Krupa: The Man Who Made Drums Loud Enough to Matter Audiolibro Por Spang-a-Lang Publishing arte de portada

Krupa: The Man Who Made Drums Loud Enough to Matter

How Gene Krupa Rewired Jazz, Rewrote Drum History, and Made Rhythm Impossible to Ignore

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Krupa: The Man Who Made Drums Loud Enough to Matter

De: Spang-a-Lang Publishing
Narrado por: Virtual Voice
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Before Gene Krupa, the drummer was background noise. After Krupa, he was the main event. "Krupa: The Man Who Made Drums Loud Enough to Matter" traces the seismic shift sparked by a restless Polish kid from Chicago’s South Side who turned percussion into performance and rhythm into cultural currency.

From his early rebellion against Catholic conservatism to the invention of the modern drum set, Krupa's journey runs through mob-run speakeasies, the seismic swing of Benny Goodman’s orchestra, and the explosive 1938 Carnegie Hall concert that changed jazz forever. The book tracks Krupa’s public fall during the 1943 drug scandal and his hard-earned redemption through showdowns with Buddy Rich and collaborations with jazz titans. It also exposes the contradictions behind his celebrity—addiction, insecurity, and his paradoxical role as a white drummer who helped popularize Black music.

This isn't a nostalgia trip. It's a forensic groove map—dissecting Krupa’s sound, his innovations in kit design, his stagecraft, and his posthumous influence on everyone from Keith Moon to hip-hop beatmakers. Written with the grit and precision of a drummer who’s survived the backline trenches, the book slices through myth to deliver a rhythmic biography that swings hard and hits clean.

Whether you're a jazz purist, a rock drummer, or a student of American music history, this is the book that puts the stick back in your hand and the drummer back in the spotlight—where Krupa always belonged.

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