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Jazz: Myth and Religion
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Bibliographic Detail
Publisher Oxford Univ Pr
Publication date April 1, 1987
Pages 221
Binding Hardcover
Book category Adult Non-Fiction
ISBN-13 9780195042498
ISBN-10 0195042492
Availability§ Out of Print
Original list price $19.95
§As reported by publisher
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Summaries and Reviews
Summary
Looks at how jazz has fulfilled a spiritual role for some of its listeners, discusses the concerns of its early opponents, and traces specific movements
Amazon.com description: Product Description: Why has jazz proved so troublesome to some and so fulfilling to others?
Early on, "respectable" voices condemned jazz as profane, even diabolical, "the Devil's music," defiling received notions of art, sex and race, and threatening the very fabric of American life, to say nothing of that of Western civilization. Traces of these feelings remain in some influential quarters, both black and white. At the same time, some people discovered meanings in jazz more significant than those in any other music or art form. For them, jazz provided ecstatic experience not found in any concert hall or church--epiphanies and catharses carrying feelings of the sacred and magical. And these feelings, along with the charismas of jazz heroes--the Armstrongs, Parkers, and Coltranes--generated strong communal understandings and sect-like groupings with rituals and myths upholding and extending the jazz mystique. True believers genuinely felt their music could supernaturally alter their personal and social lives.
Examining music and religion in the broad sense, Neil Leonard uses the work of Max Weber and his followers to consider how listeners have regarded jazz as sacred or magical and created myths and rituals to implement and sustain this belief. In a time when conventional religions are in flux or decline, jazz has provided a focus for spiritual impulses tempered by the anomie, anxieties, and alienations of the twentieth century, Leonard maintains. This book, then, tells us not only about music and society but also about religious behavior in a secular time.

About the Author:
Neil Leonard is Chairman of the Department of American Civilization at the University of Pennsylvania. He is also the author of Jazz and the White Americans.

Editions
Hardcover
Book cover for 9780195042498
 
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from Oxford Univ Pr (April 1, 1987)
9780195042498 | details & prices | 221 pages | List price $19.95
About: Looks at how jazz has fulfilled a spiritual role for some of its listeners, discusses the concerns of its early opponents, and traces specific movements

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