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A Child's Introduction to Jazz: The Musicians, Culture, and Roots of the World's Coolest Music

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Get ready to swing with A Child’s Introduction to Jazz , an interactive journey into one of the richest and most soulful music genres in the world. Listen while you learn with QR codes that will connect you to the instruments and musical flair of jazz. 

Welcome to jazz! Feel the music and rhythms of all the different styles of jazz, from swing and Dixieland to the blues and bebop, with this interactive introduction to the world’s coolest music.

Author Jabari Asim will take you on the journey through the history of jazz as you discover the most important musicians and singers while hearing some really cool sounds. You’ll learn all about the roots of jazz in Africa and New Orleans and how the music traveled to different parts of the United States and around the world. Along the way you’ll meet legendary trumpeter Louis Armstrong, who shaped a new form of jazz called improvisation; pianist and bandleader Duke Ellington, who helped create the big band sound of the swing era; and the singer Billie Holiday, whose songs such as “God Bless the Child,” “Don’t Explain,” and “Lady Sings the Blues” have become jazz standards.

Listen along to the sounds of jazz by downloading music and hearing instruments such as trumpets, clarinets, trombones, and even singers scatting as they improvise melodies. With a pull-out poster showing the different instruments of jazz, A Child’s Introduction to Jazz hits the perfect beat and will have you bebopping and scatting in no time!

96 pages, Hardcover

Published December 27, 2022

2 people are currently reading
45 people want to read

About the author

Jabari Asim

34 books347 followers
Praise for Only The Strong

"Jabari Asim is such an elegant writer that you won't realize how smoothly he drew you in until you're halfway through this book. Humane and humorous, compassionate and willing to get a little rough, this describes both the writer and the novel. Only The Strong does for St. Louis what Edward P. Jones has done for Washington D.C., Raymond Chandler for Los Angeles---marked it as place on the literary map where you'll want to stay for a long while. A riveting novel." --Victor LaValle, author of The Devil in Silver

Only the Strong is a lushly atmospheric and passionately written piece of work, bursting with colorful characters that shine on every page.” ---Bernice L. McFadden, author of Gathering of Waters

"Only the Strong effortlessly transmits Jabari Asim’s profound affection for this book's charismatic and varied characters. This is a vivid, revelatory portrait of 1970s America in the disheartened aftermath of Martin Luther King, Jr.’s death." —Rafael Yglesias, author of The Wisdom of Perversity

"There's an eerie timeliness to the publication of this fictional study of Saint Louis black communities of the 1970s. Only the Strong reminds me of Chester Himes’ Harlem entertainments—in its deceptively light handling of desperately serious subject matter. Jabari Asim is a writer to watch, and to listen to closely, in these difficult times." —Madison Smartt Bell, author of All Souls’ Rising and Zig Zag Wanderer

"It is like stepping into a time capsule of my old neighborhood in the 1970s...to read about Gateway City, Jabari Asim’s fascinating rendition of St. Louis, as an adult brings back memories of time and place, and also admiration for his storytelling." —Susan Straight, author of Between Heaven and Here and A Million Nightingales


Praise for A Taste Of Honey

"A Taste of Honey has the power of memoir and the poetry of fiction. Suddenly, it is 1968 once more, with all of the hope and violence and seismic change that rocked the cities that summer. It's all here and it's all beautifully rendered. This books is a gem."
—Chris Bohjalian, author of Secrets of Eden

"Jabari Asim has written a brilliant coming-of-age tale filled with compelling characters navigating race relations in 1968, navigating familial and neighborhood demands, and triumphantly reaffirming what it means to be human. A lovely, lyrical collection of connected stories that will leave readers breathless and ecstatic with passion and joy."
—Jewell Parker Rhodes, author of Yellow Moon

"Offering the bitter with the sweet, Jabari Asim's first collection of stories, A Taste Of Honey, serves up a multilayered dish. Asim ranges through and across a Midwestern African American community in the wake of the civil rights movement and the social changes of the last forty years, writing from the inside out and unforgettably bringing to life a world that still is too seldom seen in American fiction."
—John Keene, author of Annotations

"Jabari Asim's rich short stories read like a novel . . . full of people we love getting to know—Rose, Gabriel, Pristine, Ed, Reuben, and Guts. I particularly loved the male characters in these pages . . . men who live by their brains and their brawn, shelter their children, their community. They embrace their wives. They love hard, laugh deep, and cry inside."
—Denise Nicholas, author of Freshwater Road

"Asim successfully delves into politics, domestic violence, racial identity, young love, and more in this humorous and poignant collection..."
—Publishers Weekly

"With his debut work of fiction, the Guggenheim Fellow proves himself to be a promising storyteller." -Library Journal

"This fiction rings true." -Kirkus Reviews

More about Jabari Asim

He is the author of What Obama Means . . . For Our Culture, Our Politics, Our Future,, The N Word

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Amy.
3,742 reviews96 followers
June 13, 2023
There is a lot of great information, here - I just wish it were presented differently. There's a lot of small print, and sprinkled throughout are QR Codes where the reader can scan to listen to a sample of various types of Jazz. There are quite a few of these at the beginning, but then a long dry spell from the middle to 3/4 of the way through the book. One place where I thought there should definitely be a sample was with relation to the paragraph about Dave Brubeck's Take Five. Brubeck has been credited with taking traditional Jazz rhythms and turning them on their ear to create a completely different sound.

Also, the illustrations are not always true likenesses to the musicians that are mentioned. Sometimes there is no illustration to the musicians mentioned. I'm a visual learner, so I like to see who a writer is talking about, especially when they are being showcased in a Children's book.

Like I said, a lot of good information, here; just wish it had been presented better.
63 reviews
March 6, 2023
This was a very interesting book on the history of jazz. Wonderful artwork and QR codes throughout to listen to the music being presented on the pages. It was interactive and educational.
Profile Image for wildct2003.
3,613 reviews5 followers
May 4, 2023
Very good overview of jazz and jazz performers; more for adults and older kids

I could not get QR codes to work; got the publisher website for the book
Profile Image for Christi Balisti.
77 reviews4 followers
August 8, 2024
A great book full of tons of information, beautiful illustrations and interactive elements. I learned a ton from this book!
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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