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rhythm for sale
Rhythm For Sale is a Bona-Fide FIVE STAR book. This CLASSICAL/MASTER EDITION is the account of Harlem Renaissance producer Leonard Harper’s life story. Put Roots and The Godfather in a hot Black blender with soul and you got Rhythm For Sale. His grandson author Reid has documented Harper’s tale with decades of research and the careful chronological arrangement of the details and facts. The book is alive because or Reid’s entertaining and descriptive writing style. Reid begins with Leonard Harper as a young Alabama pickaninny boy dancing in Medicine shows in the racist South. After leaving Alabama, Harper tours the country with his song and dance partner Osceola Blanks, and they wind up performing at the Empire Theater in London. As a married couple Harper and Blanks, arrive back in the States smack dab in the middle of the Harlem Renaissance. Master pianist Duke Ellington moves in with them. Harper is hired to be the main in-house producer at Harlem’s fabled Connie’s Inn nightclub. Leonard Harper’s amazing story just begins. Rhythm For Sale just gets started as Harper opens up his downtown Times Square Dance Studio. He teaches the Marx Brothers, Ruby Keller, Adele Astaire and Busby Berkeley’s chorus-line in the fine art of (Dirty Colored), dancing with "that little extra something in the butt department." He forms his famous chorus-line the Harperettes, who jiggle and joggle in skimpy outfits while setting dance floors on fire. Leonard Harper produces in at least eight nightclubs and theaters just in New York City alone. The Cotton Club, the Hollywood Inn, Al Capone’s Grand Terrace Cafe, the Lafayette Theater ant the Apollo Theater all owe their status and particular place in nightclub and theater history to Harper and his fast variety revues. He rules the nightclub and Black Musical Comedy world on The Great White Way and uptown in Harlem. Black And Blue and Ain’t Misbehavin all came from Harper’s Hot Chocolates’ and only Rhythm For Sale tells the true story behind the making of that all-time legendary Broadway sensational revue. The book is chock full of celebrities and gangsters who come and go. Ethel Waters, Cab Calloway, Chick Webb, Louis Armstrong, Billie Holiday, Count Basie, Lena Horne, Dutch Schultz and Lucky Luciano are all integral players in Harpers show business world. Grandson Grant does not disappoint. These real life characters come to life. No cardboard cutout characters are in this book. It’s not all the razzle and dazzle of the bright stage lights in this tome. Rhythm for Sale finely peals away beyond the surface to reveal what lurks underneath the facade. Like a masterchef, the author delves deep inside the ingredients of Leonard Harper’s complicated personal life. We examine his relationships with his possessive mother, jealous brother, crippled and bitter wife, sexy girlfriends and his loving daughter. The book ends with Harper’s 1943 downfall. When his variety revue form of Colored Musical Comedy is , deemed out of date with his audience time on earth expires. His sad downfall is inevitable as the master stager is trapped and held captive of his past success. Perhaps the racial pigeonhole that forced him into working for only small-time Harlem nightspots caused his death. “Clearly Leonard Harper was just about the most important contributor to the entertainment mystique that enveloped Harlem in the 1920’s and 1930’s. He essentially invented the nightclub floorshow, Harlem style that everyone, uptown and down, then emulated. He was apparently one of the great dancers of his generation and one hell of a stage director and choreographer. Without him, I doubt we would have Broadway musicals as we know them today.”—Barry Singer author of Black And Blue: The Life And Lyrics Of Andy Razaf. “Harper’s extraordinary accomplishments as an artist and innovator spanned the worlds of vaudeville, cabaret, burlesque and Broadway musical comedy.”—Jed Bernstein former Executive Director of LIVE Broadway.
Reviews
Various Multi-Reviews

THE NETWORK JOURNAL-Herb Boyd

In "Rhythm For Sale" tracing Harper's productions, particularly his association with the fabled Connie's Inn and the Apollo Theater, is to experience not only the history of these famous venues but to journey on much of Harlem's legendary past. Reid has meticulously listed, especially a veritable daily record of Harper's works during evenings at the Apollo from 1935 to 1942. Learn the Real background story of the Apollo as Leonard Harper Directs as the In-House Producer in the theater and puts it on the World-Famous Map. 

CHANTICLEER Best Book 2015 GRAND PRIZE WINNER
The well-documented facts and events in Rhythm For Sale often tap dance across the page with fury, perhaps suggestive of the pace at which Leonard Harper worked his craft. Highly recommended.


INDIEREADER Staff: One of the Best Self-Published Books 

Reid does not tiptoe within the restrictions of political correctness. Writing exuberantly, Reid transforms the book into a richly tonal fable with emotive observances.

FOREWARD/CLARION REVIEW
Reid's approach is more expository than narrative. But his frank and colloquial descriptions of people add a sense of character. Harlem Renaissance enthusiasts will savor the names, places, shows, and feel of the era.
 

AFRO-AMERICAN LITERATURE BOOK CLUB

While other history books merely stick to the surface by focusing just on the singing and dancing, here we have a sobering exploration which examines their feeling about racism.

KIRKUS REVIEW
Reid's biographical debut ventures into the beating heart of the Harlem Renaissance.


READERS FAVORITE INTERNATIONAL REVIEWS 5-STARS

This book is a fascinating look at the dazzling Harlem Renaissance that was the backdrop to the life of his grandfather Leonard Harper. Those wanting to learn about, this wonderful era of dance and theater history will realize they have a marvelous find.

CHANTICLEER REVIEWS
Much of Grant's book's inner light comes from his own, often humorous, observations, supplemented by a simply delightful parade of celebrities and gangsters with whom Leonard Harper rubbed elbows. Like Harper himself, his biography, Rhythm For Sale is a vigorous and highly entertaining read that will transport its reader.

What a valentine it is: With compelling apt photos, an extensive bibliography, and reference list and deeply researched, well-organized chapters he (Grant) does his grandfather justice.

 

I really enjoyed this book. I’m a big jazz fan so it was interesting to find out that Harper Reid (the author’s grandfather) rented part of his Harlem apartment to Duke Ellington, my favorite musician of all time.  The book also emphasizes the systematic racism most Black artists faced during the 1920s, 30s, and 40s.  The whites of that era controlled almost every aspect of the entertainment industry and much too often took the credit for the artistic achievements of Blacks like Grant Harper Reid. By Louis Cepeda

 


WRITERS DIGEST

 

 

News
03/10/2023
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