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Martin Williams (writer)

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Name
  
Martin Williams

Role
  
Writer

Education
  
University of Virginia


Died
  
April 13, 1992, Washington, D.C., United States

Awards
  
Grammy Award for Best Album Notes

Books
  
The jazz tradition, Jazz heritage, Climate Change in Deserts, Jazz changes, Computer Fun

Similar People
  
Bill Blackbeard, Gunther Schuller, Michael Barrier

Sys podcast episode 060 writer beau martin williams talks about his new film americons


Martin Tudor Hansford Williams (9 August 1924 Richmond, Virginia — 11 or 12 April 1992) was an American jazz critic and writer.

Contents

Education and service in the armed forces

Williams attended St. Christopher Episcopal Preparatory School, then entered the U.S. Army during World War II. After his military service during World War II, which included Battle of Iwo Jima, Williams first studied law, then literature at the University of Virginia (BA 1948), at the University of Pennsylvania (MA 1950) and at Columbia University.

Career

Williams, beginning in the early 1950s, became a prolific jazz critic, contributing articles to The Saturday Review, The New York Times, Harper's Magazine, Down Beat, and The Jazz Review, which he founded in November 1958 with Nat Hentoff, which often featured contributions by jazz musicians, including Gunther Schuller, Dick Katz, and Cecil Taylor. The Jazz Review also featured contributions by other notable people, including Sheldon Mayer and Dan Morgenstern.

Williams authored many books on jazz, a collection of sixteen essays, profiling jazz musicians, in a book titled The Jazz Tradition. From 1971 to 1981 Williams headed the jazz and "American Culture Program" at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington D.C., where, in 1973, he compiled and wrote liner notes for The Smithsonian Collection of Classic Jazz. In 1983, he Gunther Schuller, and the Smithsonian — in collaboration with RCA Records — produced Big Band Jazz. With animation historian Michael Barrier, Williams co-edited A Smithsonian Book of Comic-Book Comics (1982).

References

Martin Williams (writer) Wikipedia