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The Devil's Horn

Michael Segell

$49.95

Paperback

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English
Picador USA
22 August 2006
"The young 160-year history of the saxophone comes to brilliant life in Michael Segell's wonderfully researched, beautifully told ""The Devil's Horn"". Beginning with ""a sound never heard before,"" Segell's portrait follows the iconographic instrument as it is lauded for its sensuality, then outlawed for its influence, and finally credited with changing the face of popular culture. A deeply personal story of one man's love for music-making, a universal story of artistic and political revolution, and a trenchant critique of the global forces that stand in art's way, ""The Devil's Horn"" is music writing at its very finest."

By:  
Imprint:   Picador USA
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 210mm,  Width: 140mm,  Spine: 28mm
Weight:   318g
ISBN:   9780312425579
ISBN 10:   0312425570
Pages:   336
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Michael Segell is an amateur percussionist and saxophone player and a professional music lover. He is the author of Standup Guy, and his writing has appeared in numerous publications, including The New York Times, Rolling Stone, Sports Illustrated, and Esquire, where he wrote the popular column The Male Mind. He has received two National Magazine Award nominations for his work. He lives with his wife and children in New York City and Long Eddy, New York.

Reviews for The Devil's Horn

Would someone please forward Segell the memo that states that books about jazz are supposed to be academic and soporific? . . . [A] freewheeling tribute . . . [with] exuberance that is everywhere to be found. --The New York Times Book Review [A] historical and deeply personal tribute to the saxophone . . . [The Devil's Horn] will reward and surprise readers who may have thought they knew something about the horn simply because they've spent a lifetime listening. --Baltimore Sun Segell has produced a minor miracle: a book on jazz that does not rely on largely unrevealing anecdotal tidbits, hip talk, one-upmanship . . . and dazzling (but superfluous) adjectives. . . . It is humorous, enlightening, instructive, and revealing to a degree that it may forever change your attitude toward the sax. --The Roanoke Times An excellent short course on the saxophone in jazz . . . [A] beguiling story. --Chicago Sun-Times [Segell is] adept at spreading the contagion of his own curiosities. --The News & Observer Would someone please forward Segell the memo that states that books about jazz are supposed to be academic and soporific? . . . [A] freewheeling tribute . . . [with] exuberance that is everywhere to be found. The New York Times Book Review [A] historical and deeply personal tribute to the saxophone . . . [The Devil's Horn] will reward and surprise readers who may have thought they knew something about the horn simply because they've spent a lifetime listening. Baltimore Sun Segell has produced a minor miracle: a book on jazz that does not rely on largely unrevealing anecdotal tidbits, hip talk, one-upmanship . . . and dazzling (but superfluous) adjectives. . . . It is humorous, enlightening, instructive, and revealing to a degree that it may forever change your attitude toward the sax. The Roanoke Times An excellent short course on the saxophone in jazz . . . [A] beguiling story. Chicago Sun-Times [Segell is] adept at spreading the contagion of his own curiosities. The News & Observer Would someone please forward Segell the memo that states that books about jazz are supposed to be academic and soporific? . . . [A] freewheeling tribute . . . [with] exuberance that is everywhere to be found. The New York Times Book Review [A] historical and deeply personal tribute to the saxophone . . . [ The Devil's Horn ] will reward and surprise readers who may have thought they knew something about the horn simply because they've spent a lifetime listening. Baltimore Sun Segell has produced a minor miracle: a book on jazz that does not rely on largely unrevealing anecdotal tidbits, hip talk, one-upmanship . . . and dazzling (but superfluous) adjectives. . . . It is humorous, enlightening, instructive, and revealing to a degree that it may forever change your attitude toward the sax. The Roanoke Times An excellent short course on the saxophone in jazz . . . [A] beguiling story. Chicago Sun-Times [Segell is] adept at spreading the contagion of his own curiosities. The News & Observer Would someone please forward Segell the memo that states that books about jazz are supposed to be academic and soporific? . . . [A] freewheeling tribute . . . [with] exuberance that is everywhere to be found. -- The New York Times Book Review [A] historical and deeply personal tribute to the saxophone . . . [ The Devil's Horn ] will reward and surprise readers who may have thought they knew something about the horn simply because they've spent a lifetime listening. -- Baltimore Sun Segell has produced a minor miracle: a book on jazz that does not rely on largely unrevealing anecdotal tidbits, hip talk, one-upmanship . . . and dazzling (but superfluous) adjectives. . . . It is humorous, enlightening, instructive, and revealing to a degree that it may forever change your attitude toward the sax. -- The Roanoke Times An excellent short course on the saxophone in jazz . . . [A] beguiling story. -- Chicago Sun-Times [Segell is] adept at spreading the contagion of his own curiosities. -- The News & Observer What a splendid tribute Michael Segell has written to that time-bending musical continuum that still holds so many in its thrall. -- San Francisco Chronicle Would someone please forward Segell the memo that states that books about jazz are supposed to be academic and soporific? . . . A freewheeling tribute . . . [with] exuberance that is everywhere to be found. -- The New York Times Book Review [A] historical and deeply personal tribute . . . [ The Devil's Horn ] will reward and surprise readers who may have thought they knew something about the horn simply because they've spent a lifetime listening. -- The Baltimore Sun


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