Holding the note Profiles in popular music

David Remnick

Book - 2023

"The greatest popular songs, whether it's Aretha Franklin singing "Respect" or Bob Dylan performing "Blind Willie McTell," have a way of embedding themselves in our memories. You remember a time and a place and a feeling when you hear that song again. In Holding the Note, David Remnick writes about the lives and work of some of the greatest musicians, songwriters, and performers of the past fifty years"--

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2nd Floor New Shelf 781.64/Remnick (NEW SHELF) Due May 14, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Criticism, interpretation, etc
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
David Remnick (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"This is a Borzoi book published by Alfred A. Knopf"--Title page verso.
Physical Description
xiv, 276 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9781400043613
  • How the light gets in (Leonard Cohen)
  • Soul survivor (Aretha Franklin)
  • Holding the note (Buddy Guy)
  • Groovin' high (Keith Richards)
  • Let the record show (Paul McCartney)
  • The gospel life (Mavis Staples)
  • The bird watcher (Charlie Parker and Phil Schaap)
  • We are alive (Bruce Springsteen)
  • The last Italian tenor (Luciano Pavarotti)
  • Restless farewell (Bob Dylan)
  • Vagabond (Patti Smith)
Review by Booklist Review

Remnick, New Yorker editor and Pulitzer Prize--winner, traces his love for music back to his father who made sure his sons saw the greats of the time perform. Remnick continues that family tradition in this gathering of exceptionally vivid and melodic profiles of musicians late in life. Written over the past three decades, these are keenly observed, deeply felt, and judiciously detailed encounters of genuine communion mixing interviews, biography, and analysis, all lyrically and radiantly composed. The opening essay about Leonard Cohen establishes Remnick's sensitivity to how musicians feel about reaching an advanced age as they look back while still creating and performing. There's a bittersweet quality to Remnick's perceptions of these legendary figures. He offers arresting insights into Luciano Pavarotti, Aretha Franklin, and Buddy Guy; a funny and lacerating portrait of Keith Richards, fresh takes on Paul McCartney, Mavis Staples, Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan, and Patti Smith. The most surprising profile, "The Bird Watcher," tells the mesmerizing story of radio host and "Talmudic" Charlie Parker fanatic Phil Schaap. There is acuity here, bemusement, tenderness, and gratitude.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

New Yorker editor Remnick (Lenin's Tomb) delves into the lives and art of musical greats in this standout collection of pieces published in the magazine. Remnick's conversations with such luminaries as Patti Smith, Bob Dylan, and Luciano Pavarotti occurred late in the artists' careers, when each was "grappling, in music and in their own lives, with their diminishing gifts and mortality," though the drive to create never abated. "How the Light Gets In," published a month before Leonard Cohen's 2016 death, explores the so-called godfather of gloom's personal and artistic particularities, from his reluctant, sometimes anxiety-ridden relationship with performing to his religious devotions (a lifelong "spiritual seeker," Cohen practiced Judaism, but spent years in a Zen monastery). "Soul Survivor" traces Aretha Franklin's gospel roots, while "We Are Alive" probes the "darker currents" of Bruce Springsteen's psyche and how they've fueled his creative drive: "you cannot underestimate the fine power of self-loathing," says Springsteen, who also speaks of a "need to remake myself, my town, my audience--the desire for renewal." Remnick's close observational details add texture, but what's most remarkable is his ability to give due at once to the artists' larger-than-life musical legacies and their all too human fallibilities. Music fans will revel in this peek behind the curtain. (May)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

New Yorker editor and Pulitzer Prize--winning author Remnick (Lenin's Tomb) comments on musical personalities, many of whom he saw perform and interviewed during the later stages of their careers. Structured in a conversational style, the book touches on artists like Leonard Cohen, Aretha Franklin, Buddy Guy, Keith Richards, Paul McCartney, Mavis Staples, Bruce Springsteen, Pavarotti, Bob Dylan, and Patti Smith. Remnick ruminates about the connections and similarities among many of his subjects--depression and Dylan affected Cohen; Franklin's preacher father's hardships shadowed her; and Guy influenced Jimi Hendrix and Muddy Waters. Springsteen, a troubadour of the United States' forgotten class, is fit but self-conscious about his earned wealth; Pavarotti often took time off for weight-loss regimens; and Dylan and Smith remain mutual supporters. Remnick also contends that Richards eventually lost creativity, although not his performative skills; that McCartney epitomizes the Beatles' inventiveness with melodies and inside jokes; and that Staples meshed with Dylan and Franklin. VERDICT General readers might best savor this anthology of articles, a tribute to the resilience of maturing music performers, by perusing them one by one.--Frederick J. Augustyn Jr.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Portraits of musicians who blossomed anew late in their careers. Remnick, the intellectually nimble editor of the New Yorker, has lately been focusing closely on world politics, but he finds time to profile a number of artists who, having enjoyed early success, "were all grappling, in music and in their own lives, with their diminishing gifts and mortality." The best way to grapple is to maintain "the spirit of sostenuto" that keeps one at work composing, performing, teaching, and spreading the word. "Sometimes, when I go to hear music, I feel like a weekend naturalist of the Anthropocene, feverishly trying to catch a last glimpse of some glorious species." Regarding the venerated Leonard Cohen, Remnick finds the Canadian-born poet, novelist, and later Zen Buddhist priest in a moment of somberness wrought by grief, with one loss in particular the Marianne who had inspired so many of his most famous songs. "The depth of his voice makes Tom Waits sound like Eddie Kendricks," writes Remnick of Cohen's impressive rumble. Keith Richards, having improbably survived to the age of 80, remembers that his first job as a member of the Rolling Stones was to turn audiences on to the blues, work he continues to this day; the improbability of his survival, of course, hinges on his "heroic" consumption of drugs, now a thing of the past. Richards may trade on "roguish charm," while Paul McCartney has assiduously built up a fan base that "is the general population." There's dish here--no love lost between Mavis Staples and Aretha Franklin--and plenty of astute observation, but the central point is that many older artists will go offstage only kicking and screaming--a little diminished, true, but full of fight, as a closing image of Patti Smith belting out "People Have the Power" suggests. A perceptive pleasure for literate music lovers. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Preface Sometimes, when I go to hear music, I feel like a weekend naturalist of the Anthropocene feverishly trying to catch a last glimpse of some glorious species: James Brown ringing out New Year's Eve at the Apollo; Paul Simon in a rainstorm in Forest Hills; Aretha Franklin fronting a pickup orchestra at a casino in Ontario. The urge to see aging performers while we still can is an inheritance. My parents suffered from neurological ailments that eventually made it impossible for them to work or get around easily--my mother with MS in her early thirties, my father with Parkinson's in his fifties-- and yet they somehow managed to bring my brother and me, who were children in the era of the Beatles, to see Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald, Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Nina Simone. Before my father had to shut down his small practice, he was surely the only dentist in the New York metropolitan area who replaced Muzak with Big Mama Thornton and Screamin' Jay Hawkins to accompany the sound of the drill and the spit sink. On a typical grownup venture--this one about a quarter century in the past--I emerged from the subway in the Village on a June afternoon and headed to a now-defunct club called Sweet Basil to see Doc Cheatham, a top-flight trumpet player from the very early days of jazz, who played a brunch gig there on Sundays. Cheatham was just shy of ninety. To miss him would be unforgivable. His first appearance on a record was as a sideman for Ma Rainey. It was hot out on Seventh Avenue but the club was comfortingly dark and cool. I took a seat at a shared table near the back of the bar. Cheatham, trailed by his bandmates, made his way to the bandstand. He walked with the aid of a collapsible cane and wore oversized aviator glasses. What few strands of hair he had left he dyed chestnut and combed forward over the crown of his skull. The crowd, drinking mimosas and Bloody Marys, came dressed in jeans, shorts, T-shirts. This was not Cheatham's style. He was pin sharp, gaily professional, wearing an apricot shirt, a red-print tie, a green linen jacket, and cream-colored slacks held up by skinny red galluses. Cheatham was born in 1905, in Nashville. He went by Adolphus until he started playing music for patients at a medical clinic and won his nickname for life. Doc's father played mandolin and was a barber on riverboats. His mother was a teacher. He took up music at fourteen, playing drums and coronet in school and church bands, and then, first as a sax player, then as a trumpet player, started hooking up with small-time professional gigs: carnivals, parade wagons, coal-mine dances. He played in the pit of the Bijou Theatre behind Bessie Smith and Ethel Waters. Following the Great Migration north to Chicago, he got work at the Dreamland Café, where the Prohibition-era clientele drank bathtub gin out of teacups. One day, he encountered King Oliver on the street and expressed his admiration. Oliver, who had been Armstrong's mentor, gave Doc a gift, a beat-up tarnished copper mute that Cheatham stuffed in his horn for the next seventy-odd years. Doc even played behind the man who claimed to have invented jazz itself, Jelly Roll Morton. On the bandstand, at Sweet Basil, he paid homage: "This next one's by Jelly Roll Morton," he said. "Not everyone used to like him. He'd stand on the corner all day bragging about being the greatest composer in the world. Of course, he could back it up. He wore a diamond in his front tooth. Wore a twentydollar gold piece in the tips of his shoes. He didn't play in places like this. Didn't play in the Waldorf-Astoria. Mostly, he played in bodegas . . ." "Bordellos, Doc, bordellos," the pianist Chuck Folds said, with a practiced roll of the eyes. "Yeah, bordellos," Cheatham said. " 'Cause, he was also a pimp." Cheatham played for an hour or so, mainly New Orleans standards from his youth. In his off-hours, he was making music with much younger musicians. He was not stuck in the past. He'd just met Nicholas Payton, a quicksilver trumpet player in his twenties, and soon they'd win a Grammy for their collaboration. Cheatham was mindful of time: he tapped his foot to the gunshot of the snare, he played just behind the pillowy pulse of the bass. He soloed in measured steps. He knew better than to overextend himself. His solos were brief, witty, resonant; he took his leave before he lost his breath or his way. He did not need to strain in order to glow. When he used King Oliver's mute, it was to summon that distant elder, but always with attention to the song--nothing maudlin or academic about it. After the set, I had a chance to talk with Cheatham at a table in the back. "The truth is, I was a late bloomer," he said. "I didn't even know there was a place called New Orleans until 1926. Nashville was a two-college town, nothing to listen to, dead as hell in those days. But when I got to Chicago, that town was filled with New Orleans musicians. Louis Armstrong was inspiring everyone, me included." Before Cheatham headed back to the bandstand I asked him if he'd be playing Sunday brunches at Sweet Basil in ten years, when he'd be a hundred. "I don't know," he said. "This place may not be standing in ten years. But we'll see." The pieces in this volume were written over time for The New Yorker and are the result of my earliest enthusiasms. In every case, I encountered these artists in late career. The voices had weathered. In nearly every case, the best songs and the best performances were well in the past. They were all grappling, in music and in their own lives, with their diminishing gifts and mortality. Yet there was never any diminishment in the desire to make music--to hold the note. Just as I was collecting these pieces, one songwriter and performer who had long dodged my requests to meet with her, Joni Mitchell, emerged at the Newport Folk Festival to play her first full set of music in two decades. Mitchell had been dealing for years with various ailments; in 2015, she suffered a brain aneurysm that nearly killed her. When she was a child, polio left her unable to walk for a while. But, as she told a reporter, "the aneurysm took away a lot more, really. Took away my speech and my ability to walk. And, you know, I got my speech back quickly, but the walking I'm still struggling with." Mitchell warmed up to playing in public again slowly. She began hosting private jams--"Joni jams"--at her house in Los Angeles. Brandi Carlisle, Paul McCartney, Chaka Khan, Bonnie Raitt, Herbie Hancock, and others came by to play, to talk, to sing. At Newport, a festival she last played in 1969, Mitchell took the stage in front of ten thousand people and was surrounded by a raft of musicians, including Carlisle, Celisse Henderson, Wynonna Judd, and Blake Mills. She sat in a magnificently garish armchair and sang a full set, from "Carey" to "The Circle Game." She pleased herself with songs of her own past--Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers' "Why Do Fools Fall in Love," Gershwin's "Summertime," the Clovers' "Love Potion No. 9." Her voice was far deeper than it was when she recorded Blue, her masterpiece, but Brandi Carlisle was there to provide the soprano filigree. Celisse Henderson, playing guitar with the attack of Sister Rosetta Tharpe, delighted Joni with a uniquely jagged version of "Help Me." Mitchell loved it all: the crowd, the companionship onstage, the sheer aliveness of the moment. And in the end, from the open air of Newport to the rest of us getting the full report on YouTube, it was the spectacle of Joni, determined and joyful, singing "Both Sides Now" that left every listener not just moved and grateful, but altered. But now old friends are acting strange. They shake their heads, they say I've changed. Well, something's lost, but something's gained in living every day. A young woman's song, written in 1966 after she'd read Henderson the Rain King on a flight above a bank of clouds, had reshaped itself. Something was lost, something was gained. For musicians late in their careers, it's the spirit of sostenuto, of sustain, that prevails: writing, playing, and performing keeps them in the game, helping to replenish what age has attenuated. For listeners like my father, music is also a source of resilience. Music had long ago ceased being a matter of cool or fashion, of keeping up. He listened to what he loved, no matter the period. When he told me some detail of his past--hearing Sidney Bechet at a club in Paris when he was in the Army--or when he recommended something to me or, less often, took a recommendation of mine, the pleasure was so evident it seemed almost illicit. When I was in college, he called to tell me that a singer named Alberta Hunter was performing at a club in the Village called the Cookery. I should be sure to go see her, he said, and, as a way of insisting, he sent me a check for twenty dollars to pay the cover charge. Hunter, who was a contemporary of Bessie Smith's, was the Memphis-born daughter of a Pullman porter. As a girl, she ran off to Chicago to sing the blues, and she became friends with Armstrong, Ma Rainey, Sophie Tucker, and King Oliver. She cowrote "Downhearted Blues" with Lovie Austin: Trouble, trouble, I've had it all my days. After Hunter's mother died, in 1954, she spent the next couple of decades working as a registered nurse at a hospital on Roosevelt Island. Now that she had retired from nursing, Hunter decided that she would sing again. My father had led me once more to the blues, to one of the originals, in her last years. Hunter, that night at the Cookery, was bawdy, fearless, magnificently alive. The voice was ragged, but the wear hardly detracted from the feeling. She would go out singing. Years later, at my father's funeral, we set up a boom box and played his favorite music. People left the synagogue to the strains of "Downhearted Blues." Excerpted from Holding the Note: Profiles in Popular Music by David Remnick All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.