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Florence Mills: Harlem Jazz Queen
By Bill Egan
Reviews
Bill Egan collects data
carefully and is excellent in analyzing Mills' impact on
the culture and her central role in black show business
as it matured....Egan's book well conveys Mills'
charismatic power....well researched and well written,
useful to anyone with any interest in American music and
culture.
—September 2006, THE
MISSISSIPPI RAG
Bill Egan's excellent new biography Florence Mills:
Harlem Jazz Queen brings this crucial figure back
to life, showing her important role in jazz and indeed
African-American history....Egan skillfully interweaves
Mills' personal journey with historical background,
showing the vitality and rough edges in this rich period
of early jazz....thanks goodness for Egan, whose ten
years of meticulous, tenacious research has at last
given Mills a proper biography....the book's rich
selection of photographs shows Mills shining with a
vitality that's inspiring even eight decades after her
death.
—ALL ABOUT JAZZ
"This is undeniably the best book on jazz I have ever
read."
—THE JAZZ GAZETTE
Recommended.
—Max Rodriguez, QBR THE
BLACK BOOK REVIEW
Elegantly written and illustrated, this fascinating
volume, ten years in the making, is a worthy addition to
Scarecrow's 'Studies in Jazz' series and a fine read at
that.
—JAZZ UK MAGAZINE
I enjoyed Florence Mills: Harlem Jazz Queen, by
Bill Egan. It's an exhaustively thorough biography of a
woman who was arguably the first international African
American female star of the entertainment world....Mills
is largely forgotten today, but Mr. Egan's affectionate
and scholarly and immensely entertaining biography
should correct that. His book is a monument not only to
Mills' memory, but to the history of popular theatre as
it matured via jazz from vaudeville to Broadway.
—Eric Washington,
National Public Radio, Summer Reading: The Listeners
Choose
The book is methodically researched and carefully
documented, using primary source material that has only
recently become available; the latter includes numerous
interviews with Mills and her husband. A fine addition
to the "Studies in Jazz" series, this well-written
biography provides rich insights into an important
figure in American music. Recommended.
—CHOICE
This well written and comprehensive biography will be an
invaluable reference as well as paying tribute to an
extraordinary performer.
—THE IRISH ECHO
Florence Mills, who died
tragically young in 1927, was undoubtedly the most
influential female black entertainer of her day...Bill
Egan's deeply rewarding book reflects his 10 years work
by taking us through her life and career in meticulous
detail...organised with clarity in an easy
straightforward style.
—THE JAZZ RAG
D unique biography of the African American entertainer
of the 1920s from childhood to her death at age 31.
—THE BOOKWATCH
As the first black female international superstar, jazz
singer Florence Mills (1896-1927) changed the nature of
black entertainment and opened doors for generations of
performers. This text considers her influence on some
important aspects of jazz singing and describes her
connections with Duke Ellington. Independent scholar
Egan concludes by examining Mills' association with
classical music through composers William Grant Still
and Constant Lambert.
—REFERENCE & RESEARCH
BOOK NEWS
Welcome addition to the jazz canon...Mills' artistic
contributions come to life again in Bill Egan's
prose....documenting this entertainer par excellence. .
. . Egan also provides the reader with an always
important historical context.
—ELLINGTONIA
By dint of dedicated and meticulous research,
Bill Egan has managed to almost bring his subject back to
life. She emerges from these pages not as a relic from
the past but as a surprisingly contemporary and fully
fledged human being, a woman not only of great beauty,
charm and talent, but also of remarkable intelligence
and humanity.
—Dan Morgenstern,
Director, Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University
Bill Egan has
created a first-rate biography, researched with passion,
scholarly detail and clear commitment to the
documentation of jazz artistry and culture.
—Bill Banfield,
Director, American Cultural Studies/Jazz, University of
St. Thomas
Suffice it to say that there are few individuals who
have ever heard of Florence Mills, and that includes
some resolute jazz enthusiasts. But through much
persistence Bill Egan has changed that and has
illuminated our awareness of this entertainment
legend....Harlem Jazz Queen explores the
association between Florence and the early beginnings of
jazz and ragtime, her keen intelligence and strong
social conscience, and her phenomenal success as the
first black international female superstar. It also
documents her association with classical music with
noted composers William Grant Still and Constant
Lambert. This is a history that was too long coming, but
one that will captivate and enlighten readers.
—THE RAWSISTAZ REVIEWERS
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