@article{Klotz_2019, title={Performing Authenticity “In Your Own Sweet Way”}, volume={12}, url={https://jjs.libraries.rutgers.edu/index.php/jjs/article/view/118}, DOI={10.14713/jjs.v12i1.118}, abstractNote={(Opening paragraph): "<p>In a 2001 interview for a PBS documentary titled <em>Rediscovering Dave Brubeck</em>, jazz critic Ira Gitler volunteered that the songs “In Your Own Sweet Way” and “The Duke,” both Dave Brubeck originals, became jazz standards “when Miles Davis played them, that gave them the official stamp of approval.” When interviewer Hedrick Smith asked Gitler why Davis could give the songs a stamp approval that Brubeck himself could not, Gitler responded, “Well because Miles Davis, in giving his stamp of approval to these Brubeck compositions by recording them, here was a black jazz man who was respected in both the black and white circles, and when he did it black people had to say, you know, ‘that’s cool.’” Put simply, Davis’s versions were “cool”—were somehow <em>authentic</em>—while Brubeck’s versions were not, despite being considered by most critics and audiences to be part of the cool jazz genre. In distinguishing between these uses of the term “cool,” Gitler rooted Davis’s authenticity and jazz authority in his blackness, implying that Brubeck’s whiteness kept him from achieving the same status.</p>}, number={1}, journal={Journal of Jazz Studies}, author={Klotz, Kelsey A.K.}, year={2019}, month={Dec.}, pages={72–91} }