Lawrence Gushee is Professor Emeritus at the School of Music, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.. He received the National Medal of Arts in 1986. Lomax, created the Archive of American Folk Song at the Library of Congress and published many anthologies, including American Ballads and Folk Songs and The Folk Songs of North America. Lomax produced the
- Title : Mister Jelly Roll;: The fortunes of Jelly Roll Morton, New Orleans Creole and inventor of jazz
- Author : Alan Lomax
- Rating : 4.70 (382 Vote)
- Publish : 2016-12-15
- Format : Hardcover
- Pages : 318 Pages
- Asin : 0520024028
- Language :
Lawrence Gushee is Professor Emeritus at the School of Music, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.. He received the National Medal of Arts in 1986. Lomax, created the Archive of American Folk Song at the Library of Congress and published many anthologies, including American Ballads and Folk Songs and The Folk Songs of North America. Lomax produced the first albums of American folk song in 1939 and has edited more than a hundred recordings from all parts of the world. Alan Lomax, with his father John AAdventure, suspense, sorrow life affirming choices and love, all embedded in this tale of a young womans journey.Easy to read - I could not put it down.. I was thrilled (especially since it is easier for little hands if you tear them out)! You can draw on the pages, but most of them already have a little art and a connect the dot theme that is super cute.I would recommend "milkshake" (or cream) gel pens to really see your coloringsince the pictures are more brightly or darker colored.If you enjoy adult coloring books or gift books I would highly recommend I Draw On Cats.(Any kitty lover would be thrilled!)(I received an ARC copy in exchange for an honest review)(All images have filters and do not display accurate colors). I am so impressed with this book that I really recommend it to anyone interested in herbal medicine. So, when I had the opportunity to review I Draw on Cats: A Connect-the-Dots Activity Book, I felt like it might beSince its first appearance in 1950 this book has become a classic of jazz literature. Racy, candid and controversial, it is not only the biography of one of the great jazz musicians of all time, it is also the story of a new kind of music that rose out of America's Southland to become the music of the twentieth century.You see that jazz was actually a cultural transmission, as Mr. "You get a fresh idea of what was behind the development of the new music that said so many things to so many people. Lomax puts it, a 'wordless counterpoint of protest and pride.' No one with even the slightest feeling for the subject can afford to miss this book."--"San Francisco Chronicle
No comments:
Post a Comment