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Sittin' In Launch Event
Join author Jeff Gold for the launch of his new book, Sittin' In, in conversation with SiriusXM's Mark Ruffin!
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Date and time
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About this event
**If you are registering on the day of the event, please email Nick Davies at nicholas.davies@harpercollins.com to confirm your registration.**
Join us for the launch of Sittin' In: Jazz Clubs of the 1940s and 1950s, hosted by Arcana: Books on the Arts, for a discussion between author Jeff Gold and Mark Ruffin, host of SiriusXM's Real Jazz. Books will be available for sale from Arcana during the event and signed by the author; you can also pre-order a copy here.
The discussion will be held on Crowdcast, and by RSVPing for the event here, you'll automatically be registered with them if you don't already have an account. A link to join the event will be shared via email the day before the event. Please RSVP here to make sure that you'll receive that email.
ABOUT THE BOOK
In Sittin' In, Grammy-winning historian, archivist, author, and record executive Jeff Gold offers an unprecedented look inside the jazz clubs from this era across the United States. Drawing on an incredible trove of never-before-seen photos and memorabilia, he gives us a glimpse at a world that was rich in culture, music, dining, fashion, and more.
In exclusive interviews, iconic musicians Sonny Rollins and Quincy Jones as well as preeminent jazz historian Dan Morgenstern give first-person accounts of the clubs that Rollins called “a paradisiacal place to be.” Decades before Jackie Robinson broke baseball’s color barrier, jazz clubs were among the first places in Jim Crow America where Black and white people mixed in audiences and onstage. Rollins noted, “Jazz was really where the racial barriers were broken down heavily,” and Jones explained, “Back then, it wasn’t about color in the clubs, it was about how good you can play. Racism would’ve been over in the 1950s if they’d listened to the jazz guys.”
Additional interviews include jazz pianist and composer, MacArthur Fellow, and Kennedy Center creative director Jason Moran, who explores the history and culture of the music during the era, when bebop evolved from and in response to the big band swing sound. Pulitzer Prize-winning fashion critic Robin Givhan discusses the abundant style of both clubgoers and musicians of the day in a social and sartorial context.
Separate sections consider the jazz histories and clubs of New York City, Atlantic City, Washington DC, Boston, Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago, Kansas City, St. Louis, Los Angeles, and San Francisco.
The book’s 200 exclusive images include never-before-seen club souvenir photographs, some featuring fans posing with legendary musicians such as Charlie Parker, Duke Ellington, Dizzy Gillespie, Count Basie, and Louis Armstrong—and even one photo showing clubgoer Marlon Brando with fans at New York’s Birdland. Also included is a wealth of colorful club graphics, from cards, menus, flyers, matchbooks, postcards, and posters as well as supplementary photographs of other top performers and venues of the day.
Revelatory and beautifully designed, Sittin' In is a must-have for anybody interested in music, history, race relations, fashion, the music club scene, vintage photography, and little-known corners of American culture.