It ain't necessarily so : an autobiography / Larry Adler.

Author/creator Adler, Larry
Format Book
EditionFirst edition.
Publication InfoNew York : Grove Press, 1987, ©1984.
Descriptionxi, 222 pages, 16 pages of plates : illustrations ; 24 cm
Subjects

Abstract This autobiography concerns an unusual musical career on an unusual instrument, the mouth organ. Adler raised this humble instrument to a featured part of the classical repertoire, inspiring compositions by Ralph Vaughan Williams and others. He played with the great orchestras and jazz bands. The book is anecdotal and loose with details. Baltimore-born harmonica player Adler, who admits to being the world's greatest, recalls his appearances with Fred Astaire, Eddie Cantor and George Gershwin, tours with Jack Benny, his dislike of Humphrey Bogart, and reverence for Al Jolson. Mainly in a series of wise-cracking anecdotes, he describes life in Hollywood, London and Paris, his affairs with Ingrid Bergman and other glamorous women, and his several marriages. Two long, forthright chapters deal with the question of whether he was a communist (he was not), his experiences during the McCarthy era when he was blacklisted and his passport confiscated.
General noteReprint. Previously published: London : Collins, 1984.
General noteIncludes index.
LCCN 86033485
ISBN0394623223
ISBN0394557573 (pbk.)

Availability

Library Location Call Number Status Item Actions
Music Closed Stacks - Ask at Circulation Desk ML419.A3 A3 1987 ✔ Available Place Hold