9780316895378
Where Dead Voices Gather share button
Nick Tosches
Genre Biography
Format Paperback
Dimensions 8.50 (w) x 5.50 (h) x 0.76 (d)
Pages 340
Publisher Hachette Book Group
Publication Date August 2002
ISBN 9780316895378
Book ISBN 10 0316895377
About Book

A forgotten singer from the early days of jazz is at the center of this riveting book—a narrative that is part mystery, part biography, part meditation on the meaning and power of music.

Reviews

From Barnes & Noble

Talk about a labor of love: For 20 years, Nick Tosches pillaged libraries and flea markets, searching for details about the life of Emmett Miller (1900-1962), a legendary blackface singer-performer. Beginning with a handful of old vinyl records and a tombstone, the Vanity Fair editor was able to piece together the story of this Georgia minstrel, whose songs prefigured jazz, country, and blues. Half biography and half detective story, Where Dead Voices Gather makes this obscure yodeler a flesh-and-blood person. Readers of Tosches' equally astonishing The Devil and Sonny Liston will not be surprised by his authorial alchemy.

Library Journal

In this truly remarkable book, noted critic and Vanity Fair contributor Tosches (Hellfire) takes on obscure minstrel/country-jazz singer Emmett Miller. Exploring the whole of American popular performance during the first half of the 20th century, Tosches leaps headlong into the dizzying cross-pollinations of the blackface minstrel show, country, blues, jazz, folk, and Tin Pan Alley. The book is as much about the author's search for Miller's place in American popular music as it is about the man who influenced early country great Jimmie Rodgers and who counted Jimmy and Tommy Dorsey as members of his band in the mid-1920s. Grounding his tale in solid scholarship and critical analysis, Tosches is never dry; his voice combines Greil Marcus, Hunter S. Thompson, and the liner notes of Bob Dylan albums. His only misstep is his tendency to overcorrect cited authors with sic. As engrossing as a great mystery novel, this is essential for libraries with a focus on American popular culture and highly recommended for all university and larger public libraries. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 4/15/01.] James E. Perone, Mount Union Coll., Alliance, OH Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Music critic/biographer Tosches (The Devil and Sonny Liston, not reviewed, etc.) pens a densely informative and striking exploration of race, authenticity, and musical lineage. The peg for it all is the author's 20-year obsession with Emmett Miller (1900-62), a white "trick voice" singer from Macon, Georgia, who became briefly prominent with the failing Al G. Field Minstrels troupe, then recorded a series of "yodeling blues" for Okeh Records before fading into obscurity on the Southern grind circuit. Miller's surviving music epitomized the weird 1920s-era intersections between jazz, blues, and country, despite being marginalized by the qualities Tosches finds haunting, such as its allusions to 19th-century minstrel styles and inclusion of bawdy "spoken word" routines that also were part of African-American oral tradition. Tosches alternates between his painstaking documentation of Miller's milieu and wry commentary upon his difficult search (Miller seemingly produced amnesia in everyone who met him) as well as the necessity of such quests in our time of cultural divisiveness. He traces a fascinating portrait of pre-Depression musical ferment, with artists like Miller, Jimmie Rodgers, Cab Calloway, and Al Jolson freely borrowing ideas from one another, and little-recalled individuals like Italian-American guitarist Eddie Lang forging important links despite the music industry's racial segregation. Miller's best recordings (which survived via bootleg) were made in 1927 with "the Georgia Crackers," a powerhouse ensemble including Lang, the Dorsey brothers, and Gene Krupa. Alas, the amiable Miller was evidently a profligate alcoholic, and his commercial prospects "vanished into the abyssbetween two times, that of the vaudeville singer . . . and that of the crooner, in which he was lost." Like James Ellroy, Tosches uses a staccato style to make provocative points, as when examining minstrelstry and its contemporary incarnation, gangsta rap. Yet his search for Emmett Miller, which ends at the singer's Macon tombstone, also has great poignancy, and his explication of the musical veins that run from Miller and Lang to Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash, and Bob Dylan is extremely striking. An assured hand sifting through the cultural ashes.