duaneiac Posted February 25, 2016 Report Posted February 25, 2016 (edited) On a West Coast Jazz online group I belong to Steve Voce has posted that trumpeter and author John Chilton passed away this morning. I see that Mr. Chilton's Wikipedia entry now confirms this. I have his Who's Who of Jazz as well as his biographies of Coleman Hawkins and Louis Jordan, although I have yet to read the latter. May he Rest In Peace. Edited February 25, 2016 by duaneiac Quote
Big Beat Steve Posted February 25, 2016 Report Posted February 25, 2016 Rest in peace, and thanks for the groundbreaking work at a time when not many others cared. And thanks for holding some very worthwhile jazz and R&B books in stock at your Bloomsbury Book Shop when I shopped there in 1977 and through mail order in the years thereafter. Providede me with some excellent input (and impetus) for my future collecting "career". Quote
BillF Posted February 25, 2016 Report Posted February 25, 2016 Regret I never saw Mr Chilton play, though I have read his biographies of Hawkins and Eldridge, as well as George Melly's Owning Up, which has a great deal about him. Quote
JSngry Posted February 25, 2016 Report Posted February 25, 2016 First encountered him with the Armstrong biography that him and Max Jones did, which for some reason my high school library ordered, never cataloged, and let me keep after graduation. Tax dollars at work, hell yeah! Everything I've read by him since has been informative, entertaining, and enriching. RIP, and nicely played, sir. Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted February 25, 2016 Report Posted February 25, 2016 Nicely played, indeed. Much appreciation here. Quote
HutchFan Posted February 25, 2016 Report Posted February 25, 2016 Sorry to hear of his passing. RIP Quote
jeffcrom Posted February 26, 2016 Report Posted February 26, 2016 His Sidney Bechet: Wizard of Jazz is a near-perfect blend of well-researched biography and informed discussion of Bechet's recordings. And it a tribute to his Who's Who of Jazz that this book of short biographies still holds up well after nearly 60 years. RIP. Quote
Teasing the Korean Posted February 26, 2016 Report Posted February 26, 2016 (edited) RIP. Edited February 26, 2016 by Teasing the Korean Quote
Big Beat Steve Posted February 26, 2016 Report Posted February 26, 2016 14 hours ago, jeffcrom said: And it a tribute to his Who's Who of Jazz that this book of short biographies still holds up well after nearly 60 years. Not quite yet, actually. 45 years, to be exact. The book first appeared in 1970. And updated editions are around (and they did not suffer from this updating IMHO, so what holds up today often is not even 45 years old yet). Quote
Jazzjet Posted February 26, 2016 Report Posted February 26, 2016 20 hours ago, Big Beat Steve said: Rest in peace, and thanks for the groundbreaking work at a time when not many others cared. And thanks for holding some very worthwhile jazz and R&B books in stock at your Bloomsbury Book Shop when I shopped there in 1977 and through mail order in the years thereafter. Providede me with some excellent input (and impetus) for my future collecting "career". John Chilton's bookshop was in the street behind where I used to work and opposite Great Ormond Street hospital. It was a great place to visit. Apart from loads of secondhand jazz and blues books it had tons of back copies of magazines like Jazz Monthly and Jazz Journal. There was a wonderful musty bookstore smell about the place as well. I seem to recall that John's wife (Theresa?) ran the place most of the time. Quote
JohnS Posted February 26, 2016 Report Posted February 26, 2016 Sad new, Our music could do with a few more like him. I cannot recall ever going to the bookshop. I think on one occasion I tried but found it closed. Quote
catesta Posted February 26, 2016 Report Posted February 26, 2016 I was gifted a later version (1985 I think) of Who's Who of Jazz some years back and have always been happy to have it. RIP, Mr. Chilton. Quote
king ubu Posted February 26, 2016 Report Posted February 26, 2016 Hadn't even known he was a musician, but his Hawkins biography is great. Quote
BillF Posted February 26, 2016 Report Posted February 26, 2016 1 hour ago, king ubu said: Hadn't even known he was a musician, but his Hawkins biography is great. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TBFu-zPl7UA Quote
paul secor Posted February 26, 2016 Report Posted February 26, 2016 U.K. Telegraph obituary: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/music/news/john-chilton-grammy-award-winning-jazz-writer-dies/ Quote
jeffcrom Posted February 27, 2016 Report Posted February 27, 2016 11 hours ago, Big Beat Steve said: Not quite yet, actually. 45 years, to be exact. The book first appeared in 1970. And updated editions are around (and they did not suffer from this updating IMHO, so what holds up today often is not even 45 years old yet). Yeah - I was trying to say nearly 50 years. Quote
JSngry Posted February 27, 2016 Report Posted February 27, 2016 Verve says 50, 60, what's the difference. Quote
John L Posted February 27, 2016 Report Posted February 27, 2016 RIP. I like his books quite a bit, and enjoyed seeming him live once in London. Quote
mikeweil Posted February 27, 2016 Report Posted February 27, 2016 I think every serious reading jazz fan has at least one of his books on the shelf, which is quite an accompishment. R.I.P. Quote
sidewinder Posted February 27, 2016 Report Posted February 27, 2016 Never went to the shop but always recall their advert in 'Jazz Journal'. I have a copy of the Hawkins bio and must give it another read. RIP, must have seen him live on at lest one occasion but can't recall the specifics. I don't think it was with George Melly. 18 hours ago, JohnS said: Sad new, Our music could do with a few more like him. I cannot recall ever going to the bookshop. I think on one occasion I tried but found it closed. Yep, I'm in the same category. No excuse really, as I was studying just up the road ! Quote
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