This book is so addictive!
Living With Music is a jazzy journey starting from it's root at the Minton to the rise of Bebop and the shifts and turns in Jazz scene, with special focus on Charlie Bird Parker, Charlie Christian, Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong. It opens up with a great essay on Ralph's own experience as a Trumpet player and then morphing into a full time writer with Luis Armstrong's records as his jazzy aide de camp.
And as for the musicianship, Ralph argues that a jazz musician (I think any musician for that matter) needs to achieve a "subtle identification between his instrument and his deepest drives" to establish both tonal and playing signature, sort of a "self-determined identity" and he "must be reborn, must find, as it were, his soul".
Finding a "self-identity" is something pivotal for band musicians of any taxonomy, even if you are playing in an extremely "Metal band". Ralph argues that a jazz musician's sole instructors are his/her fellow bandmates and the jamming sessions thus play the roll of a true [sic]academy for a jazz musician.
Here Ralph echoes similar point of views of Miles Davis when it comes to band musicians.
Ralph Ellison's essays, letters and interviews included to this volume praise contemporary jazz musicians like Philly Joe Jones, Luis Armstrong, Jimmy Rushing. It is Interesting to note in these interviews, how Charlie Parker's Bebop totally changed the scene with more focus on instrumentalism than the interactive dance-sing-play nature of early Jazz bands, like that of Duke Ellington.
Readers may also find it really enlightening to see the strong connections between the blues and jazz music and the literary works of that era, especially if the reader is familiar with Ralph's novel "Invisible Man" or "Juneteenth" or that of Richard Wright's "Native Son" or "Black Boy" his autobiography.
Finished reading it twice. Any musician or music enthusiast (not only the Jazz aficionados) should not miss out this book because it’s about living with music, literally. And especially, if you are playing an instrument, in a so called "Band".