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Author-Critic Albert Murray Dead at 97

Albert Murray, who wrote about Black culture and was heavily influenced by jazz, died at home in his sleep at age 97.

NEW YORK (AP) — Albert Murray, an influential author and critic, has died.

Lewis Jones, a family friend, says the 97-year-old died in his sleep Sunday.

Murray was a close friend of "Invisible Man" novelist Ralph Ellison and wrote widely about American culture. He influenced numerous writers and musicians and helped Wynton Marsalis and others stage the acclaimed Jazz at Lincoln Center concerts.

Duke Ellington called him "the unsquarest man I know." Murray often wrote and spoke in a jazzy, mock-professorial style, not unlike Ellington's stylized stage introductions.

Millions of television viewers came to know Murray as a featured commentator in Ken Burns' documentary series "Jazz."

Born in 1916, Murray grew up in Magazine Point, Ala., a hamlet not far from Mobile.

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(Photo: Mark Mainz/Getty Images)

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