The Ghetto Swinger: A Berlin Jazz-Legend Remembers

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Description

Jazz in Nazi-era and postwar Germany, as lived by a Jewish prodigy who survived the horrors of Theresienstadt and Auschwitz.

“Coco, it isn’t important what you play. It is important how you play it,” said Louis Armstrong to jazz and swing guitarist Coco Schumann all the way through a break between sessions. Recalling this episode Schumann reminds readers that even in the middle of real-world nightmares, music is alive and musicians experience this crucial freedom and hope, which they may be able to, in turn, give to their audiences. All over his remarkable life, Coco Schumann (b. 1924) would accumulate accolades, including the Order of Merit from the Federal Republic of Germany in 1989 and the prestigious Ehrenpreise Lifetime Achievement Award in 2015, and play with jazz greats Toots Thielemans, Dizzy Gillespie, Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald, and others. But few knew he relied on composing music and performing for live audiences to ease the burden of his wartime memories.

After forty years of silence Schumann’s memoir opened a rare window into the prior to now unknown life of one of Germany’s most renowned musicians, who used to be a member of the vibrant and illegal Berlin club scene, part of the cultural revival of postwar Berlin, and a survivor of Theresienstadt (Terezin) and the horrors of Auschwitz.

Shortlisted for the 2017 A.R.S.C. Awards for Excellence in Historical Research in Jazz.

Includes over 50 historical documents and rare photographs.

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