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Shades of Blue

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

After months of successful work in Europe, musician Evan Horne returns to settle in the San Francisco Bay area, where he makes inroads into the jazz scene. Life is good until he gets a phone call from a Los Angeles attorney. Evan's old friend and former mentor, pianist Calvin Hughes, has died and left Evan all of his possessions.

When Evan begins to play through some of Calvin's handwritten sheet music, he recognizes a song from the landmark Miles Davis recording Birth of the Cool and another from Kind of Blue. Evan is soon on a whirlwind journey across the country to confront his family. Was Calvin Hughes the uncredited composer of one or both of these tunes? Or was it simply Hughes' transcriptions from the recordings? Just what was his mother's relationship with Calvin Hughes? And how did jazz come into the equation?

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Moody's latest Evan Horne novel is an entertaining story that doesn't seem to know what it wants to be. As a result, the book is entertaining, but it leaves listeners wanting more. In his narration Grover Gardner uses a calm tone that works well with the world of jazz depicted in the story. Gardner beautifully captures Horne's astonishment at the life-changing information he receives when his friend and mentor, pianist Calvin Hughes, dies. Another of the novel's characters also dies early in the book. From there, the novel loses focus because Moody does not succeed in bringing his two subplots together. Still, Gardner's strengths help listeners to enjoy the production, despite its disappointing development. D.J.S. (c) AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 17, 2007
      Moody’s tepid sixth Evan Horne mystery (after 2002’s Looking for Chet Baker
      ) finds the jazz pianist at peace, living in Northern California and reunited with his girlfriend, FBI agent Andie Lawrence. Then Horne learns of the death of his friend and mentor, pianist Calvin Hughes, whose will leaves everything to him. Sorting through Hughes’s belongings in Los Angeles, Horne finds a note and a photo of Hughes next to a baby carriage, inexplicably taped to the bottom of a drawer. Why the cryptic secrecy? And who’s the kid? More interestingly, Horne also finds some aging handwritten sheet music, which might be original compositions of two famous Miles Davis recordings. Tracking down the story of these pieces of ephemera provides the basic plot, but the narrative, padded by two unconnected subplots, never generates enough interest to involve the reader. Jazz fans may enjoy the knowing references to music and jazz history, but mystery buffs will find this novel tone-deaf.

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  • English

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