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ART PEPPER: STRAIGHT LIFE EVERY SUNDAY
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ART PEPPER: STRAIGHT LIFE EVERY SUNDAY

Author: Laurie Pepper

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Art Pepper Every Sunday. Laurie reads the book.

Straight Life is a critical favorite and a cult classic. Praised for its honesty and poetry in the New Yorker, Time, The Village Voice, etc. and by fans everywhere, It's the story of a complicated man who really lived his life. Adventure, comic upsets, tragic losses, madness, passion, crime and punishment, all remembered and recalled in language as unique and powerful as the soulful jazz solos he improvised.

I fell in love with Art's stories as I fell in love with the man. I fancied myself an oral historian and believed Art to be masterful storyteller with a style unlike any I had ever heard, and I became obsessed. I interviewed him for seven years, asking endless questions, researching and verifying details. Writing and rewriting.

Straight Life was originally published by Schirmer/Macmillan in 1979. It's now available from Hachette as both paperback and ebook, I'm an audiobook fanatic and have decided that there needs to be an audio version, and since I own the performance rights, I've been recording "episodes" of 10 to 30 minutes for six years. Occasionally I'll include Art's voice and or his music when they seem apropos to the episode.

Warning: Straight Life is grossly politically incorrect. Art spoke the language of his class, his race, his gender, and his time, so I'm labeling almost every episode "explicit." If you're triggered by dirty words, racism, sexism, suicide, domestic violence, drugs, alcohol, sex or jazz music. this book isn't for you. As for me, I'm now recording readings once a week—as my voice deteriorates—and will continue until I finish or drop dead.

NEW EPISODES WILL BE POSTED EVERY SUNDAY

10 Episodes
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"Straight Life" — slang: THE TRUTHThis episode is "explicit" in that sex and abortion are mentioned and it includes violence, and dirty words
In episode 1 Art described his violent parents and leaving them to live with his grandmother.In episode 2 he talks about his family and begins music lessons.This episode is "explicit" in that it includes violence, and dirty words
At 9, Art starts performing in waterfront bars and gets paid.He keeps his father from throttling his grandmother.This episode is "explicit" in that it includes violence, and dirty words.Author's note: This is one of my favorite episodes. Music snippets heard here:Straight Life by Art Pepper: with Smith Dobson, Jim Nichols, Brad Bilhorn. Unreleased Art Pepper Volume VIII, live at the Winery—Widow's Taste/Omnivore RecordingsWhen You're Smiling: with Roger Kellaway, David Williams, Carl Burnett. Unreleased Art Pepper Volume 2, The Last Concert—Widow's Taste.That Crazy Blues by Art Pepper: with Frank Strazzeri, Hersh Hamel, Bill Goodwin—Unreleased Art Pepper Volume 4, The Art History Project—Widow's TasteListen to more Art Pepper music at http://artpepper.bandcamp.comAnd buy Straight Life in paper or kindle on Amazon
This is a long one, Interviews with Art's stepmother Thelma Pepper, and with Sarah Schecter Bartold, the woman who raised Art's mother, Ida AKA Millie. Thelma talks about Art's grandmother and then about his mother. This is American history, touching and inspiring.
Art's "cousin" Johnny talks about Art as a child and as a young man. He gives a fuller picture of Art's adventurous father and difficult mother and has shows a different side of Grandma. I apologize for being a few days late with this episode. I'm just starting this...
Art describes his early sexual experiences
Art meets the love of his life (until me, of course). Incidental music is Art's tune, Patricia, performed in Nice in 1980. I'm pretty sure the band is Art, Milcho Leviev, Bob Magnusson, Carl Burnett
ART QUITS THE COBRAS AND GETS INTO THE MUSIC THING
Art describes jamming and performing on Central Avenue in the Club Alabam. American musical history from someone who got to live right in the heart of it.
Bandleader Lee Young hired seventeen year old Art Pepper to play in his band at the Club Alabam on Central Avenue in Los Angeles. Lee describes young Art, and what the world was like before the war on Central,
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