Jazz Forum (historic periodical)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Jazz_Forum_(historic_periodical) an entity of type: Thing

Jazz Forum was a British-based "quarterly review of jazz and literature" founded and edited by Albert J. McCarthy (1920–1987) and published by the Delphic Press from 1946 — surviving only five issues until 1947. According to the jazz writers Peter Clayton and Peter Gammond, the publication offered good features by distinguished contributors. It was a short-lived but highly acclaimed experiment in linking jazz, poetry, literature, and graphic art in a post-World War II avant-garde British era. Several of the contributors were among the foremost Beat and modern writers of the time. The graphic art was also forward. The publication had useful discographies of then under-rated musicians. Contributors to the first 32-page issue included Stanley Dance, Charles Delaunay, Langston Hughes, Hugues P rdf:langString
rdf:langString Jazz Forum (historic periodical)
rdf:langString Jazz Forum
rdf:langString (Quarterly Review of Jazz and Literature)
xsd:integer 40580108
xsd:integer 1084026842
xsd:integer 1947
xsd:integer 1946
rdf:langString Quarterly
rdf:langString English
xsd:integer 52254545
rdf:langString , President
rdf:langString Artin K. Shalian
rdf:langString Delphic Press
rdf:langString Jazz Forum
rdf:langString (Quarterly Review of Jazz and Literature)
rdf:langString Jazz Forum was a British-based "quarterly review of jazz and literature" founded and edited by Albert J. McCarthy (1920–1987) and published by the Delphic Press from 1946 — surviving only five issues until 1947. According to the jazz writers Peter Clayton and Peter Gammond, the publication offered good features by distinguished contributors. It was a short-lived but highly acclaimed experiment in linking jazz, poetry, literature, and graphic art in a post-World War II avant-garde British era. Several of the contributors were among the foremost Beat and modern writers of the time. The graphic art was also forward. The publication had useful discographies of then under-rated musicians. Contributors to the first 32-page issue included Stanley Dance, Charles Delaunay, Langston Hughes, Hugues Panassie, Roger Pryor Dodge in a mix of poetry and book reviews.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3114
rdf:langString Editor

data from the linked data cloud