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Danny Barker

    Daniel Barker est un militant et musicien athée américain qui, après 19 ans en tant que prédicateur et compositeur chrétien évangélique, a quitté le christianisme en 1984. Il est depuis devenu une voix importante du mouvement séculier, se concentrant sur la critique de la religion et la défense de la pensée rationnelle. Les écrits de Barker, qui comprennent de nombreux articles et livres, explorent son parcours personnel de la foi à l'incrédulité, défendant une vision du monde fondée sur la raison. Son œuvre vise à encourager les lecteurs à réfléchir au rôle de la religion dans la société et à promouvoir la libre pensée.

    A Life in Jazz
    • A Life in Jazz

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      Jazz buffs have been waiting for Danny Barker's full account of his life in jazz since the 1950s, when Nat Hentoff and Nat Shapiro published Heah Me Talkin' to Ya , an oral history of jazz which drew heavily on Barker's reminiscences. A jazz guitarist, Danny Barker played with many importantNew Orleans bands in the 1920s and then moved to New York to play with swing bands in the 1930s, notably Cab Calloway's band, at a time when several future pioneers of the bop movement were in the band, including Dizzie Gillespie. (It is Barker who made famous the scene when Gillespie and severalcohorts began playing bop during a Calloway band stage show, which produced the angry blast from Calloway, "I won't have any of that Chinese music in my band!") Barker's memoirs brilliantly recreate the jazz world of New Orleans (parades, funerals, brothels, dance halls, and more) and the pioneermusicians of the day. The book is also a knowing account of the big band swing world. It will surely rank as one of the basic documents in jazz history.

      A Life in Jazz