W. Eugene Smith (1918–78) was an American photographer who
worked for Life from 1939 to 1954 and thereafter was affiliated
with the Magnum photo agency. Several posthumous overviews of
Smith’s work have been published, including The Big Book, a
retrospective of his work as he designed it, and a biography, Let
Truth Be the Prejudice: W. Eugene Smith, His Life and Photographs,
by Ben Maddow. Sam Stephenson is a writer from North
Carolina now based in College Station, TX. He is the author of
a biography of Smith, Gene Smith’s Sink, as well as Dream
Street: W. Eugene Smith’s Pittsburgh Project and The Jazz
Loft Project: The Photographs and Tapes of W. Eugene Smith from 821
Sixth Avenue. He is also the ghostwriter of Don't Tell
Anybody the Secrets I Told You, a forthcoming memoir by
Lucinda Williams. In 2019, he won a Guggenheim Fellowship for
his work in progress about the band Jane's Addiction.
“[Smith’s] photos of the city offer a rare glimpse into a
neighborhood being itself when it thought no one was watching. This
will be an essential book for jazz fans, photography lovers and
those interested in the history of New York.”
*Publishers Weekly, on the original edition*
"This beautiful book combines the photographs of W. Eugene Smith
with transcriptions from his private tapes as well as short
testimonies by witnesses to a unique era of New York jazz history
as it unfolded in a Sixth Avenue loft building in the 1950s and
’60s."
*La Scena Musicale*
“The samples from the tapes that Stephenson had transcribed work
with the photos to bring a moment in jazz to life as perhaps no
work in any other medium, including documentary cinema, ever has.
Absolutely magnificent.”
*Booklist, on the original edition*
“Every obsessive deserves his own obsessive Boswell, and W. Eugene
Smith has his in Stephenson.”
*New York Magazine, on the original edition*
“The most chaotic and soulful gift book this year… an elegiac stew
of sight and sound, and a singularly weird, vital and thrumming
American document.”
*The New York Times, on the original edition*
“A stunning cross of scholarly history and Smith's haunted
photography.”
*The Village Voice, on the original edition*
“[The Jazz Loft Project] is a riveting work of social archaeology,
and extraordinary testament to artists whose music caught all the
tumult and excitement of a fast-changing America. It is also a
glimpse inside the frenetic mind of a photographic pioneer; an
obsessive, maverick genius, who died, poor and relatively unsung,
in 1978, leaving behind some twenty-two tons of archive material,
including his unfinished and ultimately unfinishable jazz
project.”
*The Guardian, on the original edition*
“A book whose pages convey, beautifully, the strange cultural
moment when a rat-infested hulk of a building hosted a perfect
storm of creativity.”
*Financial Times, on the original edition*
“Smith was galvanized by the musicians’ passion. . . . He seems to
have likewise inspired by their sound; the photographs frequently
suggest a kind of rhythm. . . . The photographs are also patently
theatrical.”
*Aperture, on the original edition*
“[Smith’s photos] are less focused on expressive acts than on a
general scene—where a glass of beer on a piano is more important
than the music going on fuzzily behind it, or the whole exhausting
flow of an all-night session is summarized in a pair of shoes
hovering over a dozen cigarette butts on the floor. . . . The loft
photos are part of a larger attempt to capture the asymmetrical
constellations that form and unform all around us, all the time:
inside and outside the building are equally fascinating to
Smith.”
*American Literary History, on the original edition*
“Smith was a driven, supremely talented man who wanted his
photography to change the world—and it did. . . . After
Smith’s 1979 death, some 4,000 hours of tape reposed, with his
splendid photos, at the University of Arizona. What was on them was
unsubstantiated legend. Enter Sam Stephenson, who tended their
digitization and over painstaking years collated them with oral
histories and other documentation. The result captures American
culture in creative flux from the ground-eye level.”
*American History, on the original edition*
“The Jazz Loft Project’s unique source material gives readers a
perspective on musicians involved in the bebop that could not be
gleaned from their depiction in magazines or even the music they
created.”
*ARSC Journal, on the original edition*
“Smith left a magnificent mess, and Stephenson, in his second
decade of research on the man, maintains the same simultaneous eye
both for detail and the bigger picture.”
*Jazz Journalists Association (JJA) News, on the original
edition*
“Intriguing and memorable.”
*BookPage, on the original edition*
“An extraordinary book.”
*Chicago Reader, on the original edition*
“The highlight of the book is the photographs of musicians in the
passions of playing. In one photo, [Thelonious] Monk is leaning
back—cigarette dangling from his mouth—just as he lifts his right
hand off the keyboard. He is drenched in shadow, but the light
catches his face creating the stark contrast that distinguishes
Smith's work.”
*Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, on the original edition*
“Working with photographs and audiotapes made by photojournalist W.
Eugene Smith, Stephenson relates the history of an active jazz
musicians’ loft in New York City in a pivotal era.”
*Internet Review of Books, on the original edition*
"There are many terrific photos in The Jazz Loft Project of
musicians playing, chatting, or resting among Smith’s archive. But
these photos read quite differently from famous photos by such
photographers as Carol Reiff, William Gottlieb, or William Claxton.
They are stranger productions altogether—often fragmented, framing
hands or feet alone, or featuring unplayed instruments with no
musicians in sight. . . . Stephenson has undertaken a massive
task, involving extensive archival and field research, as well as
innumerable editorial decisions, and he has produced a stunning
book that winds its argument less along the wire of discourse than
across a complex web of images in juxtaposition. Unlike his
gargantuan Pittsburgh project, this book is not something Smith
imagined, or had in view. But Stephenson has done something Smith
found very hard to do, and has done it, moreover, in a way that is
true to Smith’s extraordinary vision of the world."
*American Literary History*
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