Smith will open a lot of eyes to an entire subgenre of ‘soul jazz’ that just got lost in the shuffle, especially when Motown was king. But no matter how much jazz a listener has lived with over a lifetime long or short, every reader can learn a lot from <i>In with the In Crowd</i>." - Richard J. Salvucci (<i>All About Jazz</i>)<br /><br />"With energy and zeal, <i>In with the In Crowd</i> goes a long way toward correcting and completing the written history of jazz from the mid-twentieth century." - Keith Hatschek, author of <i>The Real Ambassadors: Dave and Iola Brubeck and Louis Armstrong Challenge Segregation</i><br /><br />"Mike Smith’s <i>In with the In Crowd</i> addresses the fascinating—and puzzling—near-absence of popular jazz artists from conventional histories of jazz. Underlying the entire work is a deep familiarity with and profound love of these artists and their music, and a desire to correct and expand the familiar historical narrative." - Jonathan Bellman, area head of academic studies in music at University of Northern Colorado