THE
JAZZ LOFT PROJECT
Sam Stephenson
Photographs and Tapes of W. Eugene Smith
from 821 Sixth Avenue, 1957-1965
Hardbound,
11" x 9½",
288
pages
Numerous illustrations
2009, Knopf Publishing Group
From the Publisher:
Publisher Marketing In 1957, Eugene Smith,
a thirty-eight-year-old magazine photographer, walked out of his
comfortable settled world-his longtime well-paying job at ' Life'
and the home he shared with his wife and four children in Croton-on-Hudson,
New York-to move into a dilapidated, five-story loft building
at 821 Sixth Avenue (between Twenty-eighth and Twenty-ninth streets)
in New York City's wholesale flower district. Smith was trying
to complete the most ambitious project of his life, a massive
photo-essay on the city of Pittsburgh. 821 Sixth Avenue was a
late-night haunt of musicians, including some of the biggest names
in jazz-Charles Mingus, Zoot Sims, Bill Evans, and Thelonious
Monk among them-and countless fascinating, underground characters.
As his ambitions broke down for his quixotic Pittsburgh opus,
Smith found solace in the chaotic, somnambulistic world of the
loft and its artists. He turned his documentary impulses away
from Pittsburgh and toward his offbeat new surroundings. From
1957 to 1965, Smith exposed 1,447 rolls of film at his loft, making
roughly 40,000 pictures, the largest body of work in his career,
photographing the nocturnal jazz scene as well as life on the
streets of the flower district, as seen from his fourth-floor
window. He wired the building like a surreptitious recording studio
and made 1,740 reels (4,000 hours) of stereo and mono audiotapes,
capturing more than 300 musicians, among them Roy Haynes, Sonny
Rollins, Bill Evans, Roland Kirk, Alice Coltrane, Don Cherry,
and Paul Bley. He recorded, as well, legends such as pianists
Eddie Costa, and Sonny Clark, drummers Ronnie Free and Edgar Bateman,
saxophonist Lin Halliday, bassist Henry Grimes, and multi-instrumentalist
Eddie Listengart. Also dropping in on the nighttime scene were
the likes of Doris Duke, Norman Mailer, Diane Arbus, Robert Frank,
Henri Cartier-Bresson, and Salvador Dali, as well as pimps, prostitutes,
drug addicts, thieves, photography students, local cops, building
inspectors, marijuana dealers, and others. Sam Stephenson discovered
Smith's jazz loft photographs and tapes eleven years ago and has
spent the last seven years cataloging, archiving, selecting, and
editing Smith's materials for this book, as well as writing its
introduction and the text interwoven throughout. W. Eugene Smith's
Jazz Loft Project has been legendary in the worlds of art, photography,
and music for more than forty years, but until the publication
of 'The Jazz Loft Project,' no one had seen Smith's extraordinary
photographs or read any of the firsthand accounts of those who
were there and lived to tell the tale(s) . . .
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