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期刊名称:DOWN BEAT

ISSN:0012-5768
出版频率:Monthly
出版社:MAHER PUBL INC, 180 W PARK AVE, ELMHURST, USA, IL, 60126
  出版社网址:http://www.downbeatjazz.com/
期刊网址:http://www.downbeat.com/default.asp?sect
主题范畴:MUSIC

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal
About Down Beat
A History As Rich As Jazz Itself

There are many roads to jazz, as any collection of fans will demonstrate. But for many of those fans, whose age today can fall anywhere between 10 and 80, that road has been paved with issues of Down Beat magazine.

Over the decades it has instructed, recommended, criticized, praised, condemned, advocated and, in the aggregate, honored the most dynamic American music of the twentieth century. Millions have been led to records and artists on the strength of a Down Beat review, news tip, or profile. It has shaped young tastes in need of guidance and challenged older ones in need of a wake-up call. In the 1930s, before any important book on jazz had yet been written, Down Beat collected the first important body of pre-1935 jazz history. It became a monthly, then semi-monthly, a diary of the swing era as it happened, then tracked the progression of bop, pop, rock, freedom, fusion, and nineties neoclassicism, all from the perspective of the musician. Hard to believe it began by selling insurance.

You Can't Sell 'em Both"

Albert J. Lipschultz was neither a full-time musician nor a professional journalist. He had no interest in leading a band, acquiring power, or editorializing on the affairs of the world.

Al Lipschultz had only one interest. That was selling insurance. After washing out as a saxophone player in Chicago during the years of World War I, he looked for better opportunities. Soon he found one that let him use his contacts in music. Starting in 1921, he began to cultivate an insurance clientele of working Chicago musicians. He took a special interest in savings plans and annuities that promised musicians a monthly retirement income.

Lipschultz was not the only Chicagoan to take an interest in the welfare and financial security of musicians, however. There was James C. Petrillo, president of Local 10 of the American Federation of Musicians and one of the most commanding and aggressive-some would say reckless-figures in the American labor movement. The fact that the thirties was to be labor's moment at the moral center of American politics gave him even greater power. Anything that concerned musicians concerned Petrillo.

In the early thirties, as Lipschultz concentrated on building his insurance business, he began to see an opportunity that offered benefit to both himself and his customers. There was a need, he felt, for a musician's newspaper beyond the house organ of the AFM local. So in the summer of 1934, as the Century of Progress Exposition swung into its second season along Chicago's lakefront, Lipschultz took a small office on the eighth floor of the Woods Theater building on Clark and Dearborn, setting himself up as president of "Albert J. Lipschultz & Associates," publisher. He called his new magazine Down Beat, and it went on sale, all eight pages, in July 1934 for 10 cents an issue.

Adolph Bessman, an insurance associate of Lipschultz's, served as business manager. And three associate editors were hired to actually turn out the magazine. Of those three, only Glenn Burrs, a tall, balding ex-saxophone player, would stay with the publication.

By the second issue, Down Beat began listing band sidemen in orchestras playing around the Chicago area. Among the hundreds of forgotten names, a few surprises leap out: Gene Krupa and Jess Stacey [sic] were working for scale and still unknown to the world. In September, Down Beat began running a musicians' directory. Among the 75 players listed, all within an easy ride of Chicago, was Woody Herman, then a sideman "at liberty," living on Third Street in Milwaukee. Benny Goodman's name appeared for the first time in Down Beat that issue; just a note that he was playing opposite Jerry Arlen at Rose's Music Hall in New York.

Jazz had not yet moved center-stage in American popular music. It was still marginalized and underground, hiding in the rank and file of the various sweet bands that made most of the music to which the country danced. The mainstream media rarely probed jazz. When Fortune magazine ran a major jazz article on Duke Ellington, Benny Goodman, and others in 1933, it was a rarity. Lipschultz held no brief for either form. He admitted to no partisanship, sweet or jazz. He was a salesman who felt arguments were bad for business. Down Beat's raison d'etre was good will, not controversy. In 1934 the magazine ran no record reviews, no editorials, no music analysis, no criticism.

So, it must have taken Lipschultz by surprise when in the fall of 1934 he received a phone call from the formidable Petrillo. The union leader took a dim view of competition. He had seen the first issues of Down Beat and presumably had no particular argument with their content, which was thoroughly without provocation. What bothered Petrillo was Lipschultz himself, who seemed to be empire building. But in Chicago there was only one empire that counted, and that was Local 10. "You can sell my musicians insurance or you can sell them a magazine," Petrillo was reported to have said. "But you can't sell them both."

Lipschultz understood the situation immediately. He and Bessman withdrew their names from the masthead with the November issue. On November 28th Burrs purchased the magazine for a mere $1,500 and Lipschultz never again played a role.

By January 1935, the original associate editors were gone and the first record reviews began appearing, leading with Warren Scholl's enthusiastic praise for Duke Ellington's "latest composition, 'Solitude'," from Brunswick Records. Burrs took the official title of publisher and editor and hired a young free spirit named Carl Lynn Cons as associate editor and business manager, the latter title being something of a fiction. Cons had no head for business details. Nevertheless, the two soon became partners and co-owners. Burrs, a tall, extremely slender man in his late forties, was a back-slapping fellow who had a knack for being everybody's friend. His gregariousness made him a natural salesman, which in the magazine business means advertising. Cons came from Kansas City, where he had played piano professionally and dreamed of writing the Great American Novel. One associate called him "an editorial Barnum." He demanded bizarre headlines and lots of newspaper showmanship. Cons made the pages interesting, if not always entirely respectable.

During 1935 and 1936 Down Beat took a sharp turn from being a parochial little news and gossip sheet to becoming a credible national publication with a solid musician orientation and a particularly keen ear for jazz. Its timing couldn't have been more superb.


Instructions to Authors
Thank you for visiting www.downbeat.com. Your privacy is important to us. To better protect the privacy of Internet users, we have outlined our policy explaining our online information practices.

Consumer Information: Except for when a Downbeat.com visitor subscribes to Down Beat magazine or enters a promotion Downbeat.com, Downbeat.com does not collect any personal identifiable information such as name, address, phone number or email address. Nor do we obtain types of non-personally identifiable information such as the domain name or the Internet Service Provider. All information sent to Down Beat in regard to subscriptions is encrypted through a secure server.

Collection of Information by Third-Party Sites and Sponsors Downbeat.com contains links to other sites whose information practices may be different than ours. Visitors should consult the other sites' privacy notices, as we have no control over information that is submitted to, or collected by, these third parties.

Downbeat.com may offer contests or promotions that are sponsored by or co-sponsored with identified third parties. By virtue of their sponsorship, these third parties may obtain personally identifiable information that visitors voluntarily submit to participate in the contest or promotion.

Trademarks: The trademarks and tradenames used on this Site, including, but not limited to, Down Beat, Blindfold Test, and all articles are owned by Maher Publications. All other trademarks, product names and company names or logos used on this site are the property of their respective owners.


Editorial Board
Getting In Touch
General Contact Information

To contact the Down Beat editorial staff about Down Beat magazine or Downbeat.com, email us at editor@downbeat.com.

For questions concerning advertising in Down Beat magazine or on Downbeat.com, email jenr@downbeat.com.

Technical issues with Downbeat.com should be directed to webmaster@downbeat.com.

Questions about subscriptions to Down Beat magazine, including new subscriptions and change of address, can be sent to service@downbeat.com.

Send change of address to:
Down Beat
P.O. Box 906
Elmhurst, IL 60126

Phone: (800) 554-7470
(630) 941-2030

Send any promotional material to:
Down Beat
102 N. Haven Rd.
Elmhurst, IL 60126




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