Thelonious Monk: The Life and Times of an American Original
Thelonious Monk: The Life and Times of an American Original book cover

Thelonious Monk: The Life and Times of an American Original

Paperback – Illustrated, November 2, 2010

Price
$14.89
Format
Paperback
Pages
640
Publisher
Free Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1439190463
Dimensions
6 x 1.6 x 9 inches
Weight
1.4 pounds

Description

"Monk’s story, from roots in slavery, to the Great Migration north, to the cultural explosions of the 40s, 50s, and 60s, encapsulates a vivid tableau of twentieth-century American life and music. This biography is, at its best, a fitting tribute to one of America’s most original and lasting creative geniuses." —The Sacramento Book Review "...extraordinary and heroically detailed... I doubt there will be a biography anytime soon that is as textured, thorough and knowing as Kelley's. The 'genius of modern music' has gotten the passionate and compassionate advocate he deserves." — August Kleinzahler, The New York Times Book Review "An omnibus of myth busting." —Ben Ratliff, The New York Times "...a massive and impressive undertaking... Thoroughly researched, meticulously footnoted, and beautifully crafted, Thelonious Monk presents the most complete, most revealing portrait ever assembled of the man known as the high priest of bebop." —Steve Greenlee, The Boston Globe "Every step of Monk's musical journey is teased out in meticulous detail...whether he's charting the highs or lows of Monk's emotional swings, Kelley rarely strays from his central theme of an extraordinary talent pushing against the boundaries of his art." — Publishers Weekly "A wealth of historical context is richly studded with details of Monk's family background and the broader world in which he lived and worked... Likely the most thorough possible illumination of the man behind the legend." — Library Journal "Thelonious Monk was a true original… This affectionate biography fills in the fascinating and heart-wrenching backstory of an artist the world has always longed to know better." — The Christian Science Monitor "Robin D. G. Kelley’s exhaustive, necessary, and as of now definitive [book] offers a Baedeker of sorts…Kelley has created a lush portrait of the private, off-camera Monk, one it would have been difficult to paint without the unprecedented access he had to the Monk family." —David Yaffe, The Nation "This is an authoritative tome that pulls aside, without completely lifting, the shroud of mystery that has long surrounded one of the most enigmatic figures in the history of jazz." —Russ Musto, AllAboutJazz.com "…as complete a picture of this complex, original and enigmatic artist as possible… this very welcome book is certain to be a go-to reference." —Down Beat Magazine "A seminal examination of the man and his music." —Bay State Banner "Kelley hopes to balance Monk's brilliance and historic achievements with his quirks and serious problems (bipolar disorder) to take the true measure of the man. Dedicated readers of jazz history and students of Cold War and Civil Rights Era culture won't be disappointed." — The New Haven Advocate "Robin Kelley's new biography Thelonious Monk: The Life and Times of an American Original is a breath of fresh air among the biographies of our legendary jazz musicians. This book is thorough, detailed, and written with a true affinity for Monk's humaneness and creative musical output. It fills in the missing pieces about the growth of the jazz scene in New York through the forties, fifties, and sixties, detailing each step of Monk's development—who passed through his bands, what gigs he played, and what happened on those scenes. It's an invaluable and close look at the center of the world's most important creative musical developments in those decades: New York City." — Chick Corea, the Grammy-winning composer and pianist " Thelonious Monk: The Life and Times of an American Original is one of the most anticipated books in jazz scholarship, and well worth the wait. Robin D. G. Kelley represents one of this generation's most important voices equipped with the knowledge, passion, and respect for both jazz and jazz musicians required to interpret the many details and nuances of Thelonious Monk's life. This compelling book will both challenge old assumptions and inspire new assessments of the life and legacy one of the world's greatest musicians." —GERI ALLEN, pianist, composer, and Director of the Jazz Studies Department at the University of Pittsburgh "Powerful, enraging, and enduring.... In Robin Kelley's finely grained and surely definitive life and-times study, Thelonious Monk, an American original, has found an original biographer." — DAVID LEVERING LEWIS, biographer of W. E. B. Du Bois and Pulitzer Prize winner "An honest and eloquent treatment of one of our most important artists, Thelonious Monk: The Life and Times of an American Original is a stunning tour de force! It is the most comprehensive treatment of Monk's life to date. Furthermore, in Monk's story, Kelley has found the perfect medium to shed light on a nation's and a people's history and persistent quest for freedom. In so doing he has given us a book that is as bold, brilliant, and beautiful as Monk and his music." — FARAH JASMINE GRIFFIN, author of If You Can't Be Free, Be a Mystery: In Search of Billie Holiday Robin D. G. Kelley teaches History at UCLA and is the author of several books, including Freedom Dreams: The Black Radical Imagination and Hammer and Hoe: Alabama Communists During the Great Depression .

Features & Highlights

  • From the mind of brilliant historian Robin Kelley comes the first full biography of legendary jazz musician Thelonious Monk, including full access to the family's archives, dozens of interviews, and an afterword for Monk’s 2017 centennial.
  • Thelonious Monk
  • is the critically acclaimed, gripping saga of an artist’s struggle to “make it” without compromising his musical vision. It is a story that, like its subject, reflects the tidal ebbs and flows of American history in the twentieth century. To his fans, he was the ultimate hipster; to his detractors, he was temperamental, eccentric, taciturn, or childlike. His angular melodies and dissonant harmonies shook the jazz world to its foundations, ushering in the birth of “bebop” and establishing Monk as one of America’s greatest com­posers. Elegantly written and rich with humor and pathos,
  • Thelonious Monk
  • is the definitive work on modern jazz’s most original composer.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(368)
★★★★
25%
(153)
★★★
15%
(92)
★★
7%
(43)
-7%
(-43)

Most Helpful Reviews

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What can I say?

I have a passion for bios and I'm an old musician to boot. But give me a break. 600 and some pages of 4 point single spaced type and every page I'm told if he sneezed, what clothes he wore, did he take a dump that day, how many minutes he was late and every song on every gig he ever played. Gives new meaning to the phrase "too much information." I think the trick is to skip the first few chapters with the family tree back to Cain and Abel and the history of slavery. Then read a few chapters until your eyes glaze over and you start counting the pages one by one because you might be in an alternate universe. Then skip to the last chapter to make sure he really died. I wasn't conscious of it at first but I think maybe three white musicians were mentioned in the whole book. Best bet: get it at the library, skim it in two nights and forget about it. The story could have been told in 175 pages.
13 people found this helpful
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A Must Read for Jazz fans

Thoroughly enjoying reading this meticulously researched and excellently written book about the great Monk. It's one of those rare times when after finishing a book I say to myself, "OK, now what do I do with the rest of my life? Start reading it again?"

I honestly don't even know how to summarize this efficiently. There is a wealth of information, from American history to details on what Monk wore to his concerts. I will say that if the reader is not a big jazz fan then they may grow frustrated with the amount of detail. However, I love jazz and have for many years so I didn't mind learning about all the band members, concerts and recording sessions.
My only two small issues with this book are that I can't help but wonder if Robin Kelley tries too hard to make the case that Thelonious was not as "weird" as people said he was. At times his attempts to explain Monk's behavior, or try to prove the opposite of what people said about him don't ring true to me.
However, this is a small complaint because one comes away from this book seeing Thelonious Monk for the brilliant, troubled, decent man he was. My respect and admiration for him grew immensely after reading this book.
Kelley does an excellent job relaying Monk's great sense of humor. I laughed out loud more than once over the things he did and said, and still laugh even now when I think about them.
Also, while I believe that Kelley provides the most thorough to date profile of Nellie Monk, I am left with the nagging feeling that her story was still left incomplete. Her sacrifices and struggles were big, and she probably deserves a book of her own.
Finally, I appreciate that Kelley included in this biography the mistreatment of Blacks in America. There is no way Monk's story can be told without this important aspect. I was left at times feeling absolute fury at his mistreatment by police and others, and reminded (yet again) at the injustice so many Americans experience at the hands of others no matter how brilliant and accomplished they are.

I have a lot of admiration for the amount of research Robin Kelley put into this book, it is an impressive accomplishment, and Thelonious Monk definitely deserves this much attention and respect
12 people found this helpful
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Remarkable

This remarkable book comprises virtually all of Monk's compositions, performances, friendships, activities over a period of 35 years.

It is a book you will finish and repeatedly pick up, looking for a passage you liked, a passage you remembered, a passage you forgot about and then remembered.

It is the ideal coffee table book, never losing its freshness.
7 people found this helpful
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Excellent book. Detailed beginnings of how Monk changed Jazz

To counter what one reviewer here said about this book being on the "dry" side I had to put in my opinion. This is a great book for people who love Jazz. Especially about one of the great innovators of Jazz and his great contributions to this timeless Art form. The book is a biography so it will start you with the beginnings of the family of Thelonious Monk.
Great writing. The author leaves little out about the life of this great musician. The author even writes about the critics of Monk and what they thought about him and his very unique style of Jazz.
You will not be disappointed. As you read you will be transported back in time to witness the life history of Thelonious Monk. Kudos to the writer and his great biography about a great African American and his music.
3 people found this helpful
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Crepuscule for Nellie

A very serious historically accurate portrait of Thelonius Monk and the world he lived in. The book is informative but drily written. The feeling is academic.
2 people found this helpful
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AMAZING

This book is amazing -
I read many-a-musician bios -L tristano, J. Cash, The Beatles, J Morrison, Trane, Miles, C Brown, D Ellington, and MANY more . . . THIS book, though, is so thoroughly cited with legit sources!! It's amazing!! Very little author-opinion, which I find AMAZING!
Well written, LONG!!, about a great musician, talks about a bunch of stuff i've never heard about him (and Im a little fanatical about him)

Great Read
2 people found this helpful
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Brilliant Biography of A True American Original

There will never be a better book about this unique genius. One of the best biographies I have ever read. Long but impossible to put down.

You can find a great interview of the author at NPR’s Fresh Air Archives in which he discusses Monk and this book.

The only quibble: he (1) repeatedly downplays Monk’s eccentricities, largely blaming the media (everyone’s favorite villain these days) for creating “myths” about him (see page 417) while (2) filling his book with example after example of what can only be described as extremely erratic and frequently bizarre behavior. I doubt, for example, that the media deluded his neighbors at Lincoln Towers into delivering a “flood of complaints” regarding “the noise and Monk’s erratic behavior” (see page 419). It’s part of who Monk was - albeit only one part of an endlessly interesting and complex human being.

But to return to where I began: if you love jazz, if you love music, if you love 20th century American history and culture, if you want to learn more about race in America, and, not least, if you love Monk, you owe it to yourself to read this book. It is a masterpiece.
1 people found this helpful
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It's not just a biography.

Besides a very comprehensive biography on a legendary character, it also is a study on Black culture, racial segregation.
It shows to new generations that the more the things change, the more they stay the same.
Black people, no matter how important to music, arts, sports or politics, they have always been second class citizens in USA and that hasn't changed a bit for centuries.
Riots, police brutality, over and over again ....
1 people found this helpful
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I Love, Thelonious Monk

I've loved, Thelonious Monk's music and swagger for years. There were times when I listened to his music covered by someone else and wasn't aware that the song I was listening to was an original Monk tune.

When I learned of his documentary, ''Straight, No Chaser'', I couldn't wait to watch and learn. Watching the documentary, just made me love and admire him even more. However, I was still a bit hungry for some knowledge concerning the Monk. This book gave me great insight into the life of a great man, who was born to be the jazz great he was.

I only give this book a four star rating, because I agree with some earlier reviewers when they write there were times when it seemed as if the author was just writing things down to add pages to the book, for what ever reasons. All in all, it's a great book.
1 people found this helpful
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Under The Funny Hats, The Real Man We Call Monk.

I read this book last year, and from this very large, very detailed book, there's one story that still sticks out in my mind.

It comes from somewhere in the middle of the book, during the 1940s I believe. Monk and his friends were walking around NYC, and they would have to carefully step over electrified rail lines. While everyone would slow down, stop talking, concentrate and step gingerly over the high voltage tracks, Monk wouldn't miss a beat. It was as if Monk was so physically in sync with his environment that he didn't have to be thoughtful about the danger. He just walked normally, and all was well.

When I read that passage, which had nothing directly to do with music, I thought, 'Now that must be the essence of Monk!' I know this sounds irrational, but I've felt from his music--and now from this book--that there was just this bit of magic that surrounded this man. Robin Kelley does his best using exhaustive and historically rich research to strip away the enigmatic mystique of Monk to reveal the real man in flesh and blood. But that real man had an amazing gift. He seemed to be physically 'in touch' with those keys, those rhythms and those electric tracks that he skipped over. It seems he had a confidence in his own being--I wonder if he ever made a mistake?

If you enjoy Monk, you'll love this book. I loved this book. As a buyer, you should be aware that this book is written by an academic historian. So, what you'll get is several hundred pages of true Monk, well researched and cited. What may be lacking is a strong narrative element. I can't say this was an intense page-turner and it took me a while to finish this book. But that's okay--maybe because this book lacks hype, we can respect the words on the page as being true. This is the real Monk. Everyone else likes to perpetuate the strangeness of his story--but not Robin Kelley. This is the real Monk.
1 people found this helpful