Author: smithmeaword_ufq3lh

Everybody step

Everybody step

The Syncopated Times has published this article detailing how syncopation conquered the Broadway stage in and around 1920, giving birth to what’s now called the “American popular songbook” of show tunes, and describing the early careers of Irving Berlin (look at that boychik!), Jerome Kern, and George Gershwin. This is the longest piece I’ve ever …

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Robert Kimmel Smith (1930-2020)

Robert Kimmel Smith (1930-2020)

My sister, Heidi Pie Aronson, and I co-wrote this remembrance of our father, who passed away on April 18. *** Robert Kimmel Smith, novelist and author of the children’s books Chocolate Fever and The War With Grandpa, died Saturday at his home in Manhattan. He was 89. He passed peacefully from natural causes, said Margery …

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Where’s a world order when you need one?

Where’s a world order when you need one?

Since 2020 began I’ve been thinking about some of the year’s significant anniversaries, especially it being the 75th anniversary of everything that happened in 1945. I was expecting that we’d have heard a lot about 1945 by this point in the year, with world leaders gathering and doing whatever they do at commemorations: pompous speeches, …

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The First Race Record Turns 100

The First Race Record Turns 100

The March 2020 issue of The Syncopated Times newspaper will run my article on the historic 1920 recording of “Crazy Blues,” by Mamie Smith and her Jazz Hounds, the disc that opened the way for African American artists in the record business. The article explores the circumstances of the recording and the career of Perry …

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Ticking away…

Ticking away…

Reflections on the latest “Doomsday Clock” reset, published January 29 by the Progressive Media Project. This is your wake-up call! This piece was distributed over the Tribune News Service wire and was printed in newspapers and websites coast to coast! Print pickups include The Republican of Springfield, MA; Kenosha News of Kenosha, WI; Times Leader …

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The Jackie Robinson of Jazz

The Jackie Robinson of Jazz

Everybody knows Brooklyn’s number 42, but I’m surprised how many people are unaware of how popular music got integrated in the 1930s, paving the way for Robinson and Rickey to break baseball’s color line after World War II. The pivotal figure for jazz was Teddy Wilson, whose musical compatibility with the King of Swing created …

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Round 2 for the Presidentials

Round 2 for the Presidentials

Here’s my article on “the Democrats’ do-si-do,” published on Common Dreams in the wake of former VP Biden’s entrance into the race. (Here’s hoping they fix the woefully outdated bio. And photo—I haven’t worn that goatee in years!) Let me know your thoughts on this thinkpiece!

origins of the origin-al blues

origins of the origin-al blues

Behold your wordsmith’s first contribution to The Syncopated Times, a thoroughly charming monthly periodical out of Utica, New York. (“Syncopate Close to Home!”) The April issue contains my review of The Original Blues: The Emergence of the Blues in African American Vaudeville, by Lynn Abbott and Doug Seroff. The book is the culminating volume of …

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The Original Cornell Syncopators: two radio features and an article

The Original Cornell Syncopators: two radio features and an article

The Original Cornell Syncopators are a student band that plays in the earliest jazz styles. Their historical acumen is such that they make recordings on Thomas A. Edison cylinders from the nineteen-aughts! I produced a 15-minute audio feature for WRFI Community Radio News enitled: “Time Machine—Recording Hot Jazz on Cylinder.” In May 2019, the band …

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Peace Piece at The Progressive

Peace Piece at The Progressive

On the International Day of Peace, The Progressive magazine’s website published my review of Randy Forsberg’s fascinating book, Toward a Theory of Peace: The Role of Moral Beliefs. I had suggested a clever title for the article—”From the Unthinkable to the Inconceivable”—but I suppose clever titles aren’t all they’re cracked up to be. (If anyone …

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