Because I'm in the media, I receive a ton of new box sets, vinyl and books. I typically save the items I enjoyed most for a holiday-season post, since you're probably looking for gift ideas. Here are a few of my favorite things that are suitable for your Santa list and that you can order and wrap without leaving home...
Jazz Images by Francis Wolff (Elemental Music). Music no longer comes with album-sized photographs. So what better way to listen to Blue Note albums than looking at images by Francis Wolff, the label's co-founder. This book features more than 150 photos, many of them printed for the first time. Go here.
Jazz Images by William Claxton (Elemental Music). At the same time Francis Wolff was photographing Blue Note artists in New York, William Claxton was doing the same with musicians in California pioneering what would become known as West Coast jazz. Like Wolff, Claxton was key to giving the music and musicians a visual mystique. Go here.
John Coltrane: Giant Steps, Deluxe Edition 60 Years (Atlantic). This John Coltrane game-changer recorded in 1959 and released in 1960 has just been remastered and includes eight outtakes. This music on the album never gets old and continues to raise arm hairs. The double-CD is timeless and sounds great. Go here.
Classic Keys: Keyboard Sounds That Launched Rock Music (UNT). This 400-page hardback coffee-table book by Alan S. Lenhoff and David E Robertson features every conceivable electric keyboard produced and includes a superb, fascinating history. Plus hundreds of large color photos of the instruments, ads and other images. Best of all, you learn which rock bands used which keyboards. Set aside a couple of hours of reading and page-turning and listen as you read. Go here.
Verve's Acoustic Sounds Series. The label has been pressing 180-gram vinyl versions of classic jazz albums. The two most recent entries are Louis Armstrong Meets Oscar Peterson and Getz/Gilberto. Both classics. The albums look like the ones you would have purchased in the store decades ago, only they sound far better. For the rest of the albums in the series, go to Amazon and type in "Verve's Acoustic Sounds Series." For the albums mentioned above, go here and here.
George Harrison on George Harrison: Interviews and Encounters (Chicago Review). Edited by Ashley Kahn, this 574-page book is an anthology of select radio, TV and print conversations with the stern Beatle. A worthy edition for many fans who are passionate about all things considered and still find George a fascinating mystery. Go here.
Heart Full of Rhythm: The Big Band Years of Louis Armstrong (Oxford). Written by Ricky Riccardi, director of research collections for the Louis Armstrong House Museum and author of What a Wonderful World: The Magic of Louis Armstrong's Later Years. This book provides insight into Armstrong's rise from Chicago trumpeter in 1929 to national brand in 1947. A detailed look into the home life and big-band performance career of America's most complex jazz pioneer and practitioner who all but invented the jazz entertainer. Especially rewarding if you own Armstrong's music during this period or can access via streaming. Go here.
It Ain't Heavy, It's My Story: My Life in the Hollies (Omnibus). Hollies drummer Bobby Elliott writes about his life in the band and its incarnation before and after the departure of Graham Nash. A perfect book for anyone who loves the Brit band's large number of hits. Go here.
Sincerely, Ty Cobb: A Baseball Memoir (TCU). If you love baseball but don't know much about who the early greats really were or why they were special, you're in luck. Hank O'Neal has combined his mother's vast baseball scrapbook with his own passion and recollections of baseball's stars before free agency, TV broadcast rights and high-tech locker rooms. Warmly written and a wonderful trip back in time through Hank's writing, players' correspondence and loads of color images. A baseball fan's sandlot dream. Go here.
From Elvis in Nashville (RCA). Following Elvis's 1969 recording sessions in Memphis, the King headed to Nashville in June 1970 and summoned the city's leading session musicians. What ensued were catered, marathon jam sessions that produced three albums—That’s the Way It Is, Elvis Country and Love Letters From Elvis. This new four-CD set includes all of the masters as well as alternate takes. A 28-page color book makes this focused listen a snapshot in time when the tune-out years ended and the me decade began. Sideburns not included. Go here.