Wednesday, January 15, 1958 THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE Page Thirteens Wednesday, January 15, 1958 THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE Paae Thirteen 'A Handbook of Jazz' It Serves as a Guide to both Concepts and Players A HANDBOOK OF JAZZ. Bar- reveal the artist's emotions and impressions of life, or the cater- ry Ulanov. New York, 195": wauling of immoral, illiterate mu- Viking Press, 239 pp. $3.50 sicians from dives and bordellos. More than anything else, jazz By P tHIIf UNCK elicits a personal response -which Daily st5f 1Wrir is never the same in any two JAZZ MEANS many things to people. For this reason, jazz does ,,any people. It is a form of not lend itself readily to precise music which can be, according to definition such as Barry Ulanov the point of view one takes, a trys to make in A Handbook of sincere and significant attempt to Jazz. Similarly, precise criticism of Ulanov's book is not possible because of the many lights in which his opinions can be viewed. Ulanov has attempted to write a book which in one volume ties the history, the schools, the mu- sicians and the value of jazz into a unified whole, In this he has not quite succeeded, and indeed it seems hardly probable that any author, no matter how gifted, could. 'HE BASIC FLAW in any work of this kind lies in the neces- sary attempt to describe the sound of an instrument or group of in- struments in words. Just as it is impossible to convey the sound of middle C on a piano in words to someone who has never heard the note, it is even more im- possible to tell the qualities of a passage or even a single note played by Louis Armstrong or Roy Eldridge. Thus Ulanov, whether or not he realized it, had to presuppose some familiarity with jazz or at least a small amount of technical knowledge of playing some 'form of music. The book, then, becomes somewhat vague to a person who has not had any connection, whether passive or active listen- ing, with jazz. EVEN WITH THESE inherent faults, the book does a good, if somewhat opinionated, job of guiding the novice through the basic concepts of jazz and the people who play it. A Handbook of Jazz is organized in four major parts-a short his- tory of jazz, an introduction to some of the technical points of jazz, philosophy on jazz in gen- eral and information about a number of impo-tant individuals, past and present, in the field. Ulanov considers the most im- portant parts of jazz knowledge to be knowledge of the history and development of the many fields and schools of jazz. He is one of the first writers not willing, to state categorically tlat jazz developed from the Negro slaves in the South who brought their native African rhythms to the United States, combined them with hymns to produce spirituals, and then trooped to Storyville in. New Orleans to bring forth Dixie- land.' PROPONENTS of this theory point to the rhythms and mel- odies of jazz and say that only Africa could have produced them. Ulanov, on the other hand states, and correctly, that native music in Africa is not given to much in the way of melody and that jazz has never approached the intricate and quite un easurable beats of a corps of African drummers." The history, as a whole, falls short of being in any way com- plete. In the few pages he devotes to history, Ulanov can no more than sketch an outline of jazz in the last 60 years. Ulanov is not above referring to people he has never mentioned before in his history and often. leaves gaps which he obviously expects the reader to know instead of at least partially explaining his refer- ences. When writing what he calls a "capsule history," Ulanov cannot skip entire fields of jazz-boogie- woogie for example-and he should not skip through other sec- tions of his "history" with no more than a passing glance. He is per- fectly entitled to pass judgement on anything he pleases, but in that case he shouldn't call his opinions "history." AGAIN in explaining the Instru- ments used by jazz musicians, Ulanov requires a certain amount of familiarity with music in 'ex- plaining the ranges of the various instruments. At one point, he re- fers to the fingering systems used on the clarinet-a comment which lacks real significance for anyone who has no experience with clar- inets. On the whole, his chapter on instruments comes close to being ridiculous. At the beginning of the chapter, he explains that cer- tain Instruments are those used by jazz musicians. Then, in the course of his discussions, he lists all the instruments used by the perform- ers of classical music. At the end of the chapter he comes out with a debatable quota- tion made in 1926 to the effect that most classical musicians would willingly ,desert classical music if they were able to play wel enough to play jazz. 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