Monday, 16 September 2013
Monday, 2 September 2013
Colin Ward goes electric
There's a minor dispute at Five Leaves Towers. We are split between thinking Colin Ward would have grasped the possibility of ebooks or he would have been quite uninterested. No matter, we've just put the short memorial volume to Colin up as an ebook. Colin was an educator, an anarchist and an inspiration for much of what we do at Five Leaves, so it would have been churlish to let this volume go out of print. The booklet sold, we think, about 600 copies, reflecting how well Colin was regarded in all his areas of interest.Here it is as an ebook: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Remembering-Colin-Ward-ebook/dp/B00EV44G2E/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1378112112&sr=1-1&keywords=remembering+colin+ward.
Sorry about the fuzzy illustration here - I'll try to get a better one.
Saturday, 31 August 2013
An insightful reading but definitely
I don't speak German, so this is a review for any German speakers. I did put it in Google translate, which gave a very good translation, with the amusing last words being - "An insightful reading but definitely". One to include on the back of any reprint perhaps. The review appeared in the newsletter of the Jazz Institute Darmstadt.
Der Posaunist Louis Nelson erzählt über das New Orleans der 1930er und 1940er Jahre; der Bassist Norman Keenan über die Bands von Tiny Bradshaw und Lucky Millinder. Der Trompeter Gerald Wilson spricht über Einflüsse, Arrangementkonzepte und die Szene in Los Angeles, der Trompeter Fip Ricard über Territory Bands und Count Basie.
Ruby Braff äußert sich über Boston, den Jazz im Allgemeinen und Wynton Marsalis; Buster Cooper über seine Zeit mit Lionel Hampton und Duke Ellington. Ellington spielt auch im Interview mit dem Trompeter Bill Berry eine große Rolle, Hampton und Basie wiederum in den Erzählungen des Posaunisten Benny Powell.
Der Saxophonist Plas Johnson erzählt über den "Chitlin' Circuit", den er mit Johnny Otis und anderen Bands tourte, der Pianist Ace Carter über die Jazzszene in Cleveland, Ohio. Der Saxophonist Herman Riley berichtet über sein Leben und seine Arbeit in New Orleans und Los Angeles, der Saxophonist Lanny Morgan über seine Arbeit mit Maynard Ferguson.
Der Pianist Ellis Marsalis spricht über die moderne Jazzszene in New Orleans; der Saxophonist Houston Person über Orgel-Saxophon-Combos und seine Zusammenarbeit mit Etta Jones. Der Posaunist Tom Artin erzählt von seinen Erfahrungen auf der traditionellen Jazzszene der USA, der Trompeter von der Toshiko Akiyoshi Big Band und einem Engagement mit Bobby Short.
Der Bassist Rufus Reid nennt J.J. Johnson als role model, der Saxophonist John Stubblefield reflektiert über eine Karriere zwischen Don Byas, Charles Mingus und AACM. Judy Carmichael erzählt, wie sie dazu kam, Stride-Pianistin zu werden, Tardo Hammer über den Einfluss Lennie Tristanos. Der Trompeter Byron Stripling schließlich sagt, was er von Clark Terry lernte, wie es war mit Count Basie zu spielen, und warum die Jazzpädagogik ein wichtiges Instrument sei, das Wissen der großen Jazzmusiker weiterzureichen.
"Mixed Messages" ist eine abwechslungsreiche Sammlung von Erinnerungen an jazzmusikalische Aktivitäten, persönliche Erlebnisse und musikalische Erfahrungen. So "mixed", wie der Buchtitel impliziert, sind die Botschaften der darin portraitierten Musiker allerdings gar nicht, dafür ist das stilistische Spektrum denn doch zu stark auf Musiker des swingenden Jazz beschränkt. Eine erkenntnisreiche Lektüre aber auf jeden Fall.
Wolfram Knauer (August 2013)
Thursday, 29 August 2013
Wednesday, 21 August 2013
Polyamory, polyfidelity and non-monogamy: new approaches to multiple relationships...
...is certainly the most cumbersome sub-title of any Five Leaves book, and the cover of Breaking the Barriers to Desire: new approaches to multiple relationships would certainly be in our top three of worst covers (so bad I'm not putting it on here). In our defence, it was published in 1995 when we were still learning about covers. And typing 1995 makes me realise that yes, Five Leaves is a year older than we normally advertise. Have to bring forward our twentieth birthday bash.
Anyway... every two or three years I wince, when polyamory and all that is back in the press again. There's been a telly programme, which I did not watch, and today Laura Penny (who else?) is in the Guardian advocating non-monogamy.
Just to be clear, polyamory is not something that the Five Leaves batallions get up to in the office when proof-reading gets all too much. We'd never publish such a book now, but several of our early books - commissioned in our pre-flight year as Mushroom Bookshop Publications - were about sexual politics. Not that we've got anything against sexual politics, or polyamory for that matter, but our areas of publication quickly changed once the link with the Bookshop had gone. The book itself, edited by Kevin Lano and Claire Parry, sold reasonably, with the still-extant American magazine Loving More buying the last 150 copies. And that was that. Except it wasn't.
Twice, late in the life of the book, the Guardian and the Sunday Mirror featured the book through no effort our our part. In both cases we got loads of phone calls (in those pre-email days), from journalists wanting copies for further features and reviews. The second time the book was featured thirteen journalists rang, including one desperate journo at The Sun who called several times. Like we would talk to The Sun. And the number of calls from the public or people wanting to order the book? In each case, next to none. The second time it was three calls and bookshops worldwide were scarcely troubled by as many people ordering the book. By then we had no copies to give out to journalists anyway.
All we could conclude from this was that journalists were (and perhaps are) REALLY interested in non-monogamy and that the public was (and perhaps is) not, other than maybe those involved in responsible polyamory who had already bought the book. We still get occasional calls, but the book is long gone and we have lost touch with the editors and contributors.
Anyway... every two or three years I wince, when polyamory and all that is back in the press again. There's been a telly programme, which I did not watch, and today Laura Penny (who else?) is in the Guardian advocating non-monogamy.
Just to be clear, polyamory is not something that the Five Leaves batallions get up to in the office when proof-reading gets all too much. We'd never publish such a book now, but several of our early books - commissioned in our pre-flight year as Mushroom Bookshop Publications - were about sexual politics. Not that we've got anything against sexual politics, or polyamory for that matter, but our areas of publication quickly changed once the link with the Bookshop had gone. The book itself, edited by Kevin Lano and Claire Parry, sold reasonably, with the still-extant American magazine Loving More buying the last 150 copies. And that was that. Except it wasn't.
Twice, late in the life of the book, the Guardian and the Sunday Mirror featured the book through no effort our our part. In both cases we got loads of phone calls (in those pre-email days), from journalists wanting copies for further features and reviews. The second time the book was featured thirteen journalists rang, including one desperate journo at The Sun who called several times. Like we would talk to The Sun. And the number of calls from the public or people wanting to order the book? In each case, next to none. The second time it was three calls and bookshops worldwide were scarcely troubled by as many people ordering the book. By then we had no copies to give out to journalists anyway.
All we could conclude from this was that journalists were (and perhaps are) REALLY interested in non-monogamy and that the public was (and perhaps is) not, other than maybe those involved in responsible polyamory who had already bought the book. We still get occasional calls, but the book is long gone and we have lost touch with the editors and contributors.
Advance notice of Five Leaves key events in 2014
Saturday March 15: 11.00-5.00
States of Independence V
A day of talks, book launches, panels and discussion on books,
industry matters and writing
Supporting independent presses and independent
thinking.
Full programme to be announced
Organised jointly by De Montfort University Creative Writing Team and Five
Leaves Publications
Supported by Creative Leicestershire
De Montfort University, Leicester
Free
Info:info@fiveleaves.co.uk
Saturday May 10: 10.00-5.00
London Radical Bookfair
An all day bookfair involving 100 publishers and bookshops
from across the radical sector, and radical books from the commercial
sector
Panel discussions on the shortlisted books for the Bread and
Roses Award for Radical Publishing and Little Rebels Award for children's books
together with the announcement of award winners
Supporting programme of talks (and walks) leading up to the
bookfair and throughout the day
Organised by the Alliance of Radical Booksellers, Five Leaves
Publications and Bishopsgate Institute
Advance programme events ticketed, talks on the day and the
bookfair free
Bishopsgate Institute, www.bishopsgate.org.uk
Info: info@fiveleaves.co.uk
Saturday, 10 August 2013
Reasons not to date a small press publisher
Note: this list refers to the traditional male small press publisher. In the case of the new generation of female small press publishers, change He to She and delete preliminary point.
He will have a beard
He will have a beard
- He will be broke
- He will not want to go on holiday
- When he goes on holiday he will visit every bookshop within fifty miles
- He will already have a partner, better off than himself
- He will talk non-stop about how terrible Waterstones is
- Apart from when complaining about Amazon
- Or moaning about the Arts Council
- He will have friends who are poets
- He might be a poet
- At launch parties everyone will ignore you unless you are a writer
- He will start work at 6.30am
- His idea of fun is a book launch 200 miles away
- His idea of nice wine is Kwiksave BOGOFF, left over from a book launch
- He will not own a car, and can't drive
- He will ask for lifts in your car, without knowing he is doing it
- His office will be very untidy, spilling over with unsaleable books
- It will not be clean
- On principle he will only publish books that lose money
- He believes in the creative economy while contributing nothing to it
- He resents successful small presses
- He will not have a pension plan
- Other than you are his pension plan
- He will never retire
- His share of the phone bill will be 80%, but he will pay only 50%
- He will have authors staying who have travelled 250 miles to read for twenty minutes to an audience of seventeen
- You will have seen the same seventeen people at every reading for thirty years
- 50% of his income will go on buying books
- He will talk to you at length about the book he is editing
- He will ignore your advice when you suggest changes or wonder who would buy such a book
30. He knows the names of every book reviewer in the UK. None of them know his name
31. He anxiously scans the review pages of the Guardian every Saturday even though his last book review in any broadsheet was in 1992
32. He will give you a copy of his own published novel, which did not get the attention it deserved
33. He mutters
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