The Guardian (USA)

Holding the Note by David Remnick review – erudite portraits of musical greats

- Kitty Empire

How to critique a compendium of writings on music by the Pulitzer prize-winning editor of the New Yorker? Praise would read like a job applicatio­n. A hatchet job would be absurdly polemical. In a 2016 piece on the late, great Leonard Cohen, David Remnick quotes a conversati­on between Cohen and Bob Dylan in which the two singer-songwriter­s discussed accomplish­ment. Cohen, Dylan said, was “number one” but Dylan was “number zero”.

Remnick’s stuff is noisomely good. Rightly or wrongly, the New Yorker is often held to be the loftiest spot left in print, where the business of stringing sentences together on interestin­g topics still exists in an exalted form, insulated from the closures, compromise­s and clickbait that prevails elsewhere.

Its archaic hangup with diaeresis notwithsta­nding (coöperatio­n! Reëmerge!), this is an organ that takes its understand­ing of the arts as seriously as it takes its dissection­s of current affairs. And Remnick himself is that relatively rare thing, an editor who still writes reams of copy, an expert on Russia who came to pen biographie­s of Muhammad Ali and Barack Obama, all in his spare time from running the journal of record of liberal intellectu­al inquiry (or at least, its North American wing).

Holdingthe Note is album-length, pulling together 11 of Remnick’s longform New Yorker pieces on people such as Bruce Springstee­n and Mavis Staples, Luciano Pavarotti and Aretha

Franklin. They are artists who occupy a place beyond genre, in what you might call deep canon – celebrated, storied, complex; older or gone.

With the exception of Pavarotti, a Beatle (Paul McCartney) and a Stone (Keith Richards), most are also Americans, and fit in with Remnick’s interest in myth-level US figures. The youngest is probably Springstee­n. This is no slur on Remnick – recently, he interviewe­d gen Z pop icon Olivia Rodrigo for the

New YorkerRadi­o Hour podcast – but more acknowledg­ing that these essays assume a set of late 20th-century concerns, making sense of careers formed in the barely conceivabl­e late boomertime­s. In the foreword, Remnick admits he met with these veterans past their commercial peaks. What united them all, however, was a desire to “hold the note”: to keep working – or in the case of Chicago bluesman Buddy Guy, to keep an entire genre alive.

Helpfully, Remnick is also present earlier on. Now in his 60s, Remnick grew up in a jazz-obsessed Jewish family. He knows the work of Patti Smith and Bob Dylan first-hand and inside out; he saw them play, and others here, as a young civilian.

To an outsider, it feels as if New Yorker writers spend their days wittily debating the most delicious place to put a comma; they seem to have many luxurious months to pen vast profiles of subjects who grant them unlimited access. Many of these Remnick pieces are true to cliche: remarkable, not just for their expertise and vividness, but for the aeons he spends talking to his subjects and those around them.

His levels of access are exceptiona­l.

Dylan doesn’t actually talk to Remnick for his – still excellent – Dylan piece, in which he puts forward a “unified field theory of Dylan”. But he does get Dylan to talk about Cohen, and it’s no token pullquote, but rather paragraphs of eru

dite dissection, both technical and effusive.

Remnick hangs out with Paul McCartney at his house in the Hamptons, in his Manhattan office. He flies to Singapore to do Pavarotti for a piece published in 1993, an assignment that ends up covering many months as the tenor undergoes knee surgery before going back on tour. Remnick rejoins him, on private jets and in dressing rooms.

Notwithsta­nding all the largesse in which this journalism can occur, the best piece here is one where the subject is more removed. In Bird-Watcher, which ran in May 2008, Remnick profiled a Columbia University radio DJ, Phil Schaap, who has since died. Schaap was a jazz obsessive and “a mad Talmudic scholar” of the every exhalation of saxophonis­t Charlie “Bird” Parker.

Schaap grew up surrounded by jazz musicians, who thought him a prodigious child savant. He turns out to have a heart, too. Schaap takes Remnick to visit Lawrence Lucie, one of the last then-living musicians (he died in 2009) with direct links to the heyday of Jelly Roll Morton and Duke Ellington, in his care home.

Knowledgab­le and probing, Remnick conveys both the loftiness of this devotion to a niche interest and its attendant ridiculous­ness, with respectful humour. In painstakin­gly restoring tapes of lost Parker performanc­es, Schaap calculates he probably made “0.0003 cents an hour”. Jazz accounts for just 3% of music sales in the

Remnick conveys both the loftiness of this devotion to a niche interest and its attendant ridiculous­ness, with respectful humour

US in 2008, Remnick tells us – and that’s counting Michael Bublé and Kenny G. The piece is a lament about the decline of jazz as a living, breathing phenomenon, and one man’s great care and attentiven­ess to this most American, this most 20th century of art forms.

• Holding the Note: Writing on Music by David Remnick is published by Picador (£22). To support the Guardian and Observer order your copy at guardianbo­okshop.com. Delivery charges may apply

 ?? ?? Patti Smith in 2021. Many of these essays are remarkable, ‘not just for their expertise and vividness, but for the aeons Remnick spends talking to his subjects’. Photograph: Michal Augustini/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
Patti Smith in 2021. Many of these essays are remarkable, ‘not just for their expertise and vividness, but for the aeons Remnick spends talking to his subjects’. Photograph: Michal Augustini/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
 ?? Iooss Jr/Getty Images ?? One of the ‘artists who occupy a place beyond genre’: Aretha Franklin performing in New York in 1971. Photograph: Walter
Iooss Jr/Getty Images One of the ‘artists who occupy a place beyond genre’: Aretha Franklin performing in New York in 1971. Photograph: Walter

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