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Book details
  • Genre:MUSIC
  • SubGenre:Genres & Styles / Jazz
  • Language:English
  • Pages:240
  • eBook ISBN:9781483528755

World's Best Jazz Club

The Story of Bennetts Lane

by David James

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Overview
World’s Best Jazz Club is the story of Bennetts Lane, which is in turn the story of Australian jazz over the last two decades. The characters, the musical styles, the changing aesthetics, the new techniques. Through more than 50 interviews, author, journalist and accomplished jazz musician, David James has pieced together the history of this iconic club. When renowned jazz trumpeter, Wynton Marsalis, told Bennetts Lane founder and owner, Michael Tortoni, “There are not too many jazz clubs like this, anywhere.” Tortoni knew then that he was on the right track. “ one of those rare books that provides an intimate snapshot of an iconic place. It is a fascinating exposé of the life, music and 21-year history of a famous jazz club.” DR MARK POLLARD “Bennetts Lane is one of the great jazz clubs in the world. I can’t think of anywhere I played that is better.” ALLAN BROWNE “Bennetts Lane is adding to the culture of the city and the depth and the soul of the city.” VINCE JONES “It has all the hallmarks to me of a great jazz club… They got the whole combination right.” PAUL GRABOWSKY.
Description
WORLD’S BEST JAZZ CLUB: the story of Bennetts Lane is one of those rare books that provides an intimate snapshot of an iconic place. It is a fascinating exposé of the life, music and twenty-one year history of a famous jazz club. The book is filled with little gems from many great jazz artists, but more than that it documents the history of a significant place through first-hand accounts to create a wonderful view of life in the jazz scene during the critical bridge into the new millennium. The anecdotes and recollections from many of Australia’s and the world’s great jazz musicians – including Michelle Nicolle, Allan Browne, Ben Robertson, Barney McAll, Geoff Hughes, Joe Chindamo and Paul Grabowsky are divine, evocative, inspiring and often controversial. The list of musicians who have performed there, from Prince to Wynton Marsalis alone, is testament to the importance of this book in documenting the impact of Bennetts Lane in shaping the sound of the past 20 years. Along the way, the story deals with many of the vexed topics that pervade running a successful music club, including business versus art, the importance of alliances with education and industry, media hype versus the real musician and the benchmark elements of acoustics, location and, of course, music. It illuminates the club’s founder Michael Tortoni, himself a former member of successful seventies rock band Taste and a VCA graduate, and the importance of Tortoni in creating the recipe for the special sauce that brewed up a great jazz club through the carefully measured ingredients of business acumen, vision, artistry and plain audacity. David James has done a splendid job in researching and revealing the inner workings of this iconic club and the huge impact it has had on the Australian and world music scene. As the author notes, “Bennetts Lane is a place where jazz has been developed as an art form in a way that has occurred rarely, if ever, before in Australia”. The Victorian College of the Arts has been closely connected with Bennetts Lane from the club’s very beginning as a place where the spirit of jazz, improvisation and exploration resides within the walls. I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book and highly recommend it and may you, like me, be challenged, inspired and intrigued by the beauty within. (From the Foreword to the book, written by DR MARK POLLARD,Head, VCA School of Contemporary Music, The University of Melbourne.)
About the author
DR DAVID JAMES is a journalist, author, accomplished jazz flautist and composer. He is an Honorary Fellow of the Victorian College of the Arts, The University of Melbourne and has a PhD from Monash University in Literature (Shakespeare). David has been a business journalist for 28 years. During much of this time he was also a humorous columnist for BRW magazine. Between 1985 and 1990, he enjoyed indulging his passion for jazz as jazz critic for the Melbourne Herald. He writes jazz reviews for The Age and the Guardian and over the years, has interviewed numerous jazz artists, among them Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie, Gerry Mulligan, McCoy Tyner and George Shearing. David has produced two CDs: “Once”, an alto flute and guitar duet and “Globe”, music to the speeches of William Shakespeare. He is the author of The Business Devil’s Dictionary and Managing for the Twenty First Century.