The Jazz Standards: A Guide to the Repertoire
Ted Gioia. Oxford, $39.95 (528p) ISBN 978-0-1999-3739-4
Jazz pianist and historian Gioia (Delta Blues) surveys 250 influential 20th-century compositions, including Broadway show tunes, movie songs, and original pieces by Duke Ellington, Thelonious Monk, Miles Davis, and other composers. Each two-page entry serves up a chatty, fact-filled review of the tune’s birth pangs—Louis B. Mayer almost cut “Over the Rainbow” from The Wizard of Oz!—and a breezy analysis of its musicological mojo. (“Someone to Watch over Me,” the author avers, draws its wistful warmth from the all-black-keys pentatonic scale.) But Gioia is interested less in a melody’s first incarnation than in its afterlife as a template for jamming, riffing, and free-form stylistic variation, epitomized by John Coltrane’s saxy reinvention of “My Favorite Things.” He therefore includes critical appreciations of each standard’s best and most emblematic arrangements, along with a list of recordings. Gioia writes with an endearing blend of erudition and opinionating—”Come Rain or Come Shine” ’s spare tune “isn’t a melody, it’s a musical starvation diet”—that makes the book both a delightful browse and a handy reference and roadmap for jazzophiles. (July)
Details
Reviewed on: 04/16/2012
Genre: Nonfiction
Hardcover - 528 pages - 978-0-19-976914-8
MP3 CD - 978-1-5226-6993-7
Other - 544 pages - 978-0-19-977299-5
Other - 978-0-19-008720-3
Other - 978-0-19-008719-7
Paperback - 528 pages - 978-0-19-976915-5