Mezz Mezzrow (1899-1972) was born Milton Mesirow in Chicago to a Jewish family "as respectable as Sunday morning." As a teenager, however, he was sent to Pontiac Reformatory for stealing a car; there he learned to play the saxophone and decided to devote his life to the blues. Beginning in the 1920s, he had an intermittent career as a sideman in jazz groups, and struck up friendships with many of the greats of the day, including Louis Armstrong and Bix Beiderbecke. Enamored of African American culture, he helped channel it to whiter and wider audiences, backing and producing significant recordings by Frankie Newton, Teddy Wilson, Sidney Bechet, and Tommy Ladnier, among others, and helping to spark the New Orleans revival of the late 1930s. In the 1940s, Mezzrow started his own record label, King Jazz Records. He spent the last years of his life in Paris.
Bernard Wolfe (1915-1985) was born in New Haven and attended Yale University, where he studied psychology. An active member of the labor movement, he moved to Mexico for eight months in 1937 to work as personal secretary and assistant to Leon Trotsky. In subsequent years, Wolfe held disparate jobs--from serving in the Merchant Marines to working as a pornographic novelist to editing
Mechanix Illustrated--while writing fiction and science fiction. His best-known work is the 1959 novel
The Great Prince Died, a fictional account of Trotsky's assassination. Among his other books are
The Late Risers,
In Deep, Limbo, and
Logan's Gone.
Ben Ratliff has been a jazz and pop critic for
The New York Times since 1996 and has written four books including
The Jazz Ear: Conversations over Music and
Coltrane: The Story of a Sound. His latest book is
Every Song Ever: Twenty Ways to Listen in an Age of Musical Plenty.