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  • Book cover of Coltrane
    Ben Ratliff

     · 2007

    A study of jazz saxophonist John Coltrane and his musical development looks for the sources of power in Coltrane's music and examines his important influence and legacy in shaping the course of modern jazz music.

  • Book cover of Every Song Ever
    Ben Ratliff

     · 2016

    What is music in the age of the cloud? Today, we can listen to nearly anything, at any time. It is possible to flit instantly across genres and generations, from 1980s Detroit techno to 1890s Viennese neo-romanticism. This new age of listening brings with it astonishing new possibilities--as well as dangers. In Every Song Ever, the veteran New York Times music critic Ben Ratliff reimagines the very idea of music appreciation for our times. In the age of the cloud, the genre of the recording and the intention of the composer matter less and less. Instead, we can savor our own listening experience more directly, taking stock of qualities like repetition, speed, density, or loudness. The result is a new mode of listening that can lead to unexpected connections. When we listen for slowness, we may detect surprising affinities between the drone metal of Sunn O))), the mixtape manipulations of DJ Screw, and the final works of Shostakovich. And if we listen for more elusive qualities like closeness, we might notice how the tight harmonies of bluegrass vocals illuminate the virtuosic synchrony of John Coltrane's quartet. Encompassing the sounds of five continents and several centuries, Ratliff's book is a definitive field guide to our musical habitat, and a foundation for the new aesthetics our age demands.

  • Book cover of The New York Times Essential Library: Jazz
    Ben Ratliff

     · 2002

    Offers an informed collector's guide to one hundred top recorded works of jazz, profiling each piece in a context of its importance to the development of the form.

  • Book cover of The Jazz Ear
    Ben Ratliff

     · 2008

    Acclaimed music critic Ratliff sits down with jazz greats to discuss recordings by the musicians who have most influenced them. In the process, he skillfully coaxes out a profound understanding of the men and women themselves, the context of their work, and how jazz is created conceptually.

  • Book cover of Every Song Ever
    Ben Ratliff

     · 2017

    The most significant revolution in the recent history of music has to do with listening: it is now possible to listen to nearly anything at any time, to ignore albums, and to instantly flit across genres and generations, from 1980s Detroit techno to 1890s Viennese neo-romanticism. Yet music criticism has historically focused on the musician's intent, not the listener's experience. Every Song Ever is therefore the definitive field guide to listening in an age of glorious, overwhelming abundance. By revealing the essential similarities between wildly different kinds of music, Ben Ratliff shows how we listen to music now, and suggests how we can listen better.

  • Book cover of Run the Song
    Ben Ratliff

     · 2025

    A revelatory exploration of the relationship between music and running by one of our foremost music writers Out the front door, across the street, down the hill, and into Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx. This is how Ben Ratliff’s runs started most days of the week for about a decade. Sometimes listening to music, not always. Then, at the beginning of the pandemic, he began taking notes about what he listened to. He wondered if a body in motion, his body, was helping him to listen better to the motion in music. He runs through the woods, along the Hudson River, and into the lowlands of the Bronx. He encounters newly erected fences for an intended FEMA field hospital, and demonstrations against racial violence. His runs, and the notes that result from them, vary in length just as the songs he listens to do: seventies soul, jazz, hardcore punk, string quartets, Éliane Radigue’s slow-change electronics, Carnatic singing, DJ sets, piano music of all kinds, Sade, Fred Astaire, and Ice Spice. Run the Song is also the story of how a professional critic, frustrated with conventional modes of criticism, finds his way back to a deeper relationship with music. When stumped or preoccupied by a piece of music, Ratliff starts to think that perhaps running can tell him more about what he’s listening to—let’s run it, he’ll say. And with that, the reader in turn is invited to listen alongside one of the great listeners of our day in this wildly inventive and consistently thought-provoking chronicle of a profoundly unsettling time.

  • Book cover of The Wire Primers
    Rob Young

     · 2020

    Since it was founded in 1982, The Wire magazine has covered a vast range of alternative, experimental, underground and non-mainstream music. Now some of that knowledge has been distilled into The Wire Primers: a comprehensive guide to the core recordings of some of the most visionary and inspiring, subversive and radical musicians on the planet, past and present. Each chapter surveys the musical universe of a particular artist, group or genre by way of a contextualizing introduction and a thumbnail guide to the most essential recordings. A massive and eclectic range of music is celebrated and demystified, from rock mavericks such as Captain Beefheart and The Fall; the funk of James Brown and Fela Kuti; the future jazz of Sun Ra and Ornette Coleman; and the experimental compositions of John Cage and Morton Feldman. Genres surveyed and explained include P-funk, musique concrte, turntablism, Brazilian Tropiclia, avant metal and dubstep. The Wire Primers is a vital guide to contemporary sounds, providing an accessible entry point for any reader wanting to dig below the surface of mainstream music.

  • Book cover of Coltrane

    «Este libro es un retrato asombrosamente vívido del proceso creativo, tanto el del artista como el de quienes trabajan bajo su sombra o contra ella. [...] Pasará de mano en mano.» Luc Sante ¿Por qué John Coltrane continúa siendo objeto de piadosa veneración cuarenta años después de su muerte? ¿Qué hay en sus grupos, sus composiciones o sus piezas improvisadas para que tantos músicos y tantos oyentes sigan colgados de esas notas? ¿Cuál fue su papel en la historia del jazz y, más allá, en la de Estados Unidos? ¿Es posible que surja hoy otro Coltrane (es decir, otro mesías) o la pregunta carece de sentido? El prestigioso crítico Ben Ratliff aborda ésas y otras cuestiones recorriendo la trayectoria del saxofonista desde sus primeras actuaciones con una olvidada banda de la marina hasta los discos grabados a las puertas de la muerte, cuando ya lo envolvía un halo de santidad. Durante la década anterior había ido hilvanando una prodigiosa sucesión de hitos (y mitos) musicales en una búsqueda casi religiosa de la perfección. A esos años dedica Ratliff buena parte de su artillería. La segunda parte de este libro contiene otra historia, la del legado e influencia de Coltrane, que se inicia ya a mediados de los cincuenta y se manifiesta en las extremadas reacciones de compañeros, expertos y aficionados. ¿Por qué Coltrane ocupa tanto espacio en la identidad del jazz? Ratliff acomete la respuesta entendiendo que la fuerza de aquella música (fuerza técnica, compositiva, conceptual o sencillamente sonora) sólo es explicable situando el jazz junto a las demás expresiones artísticas dentro de la historia social norteamericana y colocando a Coltrane no sólo entre sus colegas, sino también entre los grandes creadores de su época. Y eso hace. Primeras reseñas «Ben Ratliff resucita lúcidamente una época volátil, a veces cuestionando con agudeza las ideas recibidas, pero prestando siempre atención a las aventuras y desventuras de los músicos.» Geoffrey O’Brien «Un análisis formidable que captura con palabras bien escogidas el carisma de Coltrane, la emoción de su búsqueda y la importancia excepcional de su legado sin rendirse jamás a esas efusiones verbales tan comunes en los libros de jazz.» Phillip Lopate

  • Book cover of Coltrane
  • Book cover of Come si ascolta il jazz. Conversazioni con Wayne Shorter, Pat Metheny, Sonny Rollins, Ornette Coleman, Joshua Redman, Branford Marsalis e altri
    Ben Ratliff

     · 2013

    Non esiste modo migliore per capire un musicista che quello di farlo parlare nel suo stesso linguaggio: la musica. È con questo presupposto cheil critico del New York Times Ben Ratliff ha incontrato quindici fra i maggiori jazzisti contemporanei e li ha invitati a conversare di musica liberamente e disinteressatamente, fuori dalle logiche della promozione discografica o da quelle della confessione biografica. Il risultato è questo libro unico nel suo genere: chiedendo a ciascun artista di scegliere uno o più brani da ascoltare e commentare insieme a lui, Ratliff accompagna i suoi interlocutori in un affascinante viaggio nella musica che è allo stesso tempo esame delle tecniche esecutive, espressione dei sentimenti suscitati dall'ascolto, riconoscimento delle paternità e dei debiti artistici. Che sia Pat Metheny a commentare la tromba di Miles Davis, Sonny Rollins a spiegare il genio di Charlie Parker, o Joshua Redman a confrontarsi con il mostro sacro Coltrane, i musicisti che prendono la parola in questo libro non smettono di ricordarci a ogni pagina che la magia del jazz è sempre lì, a un tiro di stereo dalle nostre orecchie, se soltanto siamo disposti a lasciarcene catturare.