Jazz Appreciation Month

by Hannah Lane, Librarian, African American Department

April is Jazz Appreciation Month! Every year librarians, museums, dancers, musicians, and jazz lovers across the United States celebrate the rich histories and joyful rhythms of jazz music, and the roles that jazz continues to play in our lives and communities. Here in the African American Department, we are celebrating, too!

This year’s theme for Jazz Appreciation Month is Women in Jazz. You may already be familiar with such Black Jazz greats as Duke Ellington and Wynton Marselis, but how much have you heard about the Black women who also shaped the genre, such as Mary Lou Williams, Tiny Davis, Ella Fitzgerald, Blanche Calloway, Billie Holliday, and Clora Bryant? Our doors at the Pratt may be closed, but we’re taking this opportunity to celebrate powerful Black women in Jazz by connecting you with some of our wonderful, digital resources.

A brief history of Jazz

When some imagine Jazz, they locate it, first, in places like New York. They imagine Jazz in the middle of the Harlem Renaissance; in a cafe with Zora and Langston, or bursting from the windows of the Savoy Ballroom, Carnegie Hall, or the Birdland.

And they wouldn’t be incorrect. During the 1930’s in cities like New York, St. Louis, Chicago, and Kansas City, important developments in the genre emerged and numerous legendary Black Jazz artists rose to fame. Countless standards from “Take the A Train,” “East St. Louis Toodle-oo,” and Lucky Millinder’s “Savoy” honor the musical legacies of Black communities in these vibrant settings.

And just as many Jazz standards recall the place where the deeply diverse, Afro-diasporic music was born–near the mouth of the Mississippi river, in the cosmopolitan port city of New Orleans, Louisiana. There, in the first decades of the twentieth century, Black musicians (many, people who survived slavery and their descendants) brought the music to be. At the same time, millions of Black families, workers, musicians, and artists were leaving the South for economic opportunities in northern and midwestern cities, as well as to escape the terror that was ripping throughout the south with the rise of racist violence and organized, white supremacist groups. Jazz moved throughout the United States with these hopeful Black travelers, and set down new roots in the burgeoning, new centers of Black arts and culture that they created.

Jazz Appreciation Month,” Smithsonian Museum of American History website.

Artist such as Count Basie and Duke Ellington rightfully live on in our historical memory of Jazz music, but they weren’t alone. Since the late nineteenth- and early twentieth century, Black women have been key innovators in Jazz and Blues music. Think, iconic vocalists like Gertude MaRainey, born in Columbus, Georgia in 1886, or Bessie Smith, born in Chattanooga, Tennessee in 1894. Ma Rainey, “Mother of the Blues” and Smith, “The Empress of Blues” are regarded as two of the most influential vocalists in American popular music.

Throughout the month of April, the African American Department will introduce amazing Black, women Jazz vocalists, composers, and bandleaders who, likewise, left immortal legacies in American popular music and culture. In the meantime, enjoy these digital resources about Jazz and the Blues in African American history!

For more Jazz Documentaries click the links below:

Jazz: A Film by Ken Burns

T’Aint Nobody’s Bizess: Queer Blues Divas of the 1920s

Serving Customers During COVID-19

The Pratt Library continues to serve our community

As we wrap up National Library Week, we are celebrating in a very different way.  In mid-March the Pratt Library closed its doors to protect the health and safety of our customers and staff during the COVID-19 pandemic. But that has not stopped staff from working tirelessly to serve Maryland.

Here are just a few things that are happening at the Pratt:

  • Hundreds of staff are working from home to provide services
  • A robust schedule of daily virtual programs has been developed including Writers CRIBS! and Virtual Storytime. 
  • An educational webpage has been set up to help parents find resources for home schooling their students including live online tutors. 
  • Collections staff members are working with City Schools to launch new educational databases like Tumblebooks and Scholastic.
  • Staff are using Teen Center sewing machines and 3D printers to make PPE for healthcare workers
  • A web guide has been developed to provide accurate sources of information on COVID-19.

This is just a small sample of the ongoing work of the Pratt to serve Baltimore. The Pratt will always be here for our community.

Zero Waste Home

An Interview with writer, speaker Bea Johnson and Lauren Read, Librarian, Business, Science, & Technology Department

Lifestyle changes are often made in incremental steps.  For this approach, is there a big-impact swap that you suggest as a first step?

Learn to say no is my first rule.  Refuse what you do not need. In such a consumer society, accepting is condoning.  Every time we accept a toothbrush at the dentist, a plastic bag at the store, a straw at the café, we create the demand to make more of something that quickly becomes trash.  Learn to say no on the spot; find a sentence for you to make it easy to politely decline, and people will accept and respect it. It takes three weeks for habits to form, this included, so take a second to ask do you need it first.

Many people may look at the zero-waste lifestyle as intimidating, and we know that your talk – and your book – address those things that might hold people back or that people think are too difficult.  What’s one misconception you’d like to point out to Baltimoreans in advance of your talk?

The zero waste lifestyle is the complete opposite of the mainstream understanding.  It does not take more time; it saves time. It does not cost more; it saves money. It helps the environment, yes, but also improves our standard of living.

Zero Waste Home is available as an e-audio through RB Digital.

Although thinking and living in terms of zero waste isn’t entirely focused on products, and overall, secondhand and built-to-last items rank highest, there is a lot of overwhelm to make the perfect choice among countless ones.  How do we balance making ethical product choices and not going crazy with options? Something to do with simplicity, perhaps…?

The best product is the one that you don’t buy.  Before you buy, ask do you even need this. We live in a consumerist society, created by manufacturers and marketers, creating fictitious need, promising time and money saving.  In the end we find that it’s the opposite: we must go to the store, buy, transport, stow, use, separate to dispose of “properly,” go back and buy more. There are simple questions to ask yourself.  Is this a quality, reusable item? Can you buy it secondhand [non-food] or in bulk [food]? Boost the secondhand market rather than the new manufacturing one.

A related area of overwhelm is caring for what we have.  I know to enjoy my strengths, such as cooking, and outsource my weak areas, like tailoring.  What’s your best advice to encourage people to fix rather than replace items?

When you adopt zero waste practices, you consider the whole life-cycle of things, and that includes repair.  Libraries can offer workshops to teach such skills. I wish it was more common in the U.S.

I know Baltimore has plenty of community gardens to get involved with.  What are some of your favorite ideas for connecting with community whilst keeping these practices?  

Whether you shop at the grocery store or the farmers’ market, bringing your reusables, it forces communication and creates interaction with staff and others.  It fosters communication, which over time can create great relationships. Shopping secondhand tends to be local, so it’s an added way to get to know your community members.  Renting items, also, creates bonds. In apartments, too. Even composting. There are social aspects to sharing.

Finally, libraries play a fine role in facilitating a sharing economy, especially when it comes to books, music, and movies, and in some places games, art, tools, instruments, bikes….  We’re also a third place for people to gather and collaborate in a noncommercial way. In your travels, have you noted a spectacular way that a library is promoting sustainability?

Overall, people can start looking at libraries as a space that goes beyond books, hosting workshops making useful things, having me talk, for instance.  Tool libraries are fantastic; my library has a seed library, and I wish they had created a tool library first, but people use our library like crazy. I think a lot of people go straight to the bookstore because they don’t realize how updated libraries are.  In France, they have toy libraries: I really like that.

Music Hath Charms. So Does Hoopla!

By Tom Warner, Librarian, Best & Next Department

In the midst of the COVID-19 health crisis, many of us are turning to music as an escape from the stress and anxiety this unprecedented pandemic has caused. Maybe that’s because, as William Congreave famously observed, “Music hath charms to soothe a savage breast, to soften rocks, or bend a knotted oak.”

Let’s hope music does have a curative effect on our savaged breasts, because many of the troubadours we turn to in our hour of need have themselves contracted the deadly coronavirus; according to Billboard, over 30 musicians have reported having the disease, with five – John Prine (April 7, age 73), Oscar-nominated songwriter and Fountains of Wayne co – founder Adam Schlesinger (April 1, age 52), jazz pianist Ellis Marsalis, Jr. (also April 1, 85), jazz trumpeter – composer Wallace Roney (March 31, age 59), and Arrows singer Alan Merill (March 29, age 69), who co – wrote “I Love Rock ‘n’ Roll, ” a later breakout hit for Joan Jett – recently passing away from complications related to the virus.

That unfortunate list includes popular artists Christopher Cross, Sara Bareilles, Jackson Browne, John Prine, Larry Campbell, Placido Domingo, Scarface, Radiohead guitarist Ed O’ Brein, Bon Jovi keyboardist David Bryon, Rita Wilson (Mrs. Tom Hanks), and even Idris Elba (yes, the actor – he opened for Madonna’s Rebel Heart Tour in Berlin).

If there’s any consolation, it’s that the music these artists and others create lives on forever. And music of it lives on Hoopla, the digital media service that enables you to borrow music (as well as audiobooks, ebooks, comics, movies, and TV shows) for free using your Pratt Library card. Once you use your card to set up an account, you can download or stream up to 15 titles a month to enjoy on your computer, tablet, television, or mobile device. So grab your library card and earbuds and start listening today!

Following is a Hoopla playlist highlighting the music of several of these afflicted artists. Keep them in your thoughts and prayers and ears!

Adam Schlesinger

The late – great Adam Schlesinger was the co-founder of pop band Fountains of Wayne (as well as Ivy and Tinted Windows), before branching out to write award-winning tunes for stage (Broadway’s “Cry – Baby”) and screen (That Thing You Do, Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, Sesame Street, Stephen Colbert).

Hoopla offers all five Fountains of Wayne albums for downloading or streaming to mobile devices, including their critically acclaimed third album with the hit single “Stacy’s Mom”, Welcome Interstate Managers (2003)

  • Hoopla offers all five Fountains of Wayne albums for downloading or streaming to mobile devices, including their critically acclaimed third album with the hit single “Stacy’s Mom,” Welcome Interstate Managers (2003).
  • You can also listen to Tinted Windows, the supergroup Schlesinger formed with former Smashing Pumpkins guitarist James Iha and Hanson singer Taylor Hanson.
  • Hoopla also features selections of songs Schlesinger wrote for the popular television show Crazy Ex-Girlfriend.
John Prine

Country folk singer-songwriter Prine, a two-time Grammy winner, was known for his humorous songs of protest and social commentary. Before succumbing to complications resulting from the coronavirus, Prine had survived cancer and the loss of a lung.

His legacy was best summed up by his peer Bonnie Raitt, who in a 1992 Rolling Stone interview commented: “He’s a true folk singer in the best folk tradition, cutting right to the heart of things, as pure and simple as rain.”

Wallace Roney

Jazz trumpeter Wallace Roney grew up in Philadelphia and learned his craft studying with the Philadelphia Brass Ensemble and later with Langston Fitzgerald of The Baltimore Symphony Orchestra. He came to national attention performing in the Washington, D.C. area, winning Downbeat’s Best Young Jazz Trumpeter award in 1979 and 1980.

Hoopla boasts 30 selections featuring Wallace Roney and five full-length studio albums, including his acclaimed Misterios (1994), Village (1997), No Room For Argument (2000), No Job Too Big Or Too Small (2018) and his final recording According To Mr. Roney (2019).

Ellis Marsalis, Jr.

Patriarch of the legendary musical family whose ranks include sons Branford and Wynton, Ellis wasn’t just a talented pianist but a respected educator, as well, teaching at the New Orleans Center for Creative Arts, the University of New Orleans, and Xavier University of Louisiana, and receiving an honorary doctorate from Tulane University for his contributions to jazz and musical education in 2207.

Elliss Marsalis III, the rare Marsalis son who didn’t pursue a music career, is a photographer and poet who has lived in Baltimore for more than 25 years. Ellis Marsalis is represented by seven titles in the Hoopla library, including his albums Pure Pleasure for the Piano (2012), An Open Letter To Thelonius and New Orleans Christmas Carol

Christopher Cross

Five-Time Grammy winner Cross is best known for his #1 hits “Sailing” (1980) and “Arthur’s Theme” (1981).

Hoopla has 14 Christopher Cross selections, including the albums Christopher Cross (1979), Arthur: The Soundtrack (1981), Every Turn of the World (1985), and Back of My Mind (1988).

Jackson Browne

Rolling Stone magazine listed Browne in its list of “The 100 Greatest Songwriters of All-Time,” and no wonder: songs like “These Days,” “The Pretender,” “Running on Empty,” “Lawyers in Love,” “Doctor My Eyes,” “Take It Easy,” and “Somebody’s Baby” helped propel him into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2004.

Placido Domingo

Placido Domingo has recorded over 100 operas in his long-running career, and has crossed over into Latin and popular singing success, as well.

Hoopla offers listeners over 190 selections from the legendary singer!

Scarface

Houston-based rapper and politician Scarface (Brad Terrence Jordan) started out in the Geto Boys before launching a successful solo career in 1991.

Hoopla has 14 full albums by Scarface, from his first Mr. Scarface Is Back to his last Deeply Rooted, as well as selected tracks by the Geto Boys.

Sara Bareilles

Singer-songwriter-actress has been nominated for eight Grammy awards and composed and wrote lyrics for the Broadway musical Waitress, for which she earned Tony and Grammy nominations for Best Score and Best Album, respectively. 

Hoopla offers 13 selections featuring Bareilles, including What’s Not Inside: The Lost Songs from Waitress.

These are just a sampling of the many artists whose songs can be heard on Hoopla; there are thousands more, in every conceivable genre! For a list of the most borrowed titles of 2019, click here.

Hooray for Harry

There’s no better time to relive your favorite moments from one of the most popular book series of all time! With Overdrive you can escape to the magical world of Hogwarts with just a click of a button. Right now the first book in J.K. Rowling’s series is available with no wait. Go ahead and check it out and enjoy Harry, Ron, and Hermione’s adventures!

Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone
By J.K. Rowling

On Harry’s eleventh birthday, a great beetle-eyed giant of a man called Rubeus Hagrid bursts in with some astonishing news: Harry Potter is a wizard, and he has a place at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. An incredible adventure is about to begin!

Read the eBook | Listen to eAudio

Also in the Harry Potter Series: