Ted Gioia Explained

Ted Gioia
Birth Date:21 October 1957
Birth Place:Hawthorne, California, U.S.
Occupation:Music historian, writer
Relatives:Dana Gioia (brother)

Ted Gioia (born October 21, 1957) is an American jazz critic and music historian. He is author of eleven books, including Music: A Subversive History, , The History of Jazz and Delta Blues. He is also a jazz musician and one of the founders of Stanford University's jazz studies program.

Early life and education

Gioia grew up in an Italian-Mexican household in Hawthorne, California, and later earned degrees from Stanford University and the University of Oxford, as well as a Master of Business Administration (MBA) from the Stanford Graduate School of Business.[1]

Career

After graduating, Gioia served for a period as an adviser to Fortune 500 companies while with the Boston Consulting Group and McKinsey & Company. When Gioia worked amidst Silicon Valley's venture capital community on Sand Hill Road, he was known as the "guy with the piano in his office." Gioia is also owner of one of the largest collections of research materials on jazz and ethnic music in the Western United States.

Gioia is the author of several books on music, including Music: A Subversive History (2019), West Coast Jazz (1992), (2012), and The Birth (and Death) of the Cool (2009). A second updated and expanded edition of The History of Jazz was published by Oxford University Press in 2011, and a third revised edition was issued in 2021.[2] Love Songs: The Hidden History, published by Oxford University Press in 2015, is a survey of the music of courtship, romance, and sexuality;[3] it completes a trilogy of books on the social history of music that includes Work Songs (2006) and Healing Songs (2006). All three books have been honored with ASCAP's Deems Taylor Award.[4] [5] In his study of love songs, Gioia contends that innovations in the history of this music came from Africa and the Middle East.

In 2006, Gioia was the first to expose, in an article in the Los Angeles Times, the FBI files on folk and roots music icon Alan Lomax.[6] He founded the website jazz.com in December 2007 and served as president and editor until 2010.[7]

Gioia is also a jazz pianist and composer. He has produced recordings featuring Bobby Hutcherson, John Handy, and Buddy Montgomery.

Books

Selected discography

Recorded June 9–11, 1986, and October 19, 1987, Menlo Park, California

Recorded March 31, 1989, and April 7, 1990, San Francisco

Awards and honors

Lifetime Achievement Award in Jazz Journalism, Jazz Journalists Association, 2017.[21]

The Dallas Morning News has called Ted Gioia "one of the outstanding music historians in America." His concept of "post-cool" described in his book The Birth (and Death) of the Cool, was selected as one of the Big Ideas of 2012 by Adbusters magazine.

ASCAP Deems Taylor Award: The Imperfect Art (1989), Work Songs (2006), Healing Songs (2006), Love Songs: The Hidden History (2015).

Personal life

Gioia is the brother of poet Dana Gioia.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Addicted to Distraction with Ted Gioia on the How I Write Podcast. apple.com. David. Perell. 2024.
  2. https://www.npr.org/2021/07/15/1016020385/re-revising-the-history-of-jazz Weiner, Natalie, "Re-Revising The History Of Jazz"
  3. https://catalog.libraries.psu.edu/catalog/23178929 Love Songs: The Hidden History
  4. https://www.ascapfoundation.org/programs/awards/award-recipients/deems-taylor/2007 "40th Annual ASCAP Deems Taylor Awards Presented"
  5. https://www.ascapfoundation.org/news/2016/11-8-foundation-deems-taylor-awards "48th Annual ASCAP Foundation Deems Taylor/Virgil Thomson Award Winners"
  6. https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2006-apr-23-ca-lomax23-story.html Gioia, Ted, "The Red Rumor Blues,"
  7. Web site: Ted Gioia .
  8. [Oxford University Press]
  9. 1st edn (1997);
  10. 2nd edn (2011);
  11. 3rd edn (2021);
  12. [Basic Books]
  13. Speck Press (2009);
  14. [W. W. Norton & Company|Norton]
  15. Oxford University Press 1st edn (1992);
  16. 2nd edn (1998);
  17. Oxford University Press (1988);
  18. Oxford University Press (2015);
  19. [Duke University Press]
  20. Duke University Press (2006);
  21. Web site: Wadada Leo Smith Among Winners of 2017 JJA Awards . DownBeat Magazine . 26 September 2018 . 16 May 2017.