19.2 Evidence Monk PDF
19.2 Evidence Monk PDF
19.2 Evidence Monk PDF
KRIN GABBARD
For those familiar with Thelonious Monk only through recordings, the
experience of first seeing him perform on film can be startling. The out-
rageous hats, the splayed fingers, the sucked-in cheeks, the spastic danc-
ing-all of it suggests a character with a story that goes well beyond the
music. Yet for many years, Monk has been consistently presented as an
inscrutable figure who could only be known through his music.' At least
one filmmaker simply gave up trying to make sense of his puzzling exte-
rior: when Bert Stem filmed the 1958 Newport Jazz Festival for Jazz on a
Summer's Day (1958), he kept cutting away to shots of yacht races during
the pianist's performance of "Blue Monk"; Monk is onscreen for less than
thirty seconds. More ambitious filmmakers have extended a more search-
ing gaze in three documentaries that provide strikingly different
approaches to how Monk might be understood. The title of Matthew
Seig's 1991 documentary is itself significant; Thelonious Monk: American
Composer presents a dedicated artist and family man who created a spir-
KRIN GABBARDis professor of comparative literature at the State University of New York,
Stony Brook. He is the author of Jammin' at the Margins: Jazz and the American Cinema
(University of Chicago Press, 1996) and the editor of Jazz among the Discourses (Duke
University Press, 1995) and Representing Jazz (Duke University Press, 1995).
208 BMR Journal
and vice versa becomes more complicated. For one thing, jazz archives
are not nearly as full as archives for the Civil War and baseball, to pick
two examples from Ken Bums' mammoth portfolio. (Bums' anticipated
multipart series on jazz promises to provide a revealing comparison to
his programs on less-controversial subjects that lend themselves more
easily to documentary treatment.) Jazz filmmakers often have to impro-
vise with a limited amount of stock footage, stills, and interviews. The
Cotton Club Dancers, filmed for Black and Tan, Dudley Murphy's 1929
film with Duke Ellington, appear again and again in films that make ref-
erence to the Jazz Age. Throw in some well-chosen recordings from the
period, add a few interviews with survivors and/or journalists, and the
result is your generic documentary about Harlem, jazz, or the Jazz Age.
The segment on the 1920sin Ric Burns' ten-hour Nau York: A Documentary
Film, shown on PBS in November 1999, is only the most recent example
of this practice.
Attempts to yield the "truth about black subjects are further compli-
cated by a technology that was designed by and for white people. As the
African-American director and cinematographer Ernest Dickerson has
pointed out, white filmmakers assume that they have the proper lighting
if white faces show up clearly in the frame, often at the expense of clari-
ty for the black faces (Dyer 1997, 98).3With the "standard" technology
and technicians, black subjects are problematic from the outset. Clint
Eastwood's Bird (1988), with cinematography by Jack N. Green, offers a
telling example of how mainstream cinema finds visual metaphors for
the constructed inscrutability of black Americans. As I have argued else-
where (Gabbard 1996, 88-90), the irrational behavior of Charlie Parker
(played Forest Whitaker) in Bird must be clarified for the audience by
white characterssuch as Parker's sideman Red Rodney and his common-
law wife Chan Richardson. For example, when the institutionalized
Parker attacks a white inmate for no apparent reason, the audience must
wait for Richardson to explain to a psychiatrist that Parker has given up
drugs and alcohol and thus needs to feel something, even if it is the pain
of a fight. The dark, impenetrable surface of Parker/Whitaker is made all
the more opaque by lighting and camera work that keeps him almost
constantly in the shadow^.^
But as jazz scholars know, many of the most important black artists are
3. Dickerson was cinematographer on all of Spike Lee's films from She's Gotta Have It
(1986) through Malcolm X (1992).He has also directed Juice (1992), Surviving the Game (1994),
and Bulletproof (1996).
4. Paul Smith (1993,241) compares the lighting of Eastwood's body in many of his films
to the lighting afforded Whitaker in Bird: the way that Parker/Whitaker signifies "deca-
dence and dissolution" bears a significant relationship to "the ways in which Eastwood's
own body both represents and signifies whiteness."
210 BMR Journal
of Bird Lives is a "black power hero" consistent with the racial politics of
the early 1970s. More important, Gennari shows how Russell was
obsessed by the gap between the brilliance of Parker's music and the
wretchedness of his personal life. (Gennari quotes Ralph Ellison 11964,
2291, who characterized Parker as "one whose friends had no need for an
enemy, and whose enemies had no difficulty in justifying their hate.")
Russell was never able to bridge this gap except by falling back on read-
ily available discursive practices of the two eras in which he was writing.
Stanley Crouch (1997), who is writing his own biography of Charlie
Parker, has stated that the relationship between Parker the man and
Parker the musician is mysterious to him. He quotes pianist Lennie
Tristano, who said that Bird would have been a brilliant musician if he
had been born in China hundreds of years ago. I doubt that many jazz
scholars would agree with Crouch's assertion that the life experience of
the musician does not necessarily shed light on the music. I recommend
Mark Tucker's biography of the young Duke Ellington (1991), Robert
O'Meally's book on Billie Holiday (1991), and Scott DeVeaux's work on
Coleman Hawkins and Howard McGhee (1997), exemplary texts that
show how an artist's music and life interrelate.Documentary filmmakers
have also sought this integration in biographical accounts of artists such
as Parker or Monk. For better or worse, however, the filmmakers fall back
on well-established discourses that have long been available to jazz biog-
raphers.
5. The intention was probably to make Monk's music less threatening and obscure by
associating him with the revered and popular Basie, who also played piano in a spare, per-
212 BMR Journal
In Seig's film, Monk's music is linked with great predecessors from the
outset. We are told that James P. Johnson lived in Monk's childhood
neighborhood and was an inspirational figure to him. Duke Ellington
and Coleman Hawkins, two of the most celebrated artists in the jazz
canon, appear in still photos with Monk and are held up as key influences
on the younger musician. Monk's work at the Five Spot with John
Coltrane in 1957 is meant to show that the pianist had a major effect on
the next generation of geniuses, as the earlier geniuses had inspired him.
Just as the Virgil of T. S. Eliot's "What Is a Classic?" (1944) looks back-
ward to Homer and forward to Dante, Monk is an essential link in a chain
of great musicians, his art inconceivable without them.
Seig's treatment of Monk is consistently reverential. In one of several
appearances, Monk's son, T. S. Monk Jr., speaks of a strong tradition of
education, religion, and respect for elders that formed part of his father's
upbringing and made him a serious artist. We see footage of Monk walk-
ing gracefully past the camera, pausing patiently to indulge the questions
of a reporter. The dominant "authenticating voicesu6throughout the film
are those of Randy Weston and Billy Taylor. Weston is the voice of jazz
authenticity, speaking eloquently of the spirituality in Monk's music and
the values it embodies. Taylor is the articulate intellectual who designates
Monk as a unique artist and a central figure in the history of jazz.' As
with the symbolic appropriation of Basie in "The Sound of Jazz,"
moments in Seig's film attempt to domesticate the music, insisting that
Monk was much more in the mainstream than some have supposed.
Footage of Monk playing the old pop song "Just a Gigolo" is offered as
evidence.
Not until Seig's sixty-minute film is half over does the narrative turn to
conflicts in Monk's life and describe his arrest for possession of drugs.
Taylor tells the camera that the suspension of Monk's cabaret card was a
racist act: "Too many black people [in New York] were working down-
town." T. S. Monk, however, is more reassuring, reminiscing about his
cussive style. Nevertheless, the placement of Basie did not please Monk. He later com-
plained to his personal manager, Harry Colomby, that Basie was "looking at" him while he
was playing. According to Colomby, Monk eventually vowed that "the next time he plays
somewhere I'm going to look at him." (Not surprisingly, this information is not in Seig's film
but in Zwerin's.)
6. I have borrowed this term from William Kenney (1991), who applies it both to whites
who edited and wrote introductions to slave narratives in premodern eras as well as to
Rudy Vallee, who wrote a preface to Louis Armstrong's first autobiography.
7. Orrin Keepnews, who produced the many recordings Monk made for the Riverside
label in the 1950s and 1960s, is also a talking head in Seig's film, but he is called on more to
address the specifics of Monk's life than to speak to the larger significance of the man and
his music.
Gabbard Evidence: Monk as Documentary Subject 213
father playing "Mr. Mom" while Nellie Monk supported the family dur-
ing the years that her husband was severely restricted in his ability to
work in New York clubs.We hear that Monk used the time to write music
and play games with his two children. Mention of the family's financial
problems serves as a cue to introduce Baroness Pannonica "Nica" de
Koenigswarter, the wealthy European jazz enthusiast who befriended
and gave financial support to Monk, Parker, and other musicians in New
York. Orrin Keepnews compares her to a medieval patron of the arts, and
Weston praises her for recognizing Monk's genius. There is no discussion
of her personal relations with Monk. After less than a minute of screen
time, the baroness is never mentioned again.
Drummer Ben Riley appears in the film shortly after the halfway mark
and recalls the strange circumstances under which he suddenly became a
member of the band during what he thought was a brief job at a record-
ing session. Although, Riley says, Monk never once spoke to him during
the session, Monk turned to Riley at the end and astonished him by
telling him to get his passport ready because "We're leaving on Friday."
But even this incident appears to show how tightly Monk focused on his
music to the exclusion of mundane affairs. Riley also explains that
Monk's dancing was his way of enjoying the music while his sidemen
performed. According to Riley, Monk always knew exactly when it was
time to return to the piano no matter how involved he became with his
dancing.
Throughout Seig's program, there is no mention of Monk's affection for
unusual hats, although we see many of them. Weston refers to his lurch-
ing dance style as "ballet." The program winds down with a few state-
ments on Monk's refusal to play during his last years. Weston says that
Monk should have lived in a place where an artist's needs were com-
pletely fulfilled, but because he never had such a place, he simply gave
up: "I felt spiritually that he just shut the door." In order to further
emphasize Monk's role in a thriving tradition, the penultimate moments
of the program are devoted to the music of Sphere, a quartet consisting of
two former Monk sidemen (CharlieRouse and Ben Riley), plus two musi-
cians who had never worked with Monk (Kenny Barron and Buster
Williams).The group began its career by recording only tunes by Monk,
who died--coincidentally and poignantly-on the group's first day in
the recording studio. The program ends with stirring video footage of
Monk playing "Oska T."
The creation of a jazz canon with a list of great artists in a coherent tra-
dition has been a necessary step in the growth of jazz studies as a legiti-
mate discipline (Gabbard 1995).And as DeVeaux (1991)has argued, it is
probably unfair to deconstruct a canonical view of jazz history so soon
214 BMR Journal
8. The recording session in fact took place in December 1967, after Monk's tour of
European cities in October and November of 1967.
9. The scene at the recording session is difficult to follow.The editing does not make clear
how much time has elapsed between the various segments of the footage, and Monk's
speech is indistinct. Teo Macero seems to be mocking Monk at the same time that he goes
out of his way to be enthusiastic about his presence in the studio. Commenting on an earli-
er draft of this article as it was prepared for publication, editor Mark Tucker suggested that
the presence of the camera in the studio transforms the two into something of a comedy
team: the sly Monk with his sardonic grin and the broadly slapstick Macero with his des-
perate attempts at being hip and funny. Ultimately, the sequence seems designed to reveal
the power struggle between the musician and the producer as well as the demands that the
recording industry awkwardly imposed on an artist who was both a serious musician and
an eccentric personality.
216 BMR Journal
travel so that her husband can be free to concentrate on his music. But
even Nellie is presented as somewhat eccentric when Bob Jones, the
band's road manager, reports that she brought back empty Coke bottles
in her suitcase so that she could redeem them for the deposit.
In addition to Colomby, the most favored witness in Zwerin's footage
is Charlie Rouse, who spent many years playing tenor saxophone in
Monk's groups. In contrast to Randy Weston and Billy Taylor in Seig's
film, Colomby and Rouse speak more openly of a Monk who was diffi-
cult and enigmatic. Rouse is not a natural raconteur like Weston, but his
terse comments tend to be more revealing than the grand statements that
Weston makes in Thelonious Monk: American Composer.
Zwerin begins her film by showing Monk dancing and spinning while
the other members of the quartet perform "Evidence." When his time to
solo comes, Monk runs to the piano and begins playing with great ani-
mation, perspiring profusely, pounding his foot, and bouncing on the
piano bench, still very much the strange figure who was spinning and
cavorting a few seconds earlier. After the opening performance footage,
Monk speaks, something he does in only one brief scene in Seig's film.
Bob Jones reads from an encyclopedia that gives Monk's vital statistics.
When Jones says, "It appears that you're famous, Thelonious," the pianist
mutters, "What does that mean?" Jones tells him that the book also lists
popes and presidents, to which Monk replies, "I'm famous. Ain't that a
bitch?"
The placing of Monk in a great tradition, which is the principal goal of
Seig's film, is handled with much greater dispatch by Zwerin. After the
introductory performance footage and the conversation about fame with
Jones, the voice-over narration of Samuel E. Wright is heard for less than
five minutes, touching on Monk's childhood, his connections to James P.
Johnson and jazz history, his apprenticeship with Coleman Hawkins, and
his role in the birth of bebop. When Rouse tells the camera that many of
Monk's compositions have become classics, the statement is confirmed
by footage of Tommy Flanagan and Barry Harris playing a two-piano
version of "Well, You Needn't." In this ninety-minute documentary,
Monk's troubles are introduced early: the arrest for drugs and the loss of
the cabaret card are mentioned before the first fifteen minutes have
elapsed. In the next few minutes, Colomby talks about Monk's gig at the
Five Spot with Coltrane, and the history lesson is effectively over. We
then see black-and-white footage of Monk spinning around while Nica
sits on a set of stairs in the background, chatting with someone off-cam-
era. Finished with his spins, Monk looks at the camera and says,
"Someone else did that, they'd put 'em in a strait jacket. People say, 'Oh,
that Thelonious Monk. He's crazy."' Hearing applause somewhere off
Gabbard . Evidence: Monk as Documentary Subject
camera, Monk then bows slightly and says, "Thank you." The rest of the
film features a good deal of performance footage, but Monk's eccentrici-
ties and psychological problems are consistently in the foreground.
Most of the black-and-white footage that dominates Zwerin's
Thelonious Monk: Straight No Chaser was shot by Christian and Michael
Blackwood in 1967 and 1968 for a Monk documentary that was never
completed. Co-producer Bruce Ricker first located the footage and dis-
covered that it was in excellent condition. He and Zwerin brought it to
the attention of Clint Eastwood, who bankrolled the film and served as
its executive producer. Although portions of Zwerin's film are compati-
ble with the canonizing tendencies in recent jazz writing, most of it
derives from the familiar narrative of the revolutionary jazz artist laid
low by prejudice, controlled substances, and an audience of philistines.
Dorothy Baker can probably take the lion's share of credit for first find-
ing the proper balance of pathos and tragedy in the life of a neglected jazz
artist. The inspiration for Baker's novel, Young Man with a Horn (1938),
was the white trumpeter Bix Beiderbecke, who drank himself to death in
1931, but the same narrative has dominated accounts of the lives of
Holiday, Parker, Young, and others.1° The jazz documentaries of Seig,
Toby Byron, Gary Giddins, and their collaborators would not be so relent-
lessly positive if they were not responding to this older narrative.
Designed for the high-culture aesthetics of Bravo and PBS, the docu-
mentaries of Seig and the others inevitably celebrate jazz as a great
American art form. Charlotte Zwerin, by contrast, was working in the tra-
dition of independent cinema with its refusal to be slick, demure, or self-
congratulatory. She is not afraid, for example, to show us Monk when he
is angry, childlike, and even incoherent. Straight No Chaser may be most
disturbing when it chronicles Monk's mental illness. The psychologist
Martin Margulis (1996) quotes T. S. Monk, who said that doctors wanted
to administer electroconvulsive therapy to his father but that the family
would not give permission. Although the psychiatric reports on Monk
have never been made public, Gourse (1997,117) interviewed a psychia-
trist who observed Monk for a month but found no convincing evidence
of either manic depression or schizophrenia. Gourse reports that several
authorities suggested that Monk may simply have taken too many drugs,
only some of them by design. On at least one occasion, Monk was given
LSD without his knowledge, and Timothy Leary may have shared peyote
with him in the early 1960s (120). Gourse also quotes a doctor who
10.Russell's Bird Lives (1973) is an excellent example of the romantic narrative of the self-
destructive black genius suffering from exploitation and the ignorance of audiences. In cin-
ema, a similar course is taken by director Sidney J. Furie in Lady Sings the Blues (1972) and
by Bertrand Tavernier in Round Midnight (1986).Laurent de Wilde (1997) appropriates the
same discourse to explain Monk's refusal to play during the last years of his life.
218 BMR Journal
believes that Monk was misdiagnosed and probably suffered brain dam-
age from various drugs administered to him during his several periods of
hospitalization (278).
Speaking to Zwerin's camera about his father's episodes, T. S. Monk
says, "He would generally close up, introvert, and then he would get
excited. And he may . . . pace for four days, or something like that. Then
eventually he would get exhausted." For the Monk family, these episodes
must have been heartbreaking and financially devastating.
But romantic myths of mental illness are also available to anyone wish-
ing to tell Monk's story in a different fashion. Christian Blackwood began
filming Monk the same year as the release of Frederick Wiseman's extra-
ordinary documentary Titicut Follies (1967),which was shot inside a state
mental hospital in Massachusetts. The mid-1960s was a period of extreme
reaction against the psychiatric profession, dramatically reversing a peri-
od of largely uncritical acceptance of Freud and the industry that grew up
around his work." The message of Wiseman's film about life inside a
mental hospital is that the keepers are as crazy as the patients.12Although
Wiseman did not exactly romanticize mental illness, much of the popular
entertainment of the mid- to late-1960s did-for example, books such as
R. D. Laing's Sanity, Madness, and the Family (1964), and Ken Kesey's One
Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1962) and films such as King of Hearts (1966)
and A Fine Madness (1966). To one degree or another, Christian
Blackwood undoubtedly succumbed to this revisionist view of mental ill-
ness as he pursued Monk. In this context, the Monk of Blackwood's
black-and-white footage is a free-spirited eccentric whose music is a nat-
ural expression of what the psychiatric establishment might call mental
illness. In 1967, it was not just the jazz cognoscenti who would have
regarded Monk's behavior as something other than insanity.
Zwerin, who both directed and edited Straight No Chaser, picked and
chose among the many hours of Blackwood's footage. On some level, she
too was fascinated by Monk's strange behavior and saw it primarily as
part of a complicated artist's temperament. By 1988, however, American
culture had a much less romantic view of mental illness. Zwerin has tried
to place Monk's madness in a larger context, in which the beauty of the
music tends to mitigate if not justify his weird deportment. For example,
she included a scene in which Monk lies in a hotel bed trying to order
11. After a period in the late 1950s and early 1960s, when Hollywood presented highly
sympathetic portrayals of psychiatrists and other mental health professionals in at least
twenty-five feature films, the industry dramatically changed its practices and began por-
traying psychiatrists as unprofessional, incompetent, and/or vindictive (see Gabbard and
Gabbard 1987).
12. For an excellent study of Wiseman's work, see Grant (1992).
Gabbard Evidence: Monk as Documentary Subject 219
either of the two master narratives that drive the films of Seig and
Zwerin. She focuses instead on the stories of several musicians and what
happened when they arrived one summer morning to have their picture
taken. The resulting photograph, captured by Art Kane for Esquire maga-
zine, has become a unique document in the history of jazz. Although
Bach's film devotes a few moments to the authenticating voice of Nat
Hentoff (perhaps because Matthew Seig served as co-producer), the jazz
artists are usually portrayed not so much as genius composer/musicians
but as tricksters. As Burton Peretti (1995) has observed, jazz artists, when
allowed to speak for themselves, are often fond of spinning tales about
how they resourcefully overcame danger and humiliation. Others just
seem to love a good story. Milt Hinton, Dizzy Gillespie, Benny Golson,
Eddie Locke, and Johnny Griffin all have moments of screen time in
which they display great wit and comic timing. With Bach directing and
Susan Peehl editing A Great Day in Harlem, even the dour Hank Jones
becomes a jokester, pointing out who in the photograph has or has not
put on weight since 1958.
Monk probably receives more attention than any other artist in the
photograph. Within the first ten minutes of the sixty-minute film, we
meet Robert Altschuler, the publicity man at the Riverside record compa-
ny at the time of the photograph, who was assigned the task of bringing
Monk to the photo session. Before Altschuler can begin his story, howev-
er, Johnny Griffin appears and compares Monk to Jomo Kenyatta,
explaining that the pianist wore such an imposing facade that people
were afraid to speak to him. In partial explanation of Monk's unap-
proachability, Art Blakey says that he loved and admired Monk because
he had "higher morals than any man I ever met. . . . He always told the
truth. If you wanted to know something, and you asked him a question,
. . . he's going to tell you the truth, and that's what people don't like.
That's why they were afraid of him."
Throughout Bach's film, stories about one figure drift seamlessly into
stories about others. The narrative itself has a trickster quality. The sub-
ject of Monk is dropped shortly after Blakey's testimonial, but the story
of his trip to the photo shoot is picked up again about five minutes later.
After we see Monk performing "Blue Monk" from "The Sound of Jazz,"
Altschuler reappears and continues his story of driving to the West Side
to find Monk. Once again, however, the story is interrupted by various
participants who talk about the complicated logistics of getting everyone
into position. When Altschuler appears once again, he says that Monk
made him wait for more than an hour, leading him to worry that they
would miss the shoot. When Monk finally came down to the car,
Altschuler tells us, he made no explanation for his tardiness but made a
Gabbard Evidence: Monk as Documentary Subject 221
women may not feel obliged to echo. Jean Bach has brought a playful,
noncanonizing tone to her film, but I will not insist on gender-specific
explanations for why this is the case. I will, however, point out that Bach
has been a serious jazz devotee in New York City for many years and that
she has portrayed the musicians in A Great Day in Harlem not as abstrac-
tions but as men and women she has come to know firsthand.
Even though Bach tells her stories with a light touch, there remains a
solemn, almost ceremonious air about the photograph around which she
builds her film. It may have been there from the beginning. The weath-
ered faces of older jazz artists such as Willie "The Lion" Smith, Miff Mole,
Zutty Singleton, Luckey Roberts, and Henry "Red" Allen give the photo
a distinctly austere look, in spite of Monk's bright sports jacket and the
clowning of Gillespie and Roy Eldridge in the right-hand comer. With
few exceptions, the artists in the photograph represent the music's past
rather than its future. John Coltrane and Miles Davis, busy changing jazz
history in 1958, are absent. So are the larger-than-life figures of Duke
Ellington, Louis Armstrong, and Benny Goodman, who might have given
a timeless dimension to the photograph. But the carefully composed
black-and-white photography and the nine teenth-century browns tone in
Harlem where the musicians were posed make even jazz modernists such
as Charles Mingus, Gerry Mulligan, Sonny Rollins, and Monk seem part
of an ancient tradition. To her credit, Bach does not exploit the corre-
sponding sense of loss that is built into the photograph: a listing of
deceased artists is virtually absent from the narration. Only Art Farmer
raises the subject, and even then the tone is affirmative rather than nos-
talgic when he tells us, for example, that "Lester Young is here now."
A Great Day in Harlem is fond of its tricksters, crucial figures in the
African-American literary and cultural criticism of the 1990s. Henry
Louis Gates Jr. (1988), in his seminal book The Signifying Monkey, has
explored the roots of trickster mythology and the central role that the
character has played in both African and African-American cultures. But
producer-director Bach probably took the image of Monk as trickster
from musicians rather than from scholars. After all, she knew Monk and
many of the other important figures in jazz history. Her personal acquain-
tance with musicians and the trust she has won with them over time is
evident in many of the interview segments in A Great Day in Harlem.
Perhaps Bach's ability to put her subjects at ease allowed a different
Monk to emerge in her film, one who carefully chose how and when to
exercise control and who was entirely capable of guile and a false facade
of madness. Miles Davis (1989,187) has also described Monk in this way:
"He was a great put-on artist, too, and that's the way he kept people off
of him, by acting crazy like he did." Whether or not the trickster Monk
Gabbard Evidence: Monk as Documentary Subject 223
I thank Mark Tucker, Peter Keepnews, and StanleyCrouch for their invaluable contribu-
tions to this essay.
BMR Journal
FILMOGRAPHY
REFERENCES
Baker, Dorothy. 1938. Young man with a horn. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
Bamouw, Erik. 1993. Documentary: A history of the nonsfiction film. New York: Oxford
University Press.
Blake, Ran. 1988. Monk, Thelonious. In The New Grove dictionary of jazz, edited by Barry
Kernfeld, 2: 121-123. London: Macmillan.
Crouch, Stanley. 1997. Telephone communication with the author, December 12.
Davis, Miles, with Quincy Troupe. 1989. Miles: The autobiography. New York: Simon and
Schuster.
DeVeaw, Scott. 1991. Constructing the jazz tradition: Jazz historiography. Black American
Literature Forum 25, no. 3: 525560.
. 1997. The birth of bebop: Asocial and musical history. Berkeley: University of California
Press.
de Wilde, Laurent. 1997. Monk. Translated by Jonathan Dickinson. New York: Marlowe.
Gabbard Evidence: Monk as Documentary Subject
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