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Deep in a Dream: The Long Night of
Chet Baker
James Gavin
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If James Gavin's biography Deep
in a Dream: The Long Night of Chet Baker
was fiction, it would have a shot at being the great American novel. The bootstrap story of a poor trumpeter (with
missing teeth) who couldnt read music, going on to became the most celebrated and
reviled jazzman of his time is the stuff that dark allegorical American sagas are made of. Bakers notorious drug addictions, messy
personal life, and mysterious demise--falling out of a Parisian hotel window--even give it
Dostoevskian dimension.
But, this is a biography and, maybe not quite accidentally, where Baker
was often accused of being a technically deficient musician, Gavins book runs
roughshod over some of the biographers duties to his craft. Bakers high school and military years,
for instance, take up little more than a few pages. Why are careful details on Baker's
mother's stint as a five-and-dime store manager provided, with only a minimal recounting
of her sons tour of war-torn Europe after World War II and his re-enlistment
to avoid jail?
On balance, these flaws are minor, because the aggressive and meaty
approach in Deep in a Dream capture the real flesh and blood Baker--not a small feat with a subject who worked overtime to
blur, rewrite or escape truths about himself and events in his life.
Gavin, author of Intimate
Nights: The Golden Age of New York Cabaret
writes vibrantly of the music and politics of the jazz world and of Bakers elusive
persona, not flinching at exposing the best and worse of his character. His portrait of the trumpeter, who was called
"a demon with an angel face" in an Italian courtroom when he was on trial for
trafficking drugs, is not a pretty picture, but it is certainly a page turner. Bakers self-destructive con-man personality
played at being both brutal and poetic and it comes fully alive in all of its facets in
Gavins treatment.
Gavins skill in evoking the look, sound and culture of jazz clubs
is invaluable. He renders concise snapshots
of the musicians Baker encounters--from little known sidemen in his first gigs at a beach
dive, the Haig, north of Los Angeles, to the jazz titans who headlined at the legendary
Birdland in New York. As Bakers career
takes hold, gaining him instant recognition and notoriety playing with Gerry
Mulligans Quartet at the Haig, so do the myths and rumors.
Baker immediately started to overshadow the egocentric, antagonistic
and drug-addicted, Mulligan (shortly to be jailed on drug charges) while starting his
career as a headliner and mainliner. Indeed,
drug use was considered the rite of passage to the sublime music and very few resisted the
temptation, no matter what the personal cost. Baker
is eventually taken under the wing of the legendary Charlie Bird Parker,
himself burnt out on drugs by his early 30s.
Gavin has great stories to tell about the changing jazz scene of the
50s, with the old guard of big band vets floundering in a changing market and virtuoso
players like Charles Parker, Dizzy Gillepsie, Miles Davis, Thelonious Monk breaking new
ground every night in clubs all across the United States.
Gavins describes Baker being relentlessly pursued by a Los
Angeles narcotics agent who went gunning for musicians using drugs, fixated on the
trumpeters cool persona as being culturally subversive. And he gives the sessions musicians who
werent famous, but just as musically influential, their due. Bakers delicate singing brought accusations
of homosexuality, which by Gavins account made him even more macho. The rumors persisted, particularly over his
devotion to an innovative young pianist, Dick Twardzik, who died with a needle in his arm,
a tragedy which affected Bakers whole life.
Gavin also lends an even hand to the controversies then and now over
Bakers talents as a singer Dismissed as unskilled among jazz singers of the
time like Ella Fitzgerald, Frank Sinatra, Billie Holiday, and Sarah Vaughan, Bakers
plaintive singing voice actually developed because he was nervous over not being able to
read music. His vocalizing has been revalued since and has influenced other singers.
Gavin leaves no stone unturned on Bakers personal life, often of
tabloid taste with vulgar factoids such as genital sizes of musicians or pulpy scenes of a
gun-slinging jealous wife. His deft analysis
of Bakers music, too, is eventually overwhelmed by the gory details of his life as
an addict and the book starts to read like a rap sheet.
Baker, professionally humiliated in the United States and Europe at the
height of his success and on the ropes with his addiction was nonetheless hailed as a hero
in Italy at the same time he was on trial for illegal drug use. The trial was reported in newspapers and trade
magazines and after his conviction and incarceration, Baker became an artistic icon. Upon
his release, he seemed to have all of Italy at his feet.
Rich fans gave him land and set him up in clubs while the media exploited
Bakers addiction and colorful personal life.
Baker aficionados who are looking for a thorough examination of each
stage of his life will be scratching their heads at sloppy gaps in the biography.
Gavins reliance on hearsay evidence during hazy aspects of Bakers life is
suspect. And, after the impression of heroin
chic illustrated in Bruce Webers smoke and mirrors documentary about Baker, Lets
Get Lost, an accurate biography is certainly needed, especially now as Bakers
music is enjoying a resurgence.
Gavins fascinating work adds to the drama and mystique of
Bakers dual nature, drawing a portrait of a sexy, self-effacing, self-destructive
talent whose disillusionment fueled both magic and destruction.
A companion
disc of Bakers best work has been issued by Blue Note Records.
- Lewis Whittington