Vietnam Changed the Way This Jazz Man Heard the World

Vietnam Changed the Way This Jazz Man Heard the World

Reading Time: 1 Min.

Henry Threadgill’s memoir unfolds from his maddening wartime experience to his boundary-pushing musical career. Henry Threadgill in 1983.Credit…Anthony Barboza/Getty Images Published Updated May 18, 2023, 10:17 p.m. ET When you purchase an independently reviewed book through our site, we earn an affiliate commission. EASILY SLIP INTO ANOTHER WORLD: A Life in Music , by Henry Threadgill and Brent Hayes Edwards It’s rare to come across a new Vietnam War memoir from a major publisher in 2023. Most were written decades ago, when memories were fresh and wounds still raw. That generation of soldiers has begun to pass away. Henry Threadgill’s “Easily Slip Into Another World” is an unusual entrant in the genre. For one thing, this astringent book is only in part about his war experience. The remainder is about his rebellious childhood in Chicago during the 1950s, his apprenticeship in that city’s pyretic music scene and — later, after the war — his variegated career as a composer, saxophonist and flutist touring the world and becoming, along with Ornette Coleman and Wynton Marsalis, one of the few jazz artists to have won a Pulitzer Prize . There’s more here than an insane war story, in other words. In fact, “Easily Slip Into Another World” is so good a music memoir, in the serious and obstinate manner of those by Miles Davis and Gil Scott-Heron , that it belongs on a high shelf alongside them. But this memoir rises toward, and then falls away from, Threadgill’s war experience. It’s the molten emotional core. Let’s start there. Threadgill enlisted in August 1966, when he was 22. He’d lost his draft deferment because he couldn’t afford to attend Chicago’s American Conservatory of Music full time. He didn’t feel like a soldier. If he volunteered rather than wait to be drafted, he was told, he could continue to play music in the Army. After basic training he was stationed at Fort Riley, in Kansas, in a band that performed at officers’ dances when it wasn’t out on the field playing heroic martial standards to soldiers leaving for combat. The band got good, […]

Click here to view original page at Vietnam Changed the Way This Jazz Man Heard the World

© 2023, wcadmin. All rights reserved, Writers Critique, LLC Unless otherwise noted, all posts remain copyright of their respective authors.

Share the Post:

Related Posts

A note to our visitors

This website has updated its privacy policy in compliance with changes to European Union data protection law, for all members globally. We’ve also updated our Privacy Policy to give you more information about your rights and responsibilities with respect to your privacy and personal information. Please read this to review the updates about which cookies we use and what information we collect on our site. By continuing to use this site, you are agreeing to our updated privacy policy.

small c popup

Let's have a chat

Get in touch.

Help us Grow.

The shortcode is missing a valid Donation Form ID attribute.

Join today – $0 Free

Days :
Hours :
Minutes :
Seconds