Mingus Speaks

Charles Mingus & John F. Goodman

Language: English

Published: Apr 15, 2013

Description:

Charles Mingus is among jazz’s greatest composers and perhaps its most talented bass player. He was blunt and outspoken about the place of jazz in music history and American culture, about which performers were the real thing (or not), and much more. These in-depth interviews, conducted several years before Mingus died, capture the composer’s spirit and voice, revealing how he saw himself as composer and performer, how he viewed his peers and predecessors, how he created his extraordinary music, and how he looked at race. Augmented with interviews and commentary by ten close associates―including Mingus’s wife Sue, Teo Macero, George Wein, and Sy Johnson― Mingus Speaks provides a wealth of new perspectives on the musician’s life and career.

As a writer for Playboy, John F. Goodman reviewed Mingus’s comeback concert in 1972 and went on to achieve an intimacy with the composer that brings a relaxed and candid tone to the ensuing interviews. Much of what Mingus shares shows him in a new light: his personality, his passions and sense of humor, and his thoughts on music. The conversations are wide-ranging, shedding fresh light on important milestones in Mingus’s life such as the publication of his memoir, Beneath the Underdog , the famous Tijuana episodes, his relationships, and the jazz business.

From Booklist

Longtime jazz writer Goodman maintained a relationship with protean composer and bassist Charles Mingus during the last decade of the controversial musician’s life (he died in 1979) and conducted interviews with Mingus (albeit with the interviewer often too intrusive and Mingus often turning the questions inside out), his wife, Sue; and a number of musical and personal associates. Goodman had long contemplated publishing a book, which, after several transformations, has evolved into this oddly organized but invaluable volume. The tempestuous (iconoclastic, contentious, contradictory, infuriating) Mingus was sui generis as a musician and as an individual. His speaking style, presented here in ­as-good-as-it’s-­possible-to-get transcriptions, was as singular as his musical voice, and jazz lovers have not heretofore been able to hear it this purely. Mingus’ own memoir, Beneath the Underdog (1971), though a staple, is famously unreliable, making this present addition to the jazz library, including Mingus on the history and theory of music, the business, the so-called avant-garde, race, sex, and his forerunners and contemporaries, all the more essential. --Mark Levine

Review

"Makes for fascinating reading." -- Jack Shakely ― Foreword Reviews Published On: 2013-06-01

"A valuable contribution to 20th century jazz history." ― JJA News Published On: 2013-07-27

"The book is full of . . . illuminating stories." ― Santa Fe New Mexican Published On: 2013-07-26

"Mingus's candid intelligence shines through in these interviews as the discussion ranges through all aspects of jazz, from composition to performance to history and more, and on to matters of American culture, politics, and race. . . . Fans of Mingus will definitely want to get their hands on this book." ― Library Journal Published On: 2013-08-09

"What's clear from Goodman's fluid interactions with Mingus is that the bassist trusted him. Consequently, Mingus' thoughts have the ring of honesty about them, even if his versions of certain events were often at odds with the way others perceived them. . . . Goodman extracts plenty of material that will delight Mingus' fans and ignite debate." ― All About Jazz Published On: 2013-09-20

"Known for mind-gaming journalists, Mingus is open, voluble and very funny here, clearly due to his trust for the interlocutor. . . . Like a tasteful musician, Goodman lays out until the improvisational repartee calls for him." ― MOJO Magazine Published On: 2013-12-01

"Mingus Speaks provides a wealth of new perspectives on the musician’s life and career. . . . Much of what Mingus shares shows him in a new light: his personality, his passions and sense of humor, and his thoughts on music. The conversations are wide-ranging, shedding fresh light on important milestones in Mingus’s life such as the publication of his memoir, Beneath the Underdog, the famous Tijuana episodes, his relationships, and the jazz business." ― Jerry Jazz Musician Published On: 2013-09-06

"Goodman is a superb guide to Mingus" ― IAJRC Journal Published On: 2013-09-01

From the Inside Flap

"I was privileged to be a close friend of the magnetically original composer, bassist, and leader CharlesMingus, whose deeply energizing music has never left me and many, many others around the world. Mingus was singularly absorbing off the stand and now in this historic book Mingus Speaks , primarily a series of interviews by John Goodman, who as we see is a listener to the music burning to be a soul mate of Charles Mingus as this book proceeds.

The multidimensional inner Mingus who created what he called, not jazz—jazz he said to me once was too limited a description—he created what he called ‘Mingus music.’ And much of the material here, in the book, has never been available before. For it so reveals and multi-dimensionally explains much of the music, and as long as there is jazz, Mingus speaks for the enthralling listeners around the world and—and I mean this—as they become his music. A book unlike any I’ve seen on the history of jazz.” —Nat Hentoff, author of At the Jazz Band Ball: Sixty Years on the Jazz Scene

“In words as in music, Mingus could erupt like a geyser speaking in tongues. These interviews let you experience his volatile, high-pressure flow of acute insights and outrageous conjectures.” —Gene Santoro, author of Myself When I Am Real: The Life and Music of Charles Mingus

"There are many Mingus voices in these interviews: poet, prophet, prolix raconteur, anguished, sometimes angry artist. The early '70s was a dark period in Charles' life and career, a time when he had stopped composing and was trying to find his way—here through the torrents and thickets of language." —Sue Mingus

From the Back Cover

"I was privileged to be a close friend of the magnetically original composer, bassist, and leader CharlesMingus, whose deeply energizing music has never left me and many, many others around the world. Mingus was singularly absorbing off the stand and now in this historic book Mingus Speaks , primarily a series of interviews by John Goodman, who as we see is a listener to the music burning to be a soul mate of Charles Mingus as this book proceeds.

The multidimensional inner Mingus who created what he called, not jazz―jazz he said to me once was too limited a description―he created what he called ‘Mingus music.’ And much of the material here, in the book, has never been available before. For it so reveals and multi-dimensionally explains much of the music, and as long as there is jazz, Mingus speaks for the enthralling listeners around the world and―and I mean this―as they become his music. A book unlike any I’ve seen on the history of jazz.” ―Nat Hentoff, author of At the Jazz Band Ball: Sixty Years on the Jazz Scene

“In words as in music, Mingus could erupt like a geyser speaking in tongues. These interviews let you experience his volatile, high-pressure flow of acute insights and outrageous conjectures.” ―Gene Santoro, author of Myself When I Am Real: The Life and Music of Charles Mingus

"There are many Mingus voices in these interviews: poet, prophet, prolix raconteur, anguished, sometimes angry artist. The early '70s was a dark period in Charles' life and career, a time when he had stopped composing and was trying to find his way―here through the torrents and thickets of language." ―Sue Mingus

About the Author

John F. Goodman is a writer, former music critic, professor, and media consultant based in Oaxaca, Mexico

Sy Johnson is a jazz photographer, writer, pianist, singer, educator, and former Mingus arranger