"In Blue Notes in Black and White you sense an author consumed and excited by his subject. He's synthesized loads of the literature and argument around jazz, and he builds particularly on recent works of historiography."
--Ben Ratliff "New York Times""Benjamin Cawthra, writing with grace and a formidable command of jazz history and American culture, makes us see the sounds, the social relations, and the myths of jazz as he ably uncovers the personal and institutional networks of musicians, writers, magazines, and record companies in which jazz photography developed. Even as Blue Notes in Black and White casts a sharp eye on photographic aesthetics--its pages brim with bracing insights into Gjon Mili's informal but magisterial style, Francis Wolff's use of chiaroscuro, and Herman Leonard's concept of the sculpted face--it also works as a groundbreaking history of jazz criticism. At its best, this excellent book serves as a model for a multisensory music criticism: while reading it, I often felt I was hearing the music more deeply."
--John Gennari "author of Blowin' Hot and Cool: Jazz and Its Critics"