Back in the early 1940s, late at night in the clubs of Harlem, a handful of jazz musicians began to experiment with a style that no one had ever heard before. The music was fast, complicated, impossible to play for many...

Buy Now From Amazon

Back in the early 1940s, late at night in the clubs of Harlem, a handful of jazz musicians began to experiment with a style that no one had ever heard before. The music was fast, complicated, impossible to play for many of the older musicians—but it soon became the lingua franca of jazz music. They called it bebop, and as the years went by, it became even more popular. Today it reigns as perhaps the best-loved style of jazz ever created. Ira Gitler conveys the excitement of this musical birth as only someone who was there can. In The Masters of Bebop, Gitler traces the advent of what was a revolution in sound. He profiles the leading players—Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillepie, Max Roach—but also studies the style and music of the first disciples, such as Dexter Gordon and J. J. Johnson, to reveal bebop's pervasive influence throughout American culture. Revised with an updated discography—and with a new chapter covering bebop right up through the end of the twentieth century—The Masters of Bebop is the essential listener's handbook.


  • Orders are despatched from our UK warehouse next working day.
  • Orders are despatched from our UK warehouse next working day.

Similar Products

Swing to Bop: An Oral History of the Transition in Jazz in the 1940sThe History of JazzHow to Listen to JazzJazz Masters Of The 50s (Da Capo paperback)Keeping Time: Readings in Jazz HistoryReading Jazz: A Gathering of Autobiography, Reportage, and Criticism from 1919 to NowWest Coast Jazz: Modern Jazz in California, 1945-1960Jazz Masters of the '40s (Macmillan Jazz Masters Series)