Playing for the Benefit of the Band

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New Orleans Music Culture

Lee Friedlander

View Inside Format: HC - Paper over Board
Price: $60.00
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Lee Friedlander (b. 1934) first visited the birthplace of jazz in 1957, and immediately set about photographing the aging pioneers of the art form. His love of the music and the people of New Orleans drew him back to the city, and the relationships he formed over time gave him intimate access to a scene that forged one of America’s most original artistic traditions. A revised and expanded edition of his 1992 monograph The Jazz People of New Orleans, Playing for the Benefit of the Band features over 200 photographs taken by Friedlander between 1957 and 1982, many of which are published here for the first time. Storied figures such as Duke Ellington and Mahalia Jackson have been captured by Friedlander’s disarming lens, and Sweet Emma Barrett, Sister Gertrude Morgan, Johnny St. Cyr, and other luminaries are seen in their homes and the back rooms in which they gathered to play. Also included are photographs of the city’s second-line parades, whose jubilant dancing has long been a defining aspect of New Orleans jazz culture. 



Distributed for the Yale University Art Gallery
Lee Friedlander is a photographer based in Rockland County, New York.
 
ISBN: 9780300204407
Publication Date: March 11, 2014
Publishing Partner: Distributed for the Yale University Art Gallery
207 pages, 11 x 9 5/8
202 tritone illus.