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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #0 of 74: Inkwell Co-host (jonl) Wed 6 Mar 24 12:27
permalink #0 of 74: Inkwell Co-host (jonl) Wed 6 Mar 24 12:27
Inkwell welcomes Don Armstrong, author of _The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason_. Don is a retired Associate Professor of Architecture from the Taylor School of Architecture and Construction Science at Tuskegee University, USA, where he published academic writings on design pedagogy and African American architecture. Though Don enjoyed researching these architectural topics, his scholarship took a radical turn when he rediscovered music critic Ralph J. Gleason, whom he had read as a young man. After publishing two academic papers on Gleason, Don wrote the first biography of the pioneering music writer, The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason. Don is now a freelance writer, independent scholar, and the creator of the Music Journalism History Facebook group, which provides an essential forum for leading music journalists, musicians, and others in the music industry. Don lives in coastal south Florida with his journalist wife, Jessica. Author website: <https://don-armstrong.com/>
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #1 of 74: Inkwell Co-host (jonl) Wed 6 Mar 24 12:28
permalink #1 of 74: Inkwell Co-host (jonl) Wed 6 Mar 24 12:28
Leading the conversation is Gary Lambert. Gary has spent the entirety of what he laughingly calls his "adult life" in and around the music business. Early on this translated to every- thing from low-paying jobs at record stores to nearly-no-paying jobs as a musician, in a succession of bands that went nowhere. While continuing to play for pleasure and gig occasionally, he resolved to learn more about the inner workings of the industry, and wound up in the best school imaginable, landing a job with Bill Graham Presents and working there in a variety of roles for the last eight years of the great rock impresario's life. In 1991, after many years in the orbit of the Grateful Dead, he managed to get hired by the band - the closest thing imaginable to a kid's dream of running away to join the circus not only coming true, but kinda working out as a career move. He was writer-editor of the band's official newsletter, The Grateful Dead Almanac, for 12 years, co-hosted a radio show on KPFA-FM with bassist Phil Lesh from 1987 to 1995, and helped the Dead connect with such musical icons as Babatunde Olatunji and Ornette Coleman. Since signing on (with the inestimable help of David Gans) with SiriusXM's Grateful Dead Channel and more recently submitting his face to public scrutiny as a co-host of nugs.net's popular series of "Dead Air" interviews during video livestreams of Dead & Company shows, he has experienced a somewhat disorienting kind of Celebrity Deadhead status after decades of contented anonymity. Took some getting used to, but hey, there are worse fates in life.
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #2 of 74: Inkwell Co-host (jonl) Wed 6 Mar 24 12:29
permalink #2 of 74: Inkwell Co-host (jonl) Wed 6 Mar 24 12:29
About the book, from Bloomsbury: "This deeply researched book tells Gleason's story as the son of a horseplayer who became America's leading pop music critic. Hooked on jazz as a teen, Gleason supported music-centered youth cultures his entire life. Immersed in the Depression-era student activist movement, Gleason saw pop music as a powerful tool for progressive social change." More at <https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/9781501366987/> You can read an excerpt from the book at <https://bloomsburycp3.codemantra.com/viewer/6597ed49f4428a00015ce944>
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #3 of 74: Gary Lambert (almanac) Sun 10 Mar 24 09:26
permalink #3 of 74: Gary Lambert (almanac) Sun 10 Mar 24 09:26
Welcome to the Inkwell, Don! I've been looking forward to this conversation, as Ralph Gleason has been an enduring influence on my musical and social consciousness since I first encountered his writings in various forms - record and concert reviews, historical essays and liner notes - when I was in my teens in the 1960s. I suppose a good place to start here would be to ask you about how/when you first became aware of RJG, what impact his work had on your own tastes, and what inspired you to take the deep dive into his life that resulted in your excellent biography.
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #4 of 74: Don Armstrong (don12345) Tue 12 Mar 24 04:34
permalink #4 of 74: Don Armstrong (don12345) Tue 12 Mar 24 04:34
Thank you, Gary. It's great to be here! Like you, I discovered Ralph as a sixties teen. In my case, as a Floridian, it was through Rolling Stone and his book The Jefferson Airplane and the San Francisco Sound. I loved that book, and I'm sure it reinforced my fascination with the city's rock music. However, Ralph's most radical influence came while researching the book in the 2010s. Reading his writings from the 1930s-the 50s schooled me in jazz. This led to my favorite research activity - letting his record reviews turn me on to a wonderland of fantastic music. Swing artists like Ellington, the free jazz crowd, and Bay Area Third Stream like Brubeck, daily listening over a decade, scrambled my old tastes and left them in a better place. Along the way, interviews with two generations of people who knew Ralph and his correspondence with folks like Ken Kesey and Nelson Algren left me hungry to understand what made Ralph tick. I knew it would take more than an article to do justice to Ralph's story!
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #5 of 74: Gary Lambert (almanac) Tue 12 Mar 24 17:28
permalink #5 of 74: Gary Lambert (almanac) Tue 12 Mar 24 17:28
Yes, "Jefferson Airplane and the San Francisco Sound" had a big effect on me, with Ralph's excellent essay on the origins of the scene and his interviews with most of the members of the Airplane, Bill Graham and Jerry Garcia. We'll definitely get to more of that as we go along, but let's rewind to the early part of your book, which goes deep into Ralph's early life and the beginnings of his infatuation with jazz, which happened by almost miraculous chance when he was forced into isolation by a severe case of measles, his only companion being an Atwater-Kent radio, on which he discovered the music that would become his lifelong preoccupation. I already knew that story, but there are many other details that were new to me about his early education and his life-altering decision to defy his mother's wishes that he attend a Catholic college, instead choosing Columbia University - a fairly short commute from his Westchester County home, but a gateway to another world, not only because it placed him near the epicenter of jazz, but also because of its affect on his emerging social consciousness. What were the sources of information that granted you such great insight into Ralph's formative years?
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #6 of 74: Administrivia (jonl) Wed 13 Mar 24 05:20
permalink #6 of 74: Administrivia (jonl) Wed 13 Mar 24 05:20
This conversation is world-readable, i.e. can be read by anyone on or off the WELL, the online community platform that is hosting the two week discussion. Here's a short link for access <https://tinyurl.com/ralph-gleason> The full link is <https://people.well.com/conf/inkwell.vue/topics/542/Don-Armstrong-The-Life-and -Writi-page01.html> Please share on social media or with anyone who might be interested in reading. If you're reading this conversation, and you're not a member of the WELL, you won't be able to post directly. However if you have a comment or question, send it to the email address inkwell at well.com, and we'll post it here. If you're not a member of the WELL, but you'd like to participate in more conversations like this, you can join the WELL: <https://www.well.com/join/> The WELL is an online conferencing system and a virtual community with ongoing intelligent conversations about many subjects - a great alternative to drive-by posting on social media. This conversation will last for at least two weeks, through October 2. In order to read the whole conversation, we encourage you to return regularly and, since the discussion will grow into multiple pages, use the pager (dropdown at the top and the bottom of the page).
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #7 of 74: Peter Richardson (richardsonpete) Wed 13 Mar 24 06:35
permalink #7 of 74: Peter Richardson (richardsonpete) Wed 13 Mar 24 06:35
Thank you, Don, for your superb work. Gleason is a major figure, as your biography makes clear. A little odd that it took so long for a biography to appear ... almost five decades after his death. I'm also interested in your sources. When I helped Toby Gleason write the book proposal for the two anthologies, eventually published by Yale University Press in 2016, I encouraged him to make his father's papers available to scholars. Were you able to access that material? If memory serves, his letters appear in the library collections of his friends and colleagues, but there was nothing devoted specifically to him. On the other hand, he was very prolific, so there's plenty of material to draw on there. You also do a splendid job of casting RJG as a builder. He created so many platforms for the music he loved, including the Monterey Jazz Festival and Rolling Stone magazine. Can you tell us more about that?
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #8 of 74: Don Armstrong (don12345) Wed 13 Mar 24 11:01
permalink #8 of 74: Don Armstrong (don12345) Wed 13 Mar 24 11:01
<scribbled by jonl Thu 14 Mar 24 13:30>
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #9 of 74: Don Armstrong (don12345) Wed 13 Mar 24 11:08
permalink #9 of 74: Don Armstrong (don12345) Wed 13 Mar 24 11:08
Gary and Peter, thanks for the kind remarks. The sources on Gleason's life unfolded throughout my research. I began with his introduction to Celebrating the Duke and used it to pursue additional sources. He wrote quite about his Chappaqua childhood in the Chronicle, I drew on all those columns. I cross-referenced the info with Ralph's three children Bridget, Stacy, and Toby. They pulled correspondence, photos, and other ephemera from their files which they scanned and sent - a treasure trove! I'm in discussions with them and UC Berkeley to add this material to their archives. The family files also illuminated Ralph's college years. Another key source was the Columbia Spectator. Ralph wrote for the paper from 1935-38 - lot's of material. Reviews of jazz shows and records, his thoughts about artists, plus, articles about him. His work on dance committees and the antiwar movement. Even the Spectator ads and general articles provided wonderful details used to write scenes in my book. To sum up, I drew on a combination of documents and family interviews. I also researched that era and relevant topics from horseracing to the Great Depression. The clothing, hair styles and radio shows from that time. Took a deep dive into Catholic Irish-America - an essential influence on Ralph's worldview. I wanted to bring alive the impactful events in Ralph's life.
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #10 of 74: Paulina Borsook (loris) Wed 13 Mar 24 15:22
permalink #10 of 74: Paulina Borsook (loris) Wed 13 Mar 24 15:22
just coming over here to look at this --- and i know i had never realized before that RALPH GLEASON, someone i had read and heard about, was my mother's age. just trying to wrap my head around that...
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #11 of 74: Gary Lambert (almanac) Wed 13 Mar 24 18:57
permalink #11 of 74: Gary Lambert (almanac) Wed 13 Mar 24 18:57
It seems to me that the simultaneous effects of Ralph's exposure to a new degree of political awareness at Columbia and his easy access to the great jazz venues in Harlem and on 52nd Street were absolutely crucial in making his social consciousness and his musical passions inseparable. He quickly recognized, his admiration for talented white practitioners notwithstanding, that jazz was one of the greatest expressions of black culture ever invented - he learned to discern between "straight" jazz (read mostly white) and "hot" jazz (read mostly black) and unhesitatingly expressed his preference for the latter. He even could detect changes between the way the great black bands would play at, say, the Apollo or the Savoy Ballroom and the slightly greater reserve when playing for more posh crowds downtown. Don, would you agree that Ralph's political and musical principles were essentially as one?
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #12 of 74: Gary Lambert (almanac) Wed 13 Mar 24 20:07
permalink #12 of 74: Gary Lambert (almanac) Wed 13 Mar 24 20:07
Slight addendum to the above - Ralphs preference for the black bands had already been developing during his measles-mandated confinement to his childhood bedroom, listenIng to the radio that was his only source of solace. He quickly found that the bands that spoke to him most strongly were the black-led ones that were invariably consigned to the late-night hours, while the more genteel white outfits dominated prime time, because broadcasters didnt want to alienate their advertisers and listeners in the South. So Ralph became aware of those disparities of opportunity very early on.
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #13 of 74: Peter Richardson (richardsonpete) Thu 14 Mar 24 06:51
permalink #13 of 74: Peter Richardson (richardsonpete) Thu 14 Mar 24 06:51
Yes, and I really liked your treatment of the neighborhood around Columbia, which housed what one historian called the greatest assemblage of academic progressives and radicals in Depression America. Would you say that's what he was going for when he decided to live in Berkeley?
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #14 of 74: Don Armstrong (don12345) Thu 14 Mar 24 11:03
permalink #14 of 74: Don Armstrong (don12345) Thu 14 Mar 24 11:03
Peter, that's a great question. I don't know what the state of political play was in Berkeley in 1946 when the Gleasons decided to move there, but it probably wasn't a significant factor. Now, the Bohemian nature of the Bay Area was firmly established. Having hung out in Greenwich Village, the Gleasons liked that part of Berkeley's character.
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #15 of 74: Don Armstrong (don12345) Thu 14 Mar 24 11:10
permalink #15 of 74: Don Armstrong (don12345) Thu 14 Mar 24 11:10
Gary, yes, music and politics were inseparable for Gleason. More specifically, he believed music drove social change. During the radicalism of the 60s, he believed that music was a more effective agent of progressive change than militant leftism, which he opposed.
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #16 of 74: david gault (dgault) Thu 14 Mar 24 11:22
permalink #16 of 74: david gault (dgault) Thu 14 Mar 24 11:22
One thing I remember about Gleason was his important role in the newspaper strike of 1968 in San Francisco. He helped arrange the temporary relocation of many reporters over to KQED-TV, and was on camera a lot. I just tried to find mention of the strike, which was a big deal at the time, via Google. It seems to have been effectively purged, at least to my set of search terms. I only found one mention of it, in a description of a 1994 strike as 'the first in 26 years.' I haven't read the book yet. Is there any mention of the 68 strike? It helped KQED's exposure a lot.
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #17 of 74: david gault (dgault) Thu 14 Mar 24 13:30
permalink #17 of 74: david gault (dgault) Thu 14 Mar 24 13:30
I found this after looking some more: https://diva.sfsu.edu/collections/sfbatv/bundles/189733
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #18 of 74: Don Armstrong (don12345) Fri 15 Mar 24 04:38
permalink #18 of 74: Don Armstrong (don12345) Fri 15 Mar 24 04:38
David, yes, I discuss the strike in my book. Like you, I found scant sources, mainly a Chronicle column by Gleason and a temp column he wrote for the Daily Californian while the strike was on. Thanks so much for sharing your info. Did you work for KQED? I look forward to watching the clip and may write a post about it. Although Gleason criticized the Old Left for being out of touch, he was an ardent union supporter. Again, thanks for sharing!
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #19 of 74: Peter Richardson (richardsonpete) Fri 15 Mar 24 05:59
permalink #19 of 74: Peter Richardson (richardsonpete) Fri 15 Mar 24 05:59
Wasn't there an earlier strike that led to the Sunday Ramparts, the magazine's spinoff newspaper? That's where RJG lined up a job for Jann Wenner. If memory serves, Warren Hinckle shut the paper down in 1967, right around the time Ralph quite the magazine, and the idea for Rolling Stone arose.
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #20 of 74: david gault (dgault) Fri 15 Mar 24 10:05
permalink #20 of 74: david gault (dgault) Fri 15 Mar 24 10:05
>Did you work for KQED? I volunteered at the auction. I was fascinated by the power of broadcast media then, as a 15 year old, and hung around as much as I could. Including KMPX-FM, the ballrooms and the clubs. I got my 3rd class license soon after. My parents' friends worked at KQED and impressed upon me the value and importance of the station and its impact on PBS, which didn't exist until a year later. We took it as a given that KQED's Newsroom parented PBS Newshour. My friends at KQED also worked for Bechtel and they had a lot of influence on everything. It's often forgotten that PBS began in the Nixon administration. And yeah, there's a Ramparts angle in there too. But I've forgotten the details.
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #21 of 74: david gault (dgault) Fri 15 Mar 24 10:08
permalink #21 of 74: david gault (dgault) Fri 15 Mar 24 10:08
And by the way, the lead voice on the clip from KQED's 68-69 Newsroom is Mel Wax. His daughter has a Jefferson Airplane song named for her. The world was pretty incestuous back then!
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #22 of 74: Paulina Borsook (loris) Fri 15 Mar 24 12:31
permalink #22 of 74: Paulina Borsook (loris) Fri 15 Mar 24 12:31
wrt my seemingly redonk comment in #10, what i was trying to convey was my surprise that gleason, who so shaped the musical culture of my teens and 20s, was my mother's age. i had just assumed he was a boomer, like much of the RS crowd. which made me wonder what other boomer culture-shaper was also parental age.
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #23 of 74: Frako Loden (frako) Fri 15 Mar 24 12:55
permalink #23 of 74: Frako Loden (frako) Fri 15 Mar 24 12:55
<loris>, when I first arrived as a freshman at Berkeley I hung out in the Student Union with Gleason's son, so Gleason was a full generation older than this supposed boomer.
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #24 of 74: Paulina Borsook (loris) Fri 15 Mar 24 14:09
permalink #24 of 74: Paulina Borsook (loris) Fri 15 Mar 24 14:09
right. i just hadnt realized this about gleason, just had assumed he was someone maybe like greil marcus in terms of generational cohort. someone like alan ginsberg was also an older culture-shaper --- yet we all knew he was of the beat age cohort. carry on...
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Don Armstrong: The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason
permalink #25 of 74: david gault (dgault) Fri 15 Mar 24 20:08
permalink #25 of 74: david gault (dgault) Fri 15 Mar 24 20:08
the great book about Ramparts, which covers the same period as RJG's heyday, is Hinckle's _If You Have a Lemon Make Lemonade_. It is also the story of Hinckle's partner Howard Gossage, an advertising man called "the Socrates of San Francisco" in a Tom Wolfe story from _The Pump House Gang_.
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