Ella Fitzgerald: A Biography Of The First Lady Of Jazz

Author(s)

The life of the very private and media-shy Ella Fitzgerald has long been shrouded in a mixture of half-truths and fiction. What emerges in Stuart Nicholson's groundbreaking biography is a remarkable s

Publishers Weekly

For his exhaustive biography, Nicholson ( Jazz: The Modern Resurgence ) draws on written accounts of the legendary singer and on interviews with her childhood friends and musicians who have worked with her; he was unable to arrange to talk with Fitzgerald herself. The result is a thorough, dispassionate account of a career that began in 1935 when, at age 17, the singer first appeared in New York City's Apollo Theater and the Harlem Opera House. Nicholson shows how Fitzgerald was advanced by Milt Gabler at Decca and by promoter Norman Granz; he follows the grueling schedule to which she subjected herself and provides lucid analyses of her style and place in the history of jazz and 20th-century popular music. Although there are accounts here of her continuously unhappy love life, Fitzgerald's personality remains obscure, possibly a reflection of a performer to whom nothing other than singing seems to really matter. Discography by Phil Schaap. Photos not seen by PW. (May)

Name in long format: Ella Fitzgerald: A Biography Of The First Lady Of Jazz
ISBN-10: 0306806428
ISBN-13: 9780306806421
Book pages: 368
Book language: en
Edition: Reprint
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Da Capo Press
Dimensions: Height: 0.86 Inches, Length: 8.98 Inches, Weight: 1.1243575362 Pounds, Width: 6.2 Inches