
This title will be released on:
Oct 15, 2025
Description
Highlights of Cook's life and career are retold from meticulous research and interviews with friends and musicians who knew and played with him, including Mosaic Records founder Michael Cuscuna, SteepleChase Records founder Nils Winther, and Cook's right-hand bandmate and roommate, vocalist Timmy Shepherd. The book also relays some of Cook's "lessons"--best practices of musicianship that young jazz fellow travelers learned from his example as a master musician in the 1980s New York City jam session scene. Those lessons embody the sense of deep community and the apprenticeship tradition of twentieth-century jazz--a tradition that some musicians perceive is now lacking.
Have Horn, Will Travel offers the reader a window into the life of arguably one of jazz's great underrated practitioners, laying bare the triumph and tragedy of a musician whose career largely missed the spotlight and the marquee. While the name of Junior Cook is unknown to many who have heard his signature tenor on several of Horace Silver's heralded compositions--including "Sister Sadie," "Blowin the Blues Away," and "Cookin' at the Continental"--he was the inspiration of many of his contemporaries and marshaled a generation of young musicians into the jazz idiom while living a sideman's life.
Product Details
Publisher | University of North Texas Press |
Publish Date | October 15, 2025 |
Pages | 288 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781574419825 |
Dimensions | N/A |
About the Author
Reviews
"The unique and triumphant virtue of this biographical reminiscence resides with its candid directness and sensitive understanding of both the jazz 'world' and a truly stalwart, somewhat private, musician who dedicated himself to the business of making creative music undistracted by fame, glamor, and self-adulation. I'm stunned to realize in retrospect how sad and genuinely unfair the whole of the jazz legacy would have been without this book. It rescues the truth and value of a significant jazz musician, unheralded to an unfortunate degree, whose legacy will endure as long as the grand jazz heritage lives. This text earns my deep respect."-- Jim Merod, jazz and blues recording and mastering engineer and coauthor of Whisper Not: The Autobiography of Benny Golson
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