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All That Jazz
A Bates professor replays the soundtrack of his youth
Illustration by Marty Braun

The lunchtime talk was titled “Jazz with Lewis Turlish.” But it was more like “Lewis Turlish with Jazz” — scenes from a life, with a soundtrack by Mingus and Bird.

This English professor, who retires next year, billed his presentation in a Pettigrew seminar room as “an old man looking back at his younger self.” Eight of us — including just one student — looked back with him to the Philadelphia of the 1950s, the Beat writers, and the golden days of jazz.

It was an evocative hour. A peripatetic narrator, Turlish started with high school — where he knew a girl who dated Fabian, and told all to a teen magazine — and described how he followed the full-tilt, free-flow prose of writers like Kerouac to that literature’s musical analog, jazz.

Curling up like cigarette smoke through the throb of music, Turlish’s recollections wandered from the city he calls “The Big Scrapple” through artist anecdotes, his LP collection (which he is gradually donating to the Ladd Library), jazz-charged films like Sweet Smell of Success, and the crudeness of early TV hosts like gossip columnist Earl Wilson. “He looked like a transom-peeper,” Turlish said.

When Turlish played a song, the other jazz fans present would sing the solos: “bah dadada bah bah BAH.” And while Turlish had plenty to say about the jazz soundtrack of his youth, explaining the essential attraction eluded even this man who makes his living with words.

Later, Turlish allowed that the late critic Whitney Balliett explained jazz best: “It’s the sound of surprise.”

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Change Is Good: If role-reversal rituals are common, what to make of the Bates iteration?
Dance Oasis: Amidst the struggles of American dance, the Bates dance Festival, celebrating its 25th anniversary, continues to gain importance
'Under Difficult Circumstances': Two days in the life of Teach For America corps member Carrie Garber ’05
Frog in Her Heart: Passion meets thesis as Taegan McMahon '07 investigates the effect of acid rain on her beloved dart frogs
Meet the Corries: Rebecca and John Corrie live their commitment to Bates, their disciplines, and their students



Postcards from Bates: A few picture stories from the print issue
Bates Matters: THE PEOPLE YOU MEET — President Hansen and Meaghan Creedon '08 take turns explaining what they learned by switching jobs for a day
Open Forum: Readers share comments about Bates Magazine
PreAmble: Down for the Count
Quad Angles: A selection of news stories from the College
Scene Again: 1953 — Mayoralty
Sports Notes: A WIN-WIN SITUATION — The winning careers of Rob Stockwell and Zak Ray mirror the rise of men's basketball at Bates
Connections: NETWORK SOLUTION — The rousingly successful Bates Business Network helps alums and College alike
Your Page: THE BARD OUT LOUD — Under Bobby Berkelman’s spell, he learned a better way to love Shakespeare
Vital Statistics: Honoring life's milestones
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