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Nathan Irving Hentoff (June 10, 1925 – January 7, 2017) was an American historian, novelist, jazz and country music critic, and syndicated columnist for United Media. Hentoff was a columnist for The Village Voice from 1958 to 2009. [1]
28 gru 2017 · Although most knew him as a Village Voice columnist, Nat Hentoff was a quick-change artist. In the morning, he could be a music critic. In the afternoon, a novelist of young adult lit.
20 lut 2018 · Jazz musician Nat Hentoff's bio, concert & touring information, albums, reviews, videos, photos and more.
10 sty 2017 · Nat Hentoff, the author, jazz critic and outspoken advocate of free speech, died Saturday at his home in Manhattan. He was 91. Hentoff wrote mostly about jazz in the '50s and '60s and...
7 sty 2017 · Nat Hentoff. Critic, Journalist, Producer (Award for Jazz Advocacy) 2004 NEA Jazz Master. Boston, Massachusetts. Date of birth: Jun 10, 1925. Date of death: Jan 07, 2017. Photo by Tom Pich/tompich.com. Bio. "Since I was eleven years old, I have been nurtured by the life force of jazz musicians.
9 sty 2017 · Hentoff was a combative and heterodox observer of politics, an absolutist civil libertarian who was a man of the left—one of the first great Village Voice writers—but one who was willing to,...
HENTOFF, Nathan Irving ("Nat") (b. 10 June 1925 in Boston, Massachusetts), social critic, civil libertarian, and journalist who wrote about civil rights, education, and First Amendment rights for the Village Voice and New Yorker during the 1960s, and who authored fiction and nonfiction books for adults and children about jazz and social issues.