Jazz for Curious Readers Langston Hughes: The Recordings
7:00 – 8:30pm
Location: NJMIH Visitors Center (104 E. 126th Street, Suite 2C) FREE | For more information: 212-348-8300 Back in the day Langston Hughes was called the voice of Harlem and even the poet laureate of Negro Americans. Hughes imbued his lines with the echoes of jazz and gospel, and may have been akin to a 20th-century Chaucer, capturing common experiences in bold new rhythms. He once said, "I tried to write poems like the songs they sang on Seventh Street... (these songs) had the pulse beat of the people who keep on going."
In 1926 he wrote the now classic "Weary Blues." In 1958 he took part in a recording of this work (which includes the famous "A Dream Deferred") paired it with compositions written in collaboration with Charles Mingus, Leonard Feather, and Horace Parlan. Mingus’s compositional style combined with Hughes “cool” prose and poetry, written with rhythms straight out of Harlem, made for a revealing outing.
Come hear this synthesis of music and poetry and more at the Visitor's Center of the National Jazz Museum in Harlem.
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