part II: Pittsburgh's Renaissance and Jazz's Golden Age (1945-1968) Chapter 3: Competing Visions of Modernity Chapter 4: Life in the Jazz House: The Crawford Grill No. 2 and Hurricane Bar Part III: The Paradox of Progress: Jazz as Black Musical Labor (1908-1977) Chapter 5: Civil Rights and the Musicians Union Chapter 6: Challenging Discrimination, Resisting Merger Part IV: Jazz and the Community Archive (1968-1977) Chapter 7: Hill Nightlife in the Wake of 1968 Chapter 8: The Community Archive in Practice Epilogue: To Honor and Repair Acknowledgments Appendix Notes Index

The history of Black jazz in Pittsburgh has been long overdue for a detailed treatment. Concentrating on the Hill District and the musicians, music fans, and economy that supported the scene until its demise, Jazz in the Hill makes a valuable start toward reviving this history." - Aaron Johnson, associate professor and interim director of the Jazz Studies Program at the University of Pittsburgh Colter Harper's insightful and deeply researched Jazz in the Hill examines jazz performance in a Pittsburgh neighborhood over a fifty-year period. He looks at the relationships among the musicians, the venues in which they performed, the community in which those venues existed-all of that in relationship to changing political, economic, and social conditions in the city and the nation. The book is informed by Harper's personal involvements in the scene and Charles "Teenie" Harris's splendid documentary photos. Like all great case studies, it has resonance far beyond what took place in the small physical area that is its focus." - Bruce Jackson, SUNY Distinguished Professor and James Agee Professor of American Culture at University of Buffalo Colter Harper, a respected musician in multiple genres in the Pittsburgh music scene, has made an impressive additional contribution. Blending an informed theoretical approach with meticulous research, he documents the musical and cultural history of Pittsburgh's significant African American jazz venues and patronage in relation to twentieth-century urban policies and community development." - John Miller Chernoff, author of African Rhythm and African Sensibility: Aesthetics and Social Action in African Musical Idioms

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