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Music

When jazz sounds Jewish

The role of Jews as jazz pioneers is often ignored or caricatured. A professor is putting the record straight.

January 12, 2017 11:43
Bennie Goodman the King of Swing

ByMichael Kaminer, Michael Kaminer

4 min read

Its not exactly protest music, but jazz has deep roots as a vehicle for social change. Jazz bands offered some of the 20th centurys brashest experiments in racial integration; jazz songs themselves seduced a narrow-minded America with slyly multicultural influences.  

Jews helped drive that narrative — think Benny Goodman, George Gershwin, the producer Norman Grantz, or Barney Josephson, owner of the ground-breaking Café Society in New York’s Greenwich Village. But the role of Jews as jazz pioneers had often been overlooked, or saw them presented as caricatures like the rapacious club owners Moe and Josh Flatbush in Spike Lee’s 1990 film Mo’ Better Blues.

That was until Cleveland State University Professor Charles Hersch started thinking it about it. Hersch, who’d long studied the effect of the arts on society, had just completed Subversive Sounds, his 2008 history of racial politics, jazz, and their intersection in New Orleans.

“I have a long history of examining music in terms of ethnicity and race, and I just noticed there were a lot of Jewish musicians in the jazz pantheon, and no one had written much about it,” Hersch says. “What does it mean for Jews to be aligned with an art form dominated by African-Americans?”