Author Archive

Louis Armstrong and His Hot Five

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , on April 14, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Louis Armstrong and His Hot Five

From Wikipedia

The Hot Five was Louis Armstrong‘s first jazz recording band led under his own name.

It was a typical New Orleans jazz band in instrumentation, consisting of trumpetclarinet, and trombone backed by a rhythm section. The original New Orleans jazz style leaned heavily on collective improvisation, where the three horns together played the lead: the trumpet played the main melody, and the clarinet and trombone played improvised accompaniments to the melody. This tradition was continued in the Hot Five, but because of Armstrong’s creative gifts as a trumpet player, solo passages where the trumpet played alone began to appear more frequently. In these brilliant solos, Armstrong laid down the basic vocabulary of jazz improvising, and became its founding and most influential exponent.

The Hot Five was a recording group organized at the suggestion of Richard M. Jones for Okeh Records. All their records were made in Okeh’s Chicago, Illinois recording studio. The exact same personnel recorded a session made under the pseudonym “Lil’s Hotshots” for Vocalion/Brunswick. While the musicians in the Hot Five played together in other contexts, as the Hot Five they were a recording studio band that performed live only for two parties organized by Okeh Records.

There were two different groups called “Louis Armstrong and his Hot Five”, the first recording from 1925 through 1927 and the second in 1928; Armstrong was the only musician in both groups.

The first Hot Five

The original Hot Five were, other than Armstrong’s wife Lil Hardin Armstrong on piano, all New Orleans musicians who Armstrong had worked with in that city in the 1910s: Kid Oryon tromboneJohnny Dodds on clarinet, and Johnny St. Cyr on guitar and banjo.

For some or all of the Louis Armstrong and his Hot Seven sides, Ory was in New York City working with King Oliver‘s band, and was replaced, probably by John Thomas.

On one session in December 1927, Lonnie Johnson was added on guitar.

The recordings of this group are considered by many to be uneven, with some of the blunders (e.g. the mis-timed hokum at the end of “Heebie Jeebies“) becoming notorious in jazz circles, and the solos of Dodds, Ory and Hardin sounding distinctly pedestrian in comparison with Armstrong’s.[citation needed] However, the ensemble passages are frequently effective, and the genius of Armstrong’s cornet or trumpet playing touch virtually every recording. Some of the more important examples are “Cornet Chop Suey”, “Muskrat Ramble“, “Hotter Than That” and “Struttin’ With Some Barbecue”.

The 1928 Hot Five

In 1928, Armstrong revamped the recording band, replacing everyone but himself with his band-members in the Carrol Dickerson Orchestra which Armstrong was playing with Fred Robinson, trombone, Jimmy Strong, clarinet and tenor saxophoneEarl Hines, piano, Mancy Carr (not “Cara” as has often been misprinted) on banjo, and Zutty Singleton on drums.

This second Hot Five played music that was specifically arranged as opposed to the more free-wheeling improvised passages in the earlier Hot Five structures. A tentative movement toward the kind of fully arranged horn sections that would dominate swing music a decade later was starting to become fashionable, and this second Armstrong group embraced a rudimentary version of it, with Don Redmon as arranger providing some written-out section parts. Jimmy Strong on clarinet and Fred Robinson on trombone were not as strong soloists as Dodds and Ory had been with the earlier band, but with pianist Earl Hines, Armstrong here met a musician who was more nearly his equal technically and creatively than any other in either band.

Thus, these sessions resulted in some of the most important masterpieces of early jazz, of which “West End Blues” is arguably the best known. Other important recordings include “Basin Street Blues“, “Tight Like This”, “Saint James Infirmary“, and “Weather Bird”. In the last named, only Armstrong and Hines are present, turning an old rag number into a tour-de-force of inspired musical runs as the trumpet and piano playfully come together, draw apart to compete, and come together again, over several cycles.

Mason Risch Phonograph as a Christmas Present to the Children-1922

Posted in Phonographs That Played 78 rpm records with tags , , , , on April 13, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Please the Bride with a Phonograph!-1922

Posted in Phonographs That Played 78 rpm records with tags , , , , , , , , , on April 13, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Please the Bride with a Phonograph!-1922

A bridal shopping advertisement in the Edmonton Bulletin, June 1st, 1922, would seem to suggest that the wife-to-be should receive a phonograph as a wedding present.

Taft Jordan

Posted in Recording Artists of the 1930's and 1940's with tags , , , , , , , , on April 13, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Taft Jordan

From Wikipedia

Taft Jordan, Aquarium, New York, ca. November 1946

Taft Jordan (February 15, 1915, Florence, South Carolina – December 1, 1981, New Orleans) was an American jazz trumpeter, heavily influenced by Louis Armstrong.

Jordan played early in his career with the Washboard Rhythm Kings before joining Chick Webb‘s orchestra from 1933 to 1942, remaining there after Ella Fitzgerald became its frontwoman. Jordan and Bobby Stark traded duties as the main trumpet soloist in Webb’s orchestra. From 1943 to 1947 he played with Duke Ellington, then with Lucille Dixon at the Savannah Club in New York City from 1949 to 1953. After this he played less often, though he toured with Benny Goodman in 1958, played on Miles Davis‘s Sketches of Spain, and worked with the New York Jazz Repertory Company. He recorded four tunes as a leader in 1935, and led his own band in 1960–61, when he recorded LPs for MercuryAamco Records, and Moodsville.

Taft Jordan and The Mob

Jordan recorded 4 titles for ARC (Banner, Melotone, Oriole, Perfect, Romeo) on February 21 and 22, 1935. It was an all-star group consisting of

  • Jordan-t
  • Ward Silloway-tb
  • Johnny Mince-cl
  • Elmer Williams-ts
  • Teddy Wilson-p
  • Bobby Johnson-g
  • John Kirby-sb
  • Eddie Dougherty-d

Two takes were recorded of “Night Wind”, “If the Moon Turns Green”, “Devil in the Moon”, and “Lousiana Fairy Tale” (all were current commercial pop hits). Take 1 of each were rejected versions with vocals by Jordan. ARC issued the take 2 instrumental versions, which were outstandingly arranged swing.

Jan Savitt

Posted in Recording Artists of the 1930's and 1940's with tags , , , , , , , , on April 13, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Jan Savitt

From Wikipedia
Jan Savitt
Birth name Jacob Savetnick
Born September 4, 1907
ShumskRussian Empire
Origin PhiladelphiaPennsylvania, USA
Died October 4, 1948 (aged 41)
SacramentoCalifornia
Genres Jazz
Occupations Bandleader, arranger, musician
Instruments Violin
Associated acts The Top Hatters; George Tunnell

Jan Savitt (born Jacob Savetnick; September 4, 1907 – October 4, 1948) was an American bandleader, musical arranger, and violinist.

Savitt was born in Shumsk, then part of the Russian Empire (now part of Ukraine). He was invited to join the Philadelphia Orchestra when he was nineteen, having studied at the Curtis Institute and in Europe. His band The Top Hatters was formed in 1937 and began touring the following year. Their songs include “720 in the Books”, “It’s A Wonderful World” and his theme songs “Quaker City Jazz” and “From Out Of Space”. Savitt was one of the first of the big band leaders to feature an African American vocalist, George Tunnell(“Bon Bon”). His other vocalists were Carlotta Dale, Allan DeWitt, Joe Martin, and Gloria DeHaven. His band names include Jan Savitt & His Top Hatters, the Jan Savitt String Orchestra and Jan Savitt & His Orchestra.

Savitt recorded short pieces for the National Broadcasting System’s Thesaurus series, probably in the 1940s. These were pieces radio stations used as ‘fillers’ just prior to network programs, which would begin precisely on the hour or half-hour. Disc 1143 in the Thesaurus catalogue features four selections by the Jan Savitt Orchestra on one side of the 33 1/3 transcription: “The Masquarade is Over I’m Afraid”; “If I Didn’t Care”; “Ring Dem Bells”, and “Romance Runs in the Family”.

Shortly before arriving in SacramentoCalifornia, with his orchestra on Saturday, October 2, 1948, for a concert scheduled for that evening at Memorial Auditorium, Savitt was stricken with a cerebral hemorrhage and taken to Sacramento County Hospital. Savitt died on October 4, with his wife at his bedside.

American Record Corporation

Posted in 78 RPM Label Discography, 78 RPM Record Development with tags , , , , , , , , on April 13, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

American Record Corporation

From Wikipedia
 

American Record Corporation (ARC),  also referred to as American Record CompanyAmerican Recording Corporation, or (erroneously) as ARC Records, was aUnited States based record company. It resulted from the merger in July 1929 of the Cameo Record Corporation (CameoLincoln and Romeo labels), the Pathé Phonograph and Radio Corporation (the US branch of the Pathé and Perfect labels), the Plaza Music Company‘s group of labels (BannerDominoJewelOriole, and Regal labels) (although apparently the Plaza company itself was excluded from the final merger),  and the Scranton Button Company, the parent company of Emerson Records (and the company who pressed most of the above labels).

Louis G. Sylvester (former head of Scranton) became president of the new company located at 1776 Broadway in ManhattanNew York City. In October 1929, Herbert Yates, head of Consolidated Film Industries, took control of ARC. In the following years, the company was very involved in a depressed market, buying failing labels at bargain prices to exploit their catalogue.

In December 1931 Warner Bros. leased BrunswickVocalion and associated companies to ARC. By 1932, ARC was king of the 3 records for a dollar market, selling 6 million units, twice as much as RCA Victor. In an effort to get back on top, RCA created its “Timely Tunes” label in 1931, and the Bluebird and Electradisk labels in 1932. ARC bought out theColumbia catalogue in 1934, including OKeh. As the Depression began, ARC began weeding out some of the slowing selling labels (including Domino, Regal, Jewel, see below). ARC started a theater-only label using instrumental versions of their standard 35c recordings. In the 1930s ARC produced Brunswick and (after 1934) Columbia at 75c and Oriole(sold at McCrory), Romeo (sold at Kress), as well as MelotoneVocalionBanner and Perfect (which were general purpose labels) at 35c. Also for a time in 1933-34, ARC revived the Domino label exclusively as a client label for John Gabel company in Pennsylvania (they were a jukebox distributor).

As with the companies that they bought, some of the labels were created exclusively for specific stores: Challenge and Conqueror (Sears, Roebuck), Oriole (McCrory), Romeo (Kress) and when the contracts ended, the labels ended too. Other labels (Banner, Perfect, Melotone) were known to have been sold at enough varied businesses that they are considered “general purpose labels”. Many of the remaining labels have not been attributed with a specific store contract, but it’s likely that the smaller and shorter-lived labels were exclusive to some business or another.

In April 1938, ARC discontinued Melotone, Banner, Romeo, Oriole and Perfect. In December 1938, the entire ARC complex was purchased from Consolidated Film for $700,000 by the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS).  The record company was renamed Columbia Recording Corporation,  which revived the Columbia imprint as its flagship label with Okeh as a subsidiary label. This allowed the rights to the Brunswick and Vocalion labels (and pre-December 1931 Brunswick/Vocalion masters) to revert to Warner Bros., who sold the labels to Decca Records. The ARC legacy is now part of Sony Music Entertainment.

Labels ARC issued or pressed (1929-1938)

+ labels that existed prior to the formation of ARC

  • ARC sold to theaters for background music 1931-1933?
  • Banner +1929-1938
  • Bernardo (client label)
  • Broadway +from 1932 (fulfilling a contract with Montgomery Ward)
  • Brunswick +1932-1938 (under lease agreement from Warner Bros. Pictures)
  • Cameo +1929-1930
  • Challenge +(client label for Sears)
  • Columbia +late 1934-1938
  • Commodore (client label for Commodore Music Shops)
  • Conqueror +(client label for Sears from 1929-1938)
  • Domino +1929-1931 (but was restarted (with a gold label) as a client label for the John Gabel Co. circa 1933-34)
  • Fox Movietone (client label sold only at Fox Theaters)
  • Gospel Herald
  • Gramophone Shop Varieties (client label for The Gramophone Shop)
  • Hollywood 1936-1937
  • Homestead (mail order label 1929-circa 1931)
  • Hot Record Society (client label for the Hot Record Society)
  • Jewel +1929-circa 1932
  • Liberty Music Shops (client label for the Liberty Music Shops)
  • Lincoln +from 1929-1930
  • Master 1937
  • Mel-O-Dee (client label as a specialty jukebox label)
  • Melotone +1932-1938
  • Oriole +1929-1938 (client label for McCrory)
  • Pathe +1929-1930
  • Perfect +1929-1938
  • Regal +1929-1931
  • Romeo +1929-1938 (client label for Kress Stores)
  • Shamrock Stores – (client label for the Shamrock Stores)
  • Special Editions – a reissue label
  • Supertone +1930-circa 1931 (short-lived series made by Brunswick after the Gennett period ended, but this rare series probably hails from right before the ARC takeover of Brunswick)
  • U.H.C.A. – (client label specializing in reissues for United Hot Clubs of America through Commodore)
  • Variety 1937
  • Vocalion +1932-1938 (under lease agreement from Warner Bros. Pictures)

Charlie Shavers

Posted in Recording Artists of the 1930's and 1940's with tags , , , , , , on April 13, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Charlie Shavers

From Wikipedia
Charlie Shavers
Charlie Shavers, National Studio, May 1947 (Gottlieb 07761).jpg
Charlie Shavers, National Studios, ca. May 1947.
Photography by William P. Gottlieb.
Background information
Birth name Charles James Shavers
Born August 3, 1920
New York CityNew York,United States
Died July 8, 1971 (aged 50)
New York City, New York, United States
Genres Jazz
Instruments Trumpet

Charles James Shavers (August 3, 1920 – July 8, 1971), known as Charlie Shavers, was an American swing era jazz trumpetplayer who played at one time or another with Dizzy GillespieRoy EldridgeJohnny DoddsJimmy NooneSidney BechetMidge Williams and Billie Holiday. He was also an arranger and composer, and one of his compositions, “Undecided”, is a jazz standard.

Charlie Shavers’ father (a distant relative of Fats Navarro) was from the prominent Shavers family of Key West, Florida, and Charlie was a cousin of heavyweight boxer Earnie Shavers. Born in New York City, he originally took up the piano and banjo before switching to trumpet.  In the mid-thirties, he performed with Tiny Bradshaw and Lucky Millinder. In 1936 he joined John Kirby‘s Sextet as trumpet soloist and arranger (he was only 16 but gave his birthdate as 1917 in order to avoid child labor laws  – many biographies still list this date ). His arrangements and solos with this band contributed greatly towards making it one of the most commercially successful and widely imitated bands of its day. In 1937 he was performing with Midge Williams and her Jazz Jesters. In 1944 he began playing sessions in Raymond Scott‘s CBS staff orchestra. In 1945 he left John Kirby‘s band to join Tommy Dorsey‘s Orchestra, with whom he toured and recorded, off and on, until 1953. During this time he continued to play sessions at CBS, played with theMetronome All-Stars, and made a number of recordings as trumpet soloist with Billie Holiday. From 1953 to 1954 he worked withBenny Goodman, and toured Europe with Norman Granz‘s popular Jazz at the Philharmonic series, where he was always a crowd favorite. He went on to form his own band with Terry Gibbs and Louie Bellson.

Charlie Shavers died from throat cancer in New York in 1971 at the age of 50. His friend Louis Armstrong died while Shavers was on his deathbed, and his last request was that his trumpet mouthpiece be buried with Armstrong in his coffin.

Roy Eldridge

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's, Recording Artists of the 1930's and 1940's with tags , , , , , , , , on April 13, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Roy Eldridge

From Wikipedia
Roy Eldridge
Roy Eldridge.jpg
Eldridge at the Village Jazz Lounge in Walt Disney World (photo by Laura Kolb)
Background information
Birth name David Roy Eldridge
Born January 30, 1911
Origin Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,U.S.
Died February 26, 1989 (aged 78)
Genres Jazz
Swing
Big Band
Occupations Trumpeter
Instruments Trumpet
Associated acts Charlie Barnet

David Roy Eldridge (January 30, 1911 – February 26, 1989), commonly known as Roy Eldridge, and nicknamed “Little Jazz”, was an American jazz trumpet player. His sophisticated use of harmony, including the use of tritone substitutions, his virtuosic solos exhibiting a departure from the smooth and lyrical style of earlier jazz trumpet innovator Louis Armstrong, and his strong impact onDizzy Gillespie mark him as one of the most influential musicians of the swing era and a precursor of bebop.

Early life

Eldridge was born on the North Side of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on January 30, 1911 to parents Alexander, a carpenter, and Blanche, a gifted pianist with a talent for reproducing music by ear, a trait that Eldridge claimed to have inherited from her.  Eldridge began playing the piano at age five; he claims to have been able to play coherent blues licks at even this young age.  The young Eldridge looked up to his older brother, Joe, particularly because of Joe’s diverse musical talents on the violinalto saxophone, and clarinet. Roy took up the drums at the age of six, taking lessons and playing locally.  Joe recognized his brother’s natural talent on the bugle, which Roy played in a local church band, and tried to convince Roy to play the valved trumpet. When Roy began to play drums in his brother’s band, Joe soon convinced him to pick up the trumpet, but Roy made little effort to gain proficiency on the instrument at first. It was not until the death of their mother, when Roy was eleven, and his father’s subsequent remarriage that Roy began practicing more rigorously, locking himself in his room for hours, and particularly honing the instrument’s upper register.  From an early age, Roy lacked proficiency at sight-reading, a gap in his musical education that would affect him for much of his early career, but he could replicate melodies by ear very effectively.

Career

Early career and traveling bands

Eldridge led and played in a number of bands during his early years, moving extensively throughout the American Midwest.  He absorbed the influence of saxophonists Benny Carter and Coleman Hawkins, setting himself the task of learning Hawkins’s 1926 solo on “The Stampede” (by Fletcher Henderson‘s Orchestra) in developing an equivalent trumpet style.

Eldridge left home after being expelled from high school in ninth grade, joining a traveling show at the age of sixteen; the show soon folded, however, and he was left in Youngstown, Ohio.  He was then picked up by the “Greater Sheesley Carnival,” but returned to Pittsburg after witnessing acts of racism in Cumberland, Maryland that significantly disturbed him.  Eldridge soon found work leading a small band in the traveling “Rock Dinah” show,  his performance therein leading swing-era bandleader Count Basie to recall young Roy Eldridge as “the greatest trumpet I’d ever heard in my life.” Eldridge continued playing with similar traveling groups until returning home to Pittsburgh at age seventeen.

At the age of twenty, Eldridge led a band in Pittsburgh, billed as “Roy Elliott and his Palais Royal Orchestra”,  the agent intentionally changing Eldridge’s name because “he thought it more classy.”  Roy left this position to try out for the orchestra of Horace Henderson, younger brother of famed New York bandleader Fletcher Henderson, and joined the ensemble, generally referred to as The Fletcher Henderson Stompers, Under the Direction of Horace Henderson. Eldridge then played with a number of other territory bands, staying for a short while in Detroit before joining Speed Webb’s band which, having garnered a degree of movie publicity, began a tour of the Midwest.  Many of the members of Webb’s band, annoyed by the leader’s lack of dedication, left to form a practically identical group with Eldridge as bandleader.  The ensemble was short-lived, and Eldridge soon moved to Milwaukee, where he took part in a celebrated cutting contest with trumpet player Cladys “Jabbo” Smith, with whom he later became good friends.

New York and Chicago

Eldridge moved to New York in November 1930, playing in various bands in the early 1930s, including a number of Harlem dance bands with Cecil ScottElmer SnowdenCharlie Johnson, and Teddy Hill.  It was during this time that Eldridge received his nickname, ‘Little Jazz’, from Ellington saxophonist Otto Hardwick, who was amused by the incongruity between Eldridge’s raucous playing and his short stature.  At this time, Eldridge was also making records and radio broadcasts under his own name. He laid down his first recorded solos with Teddy Hill in 1935, which gained almost immediate popularity.  For a brief time, he also led his own band at the reputed Famous Door nightclub. Eldridge recorded a number of small group sides with singer Billie Holiday in July 1935, including “What a Little Moonlight Can Do” and “Miss Brown to You“, employing a Dixieland-influenced improvisation style.  In October 1935, Eldridge joined Fletcher Henderson’s Orchestra, playing lead trumpet and occasionally singing.  Until he left the group in early September 1936, Eldridge was Henderson’s featured soloist, his talent highlighted by such numbers as “Christopher Columbus” and “Blue Lou.”  His rhythmic power to swing a band was a dynamic trademark of the jazz of the time. It has been said that “from the mid-Thirties onwards, he had superseded Louis Armstrong as the exemplar of modern ‘hot’ trumpet playing”.

In the fall of 1936, Eldridge moved to Chicago to form an octet with older brother Joe Eldridge playing saxophone and arranging. The ensemble boasted nightly broadcasts and made recordings that featured his extended solos, including “After You’ve Gone” and “Wabash Stomp.”  Eldridge, fed up with the racism he had encountered in the music industry, quit playing in 1938 to study radio engineering.  He was back to playing in 1939, when he formed a ten-piece band that gained a residency at New York’s Arcadia Ballroom.

With Gene Krupa’s Orchestra

In April 1941, after receiving many offers from white swing bands, Eldridge joined Gene Krupa‘s Orchestra, and was successfully featured with rookie singer Anita O’Day.  In accepting this position, Eldridge became one of the first black musicians to become a permanent member of a white big band.  Eldridge was instrumental in changing the course of Krupa’s big band from schmaltz to jazz.  The group’s cover of Jimmy Dorsey‘s “Green Eyes,” previously an entirely orchestral work, was transformed into jazz via Eldridge’s playing; critic Dave Oliphant notes that Eldridge “lift[ed]” the tune “to a higher level of intensity.”  Eldridge and O’Day were featured in a number of recordings including the novelty hit “Let Me Off Uptown” and “Knock Me With a Kiss”.

One of Eldridge’s best known recorded solos is on a rendition of Hoagy Carmichael‘s tune, “Rockin’ Chair”, arranged by Benny Carter as something like a concerto for Eldridge. Jazz historian Gunther Schuller referred to Eldridge’s solo on “Rockin’ Chair” as “a strong and at times tremendously moving performance,” although he disapproved of the “opening and closing cadenzas, the latter unforgivably aping the corniest of operatic cadenza traditions.”  Critic and author Dave Oliphant describes Eldridge’s unique tone on “Rockin’ Chair” as “a raspy, buzzy tone, which enormously heightens his playing’s intensity, emotionally and dynamically” and writes that it “was also meant to hurt a little, to be disturbing, to express unfathomable stress.”

After complaints from Eldridge that O’Day was upstaging him, the band broke up when Krupa was jailed for marijuana possession in July 1943.

Touring, freelancing, and small group work

After leaving Krupa’s band, Eldridge freelanced in New York during 1943 before joining Artie Shaw‘s band in 1944. Owing to racial incidents that he faced while playing in Shaw’s band, he left to form a big band,  but this eventually proved financially unsuccessful, and Eldridge returned to small group work.

In the postwar years, he became part of the group which toured under the Jazz at the Philharmonic banner.  and became one of the stalwarts of the tours. The JATP’s organiserNorman Granz said that Roy Eldridge typified the spirit of jazz. “Every time he’s on he does the best he can, no matter what the conditions are. And Roy is so intense about everything, so that it’s far more important to him to dare, to try to achieve a particular peak, even if he falls on his ass in the attempt, than it is to play safe. That’s what jazz is all about.”

Eldridge moved to Paris in 1950 while on tour with Benny Goodman, before returning to New York in 1951 to lead a band at the Birdland jazz club. He additionally performed from 1952 until the early sixties in small groups with Coleman HawkinsElla Fitzgerald and Earl Hines among others, and also began to record for Granz at this time.  Eldridge also toured with Ella Fitzgerald from late 1963 until March 1965 and with Count Basie from July until September 1966 before returning to freelance playing and touring at festivals.

Racial barriers

As the featured soloist in Artie Shaw and Gene Krupa’s bands, Eldridge was something of an exception, as black musicians in the 1930s were not allowed to appear in public with white bands.  Artie Shaw commented on the difficulty Roy had in his band, noting that “Droves of people would ask him for his autograph at the end of the night, but later, on the bus, he wouldn’t be able to get off and buy a hamburger with the guys in the band.”  Krupa, on at least one occasion, spent several hours in jail and paid fines for starting a fistfight with a restaurant manager who refused to let Eldridge eat with the rest of the band.

Late life

Eldridge became the leader of the house band at Jimmy Ryan’s jazz club on Manhattan‘s West 54th Street for several years, beginning in 1969.  Although Ryan’s was primarily aDixieland venue, Eldridge tried to combine the traditional Dixieland style with his own more brash and speedy playing.  Eldridge was incapacitated by a stroke in 1970, but continued to lead the group at Ryan’s soon after and performing occasionally as a singer, drummer, and pianist.  Writer Michael Zirpolo, seeing Eldridge at Ryan’s in the late 1970s noted “I was amazed that he still could pop out those piercing high notes, but he did, with frequency…I worried about his health, because the veins at his temples would bulge alarmingly.”  As leader at Ryan’s, Eldridge was noted for his occasional hijinx, including impromptu “amateur night” sessions during which he’d invite inexperienced players on stage to lead his band, often for comedic effect and to give himself a break.  In 1971, Eldridge was inducted into the Down Beat Jazz Hall of Fame.

After suffering a heart attack in 1980, Eldridge gave up playing.  He died at age 78 at the Franklin General Hospital in Valley Stream, New York, three weeks after the death of his wife, Viola.

Music

Influences

According to Roy, his first major influence on the trumpet was Rex Stewart, who played in a band with young Roy and his brother Joe in Pittsburgh.[42] But unlike many trumpet players, the young Eldridge did not derive most of his inspiration from other trumpeters, but from saxophonists. Roy first developed his solo style by playing along to recordings ofColeman Hawkins and Benny Carter, and later said that, after hearing these musicians, “I resolved to play my trumpet like a sax.”  Following these musicians was evidently beneficial to Roy, who got one of his first jobs by auditioning with an imitation of Coleman Hawkin’s solo on Fletcher Henderson’s “Stampede” of 1926.  Eldridge additionally purports to have studied the styles of white cornettist Loring “Red” Nichols and Theodore “Cuban” Bennett, whose style was also very much influenced by the saxophone. Eldridge, by his own report, was not significantly influenced by trumpeter Louis Armstrong during his early years, but did undertake a major study of Armstrong’s style in 1932.

Style

Eldridge was very versatile on his horn, not only quick and articulate with the low to middle registers, but the high registers as well; jazz critic Gary Giddins described Eldridge as having a “flashy, passionate, many-noted style that rampaged freely through three octaves, rich with harmonic ideas impervious to the fastest tempos.”  Eldridge is frequently grouped among those jazz trumpeters of the ’30s and ’40s, including Red AllenHot Lips PageShad Collins, and Rex Stewart who eschewed Louis Armstrong’s lyrical style for a rougher and more frantic style.  Of these players, critic Gary Giddins names Eldridge “the most emotionally compelling, versatile, rugged, and far-reaching.”  Eldridge was also lauded for the intensity of his playing; Ella Fitzgerald once said: “He’s got more soul in one note that a lot of people could get into the whole song.”  The high register lines that Eldridge employed were one of many prominent features of his playing, and Eldridge expressed a penchant for the expressive ability of the instrument’s highest notes, frequently incorporating them into his solos.  Eldridge was also known for his fast style of playing, often executing blasts of rapid double-time notes followed by a return to standard time. His rapid-fire style was noted by jazz trumpeter Bill Coleman when Roy was as young as seventeen; when asked by Coleman how he achieved his speed, Eldridge replied: “Well, I’ve taken the tops off my valves and now they really fly.”  Eldridge attributes these virtuosic elements of his style to a rigorous practice regime, particularly as a teen: “I used to spend eight, nine hours a day practicing every day.”  Critic J. Bradford Robinson sums up his style of playing as exhibiting “a keen awareness of harmony, an unprecedented dexterity, particularly in the highest register, and a full, slightly overblown timbre, which crackled at moments of high tension.”  Giddins also notes that Eldridge “never had a pure or golden tone; his sound was always underscored by a vocal rasp, an urgent, human roughness.”

As for Eldridge’s singing style, jazz critic Whitney Balliett describes Eldridge as “a fine, scampish jazz singer, with a light, hoarse voice and a highly rhythmic attack,” comparing him to American jazz trumpeter and vocalist Hot Lips Page.

Musical Impact

Eldridge’s fast playing and extensive development of the instrument’s upper register were heavy influences on Dizzy Gillespie, who, along with Charlie Parker, brought bebop into existence. Tracks such as “Heckler’s Hop,” from Eldridge’s small group recordings with alto saxophonist and clarinettist Scoops Carry, in which Eldridge’s use of the high register is particularly emphasized, were especially influential for Dizzy.  Dizzy got the chance to engage in numerous jam sessions and “trumpet battles” with Eldridge at New York’sMinton’s Playhouse in the early 1940s.  Referring to Eldridge, Dizzy went so far as to say: “He was the Messiah of our generation.”  Eldridge first heard Dizzy on bandleaderLionel Hampton‘s 1939 recording of “Hot Mallets,” and later recalled: “I heard this trumpet solo and I thought it was me. Then I found out it was Dizzy.”  A careful listening to bebop standards, such as the song “Bebop”, reveals how much Eldridge influenced this genre of jazz. Eldridge also claimed that he was not impressed with Dizzy’s bop solo style, saying once to bebop trumpeter Howard McGhee after jamming with Dizzy at the Heat Wave club in Harlem: “I don’t dig it…I really don’t understand him.”  Although frequently touted as the bridge between Louis Armstrong and Dizzy Gillespie, Eldridge always insisted: “I was never trying to be a bridge between Armstrong and something.”

In modern jazz criticism, Eldridge has become something of a litmus test for jazz trumpeters. Critic Gunther Schuller, critiquing the style of multi-instrumentalist composer-arranger Benny Carter wrote that Carter’s playing is “not true trumpet playing, in the sense that Roy Eldridge’s or Buck Clayton‘s or Harry James‘s is.”

Other significant musicians influenced by Roy Eldridge include Shorty Sherock of the Bob Crosby Orchestra,  and bebop pioneers Howard McGhee and Fats Navarro.

Personality

Eldridge was famously considered competitive by those who knew him, pianist Chuck Folds saying, “I can’t imagine anyone more competitive than he [Roy] was in the 1970s. I’ve never met anyone scrappier than Roy, ever, ever, ever.” Eldridge fully admitted to his competitive spirit, saying “I was just trying to outplay anybody, and to outplay them my way.”  Jazz trumpeter Jonah Jones reports that Eldridge’s willingness to “go anywhere and play against anyone” even led to a cutting contest with his own hero, Rex Stewart. Roy could also become antagonistic, particularly in the face of those he deemed racist.  Many noted Roy’s constant restlessness, saxophonist Billie Bowen noting that Roy “could never, even as a youngster, sit down for more than a few minutes, he was always restless.” Eldridge is also said to have suffered from sporadic stage fright.  He occasionally found himself in trouble with women, including an incident that involved his being forced to sell his trumpet temporarily in order to reclaim a portion of the money that had been stolen from him by a woman with whom he had drunkenly spent the night.  Roy is also said to have developed a fiery temper later in life, according to clarinettist Joe Muranyi, who worked with Eldridge at Ryan’s and has called Elridge’s temper “Mt. Vesuvius to the fifth power.”

Partial Discography

(From left) Thelonious MonkHoward McGhee, Roy Eldridge, Teddy HillMinton’s Playhouse, New York, N.Y., ca. Sept. 1947.
Photograph by William P. Gottlieb.

With Ben Webster

Black Swan Records Review in “The Billboard”, October 29, 1921

Posted in 78 RPM Record Development, Interviews and Articles, Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , , on April 12, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

In addition to the review of Black Swan Records growth, there is an additional bonus-an actual advertisement at the bottom of the page of Ethel Waters appearing on the Black Swan label. As the article is in PDF format you will need to click on the link below to view it:

 

 

Billboard 1921 – 6872-Black Swan Records and ad for Ethel Waters on Black Swan

Ambrose

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , , , on April 12, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Ambrose

From Wikipedia
Ambrose
Birth name Benjamin Baruch Ambrose
Born September 15, 1896
LondonEngland
Origin New YorkNew YorkUnited States
Died June 11, 1971 (aged 74)
LeedsEngland
Genres Big band
Occupations Musicianbandleader
Instruments Violin
Years active 1916–1971
Notable instruments
Violin

Benjamin Baruch Ambrose (15 September 1896 – 11 June 1971), known professionally as Ambrose or Bert Ambrose, was anEnglish bandleader and violinist. Ambrose became the leader of a highly acclaimed British dance bandBert Ambrose & His Orchestra, in the 1930s.

Early life

Ambrose was born in the East End of London; his father was a Jewish wool merchant. He began playing the violin while young, and soon after he was taken to the United States by his aunt he began playing professionally — first for Emil Coleman at New York’s Reisenweber’s restaurant, then in the Palais Royal’s big band. After making a success of a stint as bandleader, at the age of twenty he was asked to put together and lead his own fifteen-piece band. After a dispute with his employer, he moved his band to another venue, where they enjoyed considerable popularity.

In 1922, he returned to London, where he was engaged by the Embassy Club to form a seven-piece band. Ambrose stayed at the Embassy for two years, before walking out on his employer in order to take up a much more lucrative job in New York. After a year there, besieged by continual pleas to return from his ex-employer in London, in 1925 he was finally persuaded to go back by a cablefrom the Prince of Wales: “The Embassy needs you. Come back — Edward”.

This time Ambrose stayed at the Embassy Club until 1927. The club had a policy of not allowing radio broadcasts from its premises, however, and this was a major drawback for an ambitious bandleader; this was largely because the fame gained by radio work helped a band to gain recording contracts (Ambrose’s band had been recorded by Columbia Records in 1923, but nothing had come of this). He therefore accepted an offer by The May Fair hotel, with a contract that included broadcasting.

Ambrose stayed at the Mayfair for six years, during which time the band made recordings for Brunswick RecordsHMV and Decca Records. He teamed up with Richard Rodgersand Lorenz Hart, and an American harmony song trio, the Hamilton Sisters and Fordyce (aka, Three X Sisters) to record songs “My Heart Stood Still” and other tunes. This period also saw the musical development of the band, partly as a result of Ambrose’s hiring of first-class musicians, including Sylvester AholaTed Heath, Joe Crossman, Joe Jeannette,Bert Read, Joe Brannelly, Dick Escott and trumpeter Max Goldberg.

The 1930s and 1940s

In 1933, Ambrose was asked to accept a cut in pay at the Mayfair; refusing, he went back to the Embassy Club, and after three years there (and a national tour), he rejected American offers and returned to the Mayfair Hotel in 1936. He then went into partnership with Jack Harris (an American bandleader), and in 1937 they bought a club together (Ciro’s Club). For 3 months they even employed Art Tatum  there, some think the greatest jazz pianist who ever lived. Ambrose and Harris alternated performances in Ciro’s until a disagreement led to the rupture of their partnership. Ambrose then worked at the Café de Paris until the outbreak of World War II, when he again went on tour.

His major discovery in the years leading up to the war was the singer Vera Lynn (b. 1917), who sang with his band from 1937 to 1940 and, during the war, became known as the “Forces’ Sweetheart”. Lynn married Harry Lewis, a clarinettist in the band, in 1939. Other singers with the Ambrose band included Sam BrowneElsie Carlisle, Denny Dennis (who recorded a number of duets with Vera Lynn), and Evelyn Dall. The Ambrose signature tune was When Day Is Done.

After a short period back at the Mayfair Hotel, he retired from performing in 1940 (though he and his orchestra continued to make records for Decca until 1947). Several members of his band became part of the Royal Air Force band, the Squadronaires, during the war. Ambrose’s retirement was not permanent, however, and he formed and toured with the Ambrose Octet, and dabbled in management.

The 1950s and 1960s

In the mid-1950s, despite appearances back in London’s West End and a number of recordings for MGM, Ambrose was — in common with other bandleaders — struggling; rock and roll had arrived. He was forced to start performing in small clubs with casual musicians, and his financial position deteriorated catastrophically. His situation was saved, however, by his discovery of the singer Kathy Kirby (1938–2011), whom he heard singing at the age of sixteen at the Ilford Palais; he started a long relationship with her, and promoted her career.

It was during the recording of one of Kirby’s television programmes (at the Yorkshire Television studios) that Ambrose collapsed, dying later the same night in Leeds General Infirmary. His music was kept alive after his death by, among others, the Radio 2 broadcasters Alan Dell and Malcolm Laycock, the latter continuing to play his records into the 21st century. His records, especially from his many 78RPM discs, still regularly feature on Australian radio 8CCC-FM’s long running nostalgia programme “Get Out Those Old Records” hosted by Rufl.

Ambrose was commemorated in 2005 by a blue plaque unveiled on the May Fair hotel.

Rube Bloom

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , , , on April 12, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Rube Bloom

From Wikipedia

Reuben Bloom (April 24, 1902 – March 30, 1976) was a Jewish American multi-faceted entertainer, and in addition to being a songwriter, pianistarrangerband leader, recording artist, vocalist, and writer (he wrote several books on piano method).

Life and career

He was born and died in New York City.

During his career, he worked with many well-known performers, including Bix BeiderbeckeJoe VenutiRuth Etting, and Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey. He collaborated with a wide number of lyricists, including Johnny MercerTed Koehler, and Mitchell Parish.

During the 20s he wrote many novelty piano solos which are still well regarded today. He recorded for the Aeolian Company’s Duo-Art reproducing piano system various titles including his “Spring Fever”. His first hit came in 1927 with “Soliloquy”; his last was “Here’s to My Lady” in 1952, which he wrote with Johnny Mercer. In 1928, he made a number of records with Joe Venuti’s blue Four for OKeh, including 5 songs he sung, as well as played piano.

Bloom formed and led a number of bands during his career, most notably “Rube Bloom and His Bayou Boys”, which consisted of 3 records made over 3 sessions in 1930 and are considered 6 of the hottest recordings made in the first days of the depression. It was an all-star studio group containing Benny GoodmanAdrian Rollini, Tommy Dorsey andManny Klein). At other times, he played with other bands; an example of this side of his career can be found in his work with Bix Beiderbecke and Frankie Trumbauer in the Sioux City Six, as well as his frequent work with Joe Venuti’s Blue Four.

His song “I Can’t Face the Music” was recorded by Ella Fitzgerald on her 1962 Verve release Rhythm is My Business, in a fabulous swing/big band version with Bill Doggett.

According to some sources, his first name was pronounced like ‘Ruby’ by his friends.

He is buried in Beth David Cemetery in Elmont, New York.

Songs

Jack Purvis

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , on April 12, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Jack Purvis

From Wikipedia

Jack Purvis (December 11, 1906 – March 30, 1962) was an American jazz musician.

Purvis was best known as a trumpet player and the composer of Dismal Dan and Down Georgia Way.  He was one of the earliest trumpeters to incorporate the innovations pioneered by Louis Armstrong in the late 1920s.  He also played trombone and on occasion a number of other instruments professionally (including harp).

Early years

John “Jack” Purvis was born in KokomoIndiana on December 11, 1906 to Sanford B. Purvis, a real estate agent and his wife Nettie (Jackson) Purvis.  Jack’s behavior became uncontrollable after his mother’s death in 1912, and, as a result of many acts of petty larceny, he was sent to a reform school. While there, he discovered that he had an uncanny musical ability, and soon became proficient enough to play both the trombone and trumpet professionally. This also enabled him to leave the reformatory and continue his high school education, while he was playing paying gigs on the side. One of the earliest jobs he had as a musician was with a band led by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Not long afterward, he worked with the dance band of Hal Denman.

After high school he worked in his home state for a time then went to Lexington, Kentucky where he played with the Original Kentucky Night Hawks. Around this time he learned to fly planes. In 1926 he was with Bud Rice and toured New England. He then worked the remainder of 1926 and the beginning of 1927 with Whitey Kaufman’s Original Pennsylvanians. Purvis married in Pittsburgh, in 1927, and soon became a father. His daughter, Betty Lou, was, for a time, a disc jockey in Pittsburgh in the late 1940s, and a correspondent for Down Beat magazine. This was Purvis’ only verified marriage, and rumors persist that he committed bigamy on several occasions. For a short time he played trumpet with Arnold Johnson‘s orchestra, and by July 1928 he traveled to France with George Carhart‘s band. It is reported that he had an early brush with the law when he cheated a tourist out of his travelers checks and was forced to leave the band and flee France.  Ship’s passenger list information reports “Jacques F. Purvis” returning to New York, from Le Havre, France, on November 19. 1928.

In 1929 he joined Hal Kemp‘s band. From 1929 to 1930 Purvis recorded with Kemp, Smith BallewTed Wallace (a pseudonym for agent Ed Kirkeby), Rube Bloom, the California Ramblers, and Roy Wilson’s Georgia Crackers. On December 17, 1929 Purvis led his own recording groups using Hal Kemp’s rhythm section to produce Copyin’ Louis, and Mental Strain at Dawn.

The 1930s

In 1930, Purvis led a couple of racially mixed recording sessions including the likes of J.C. Higginbotham, and Adrian Rollini.  One of these sessions was organized by Adrian Rollini and OKeh A & R man, Bob Stephens.

After leaving Hal Kemp in 1930, allegedly because legal issues precluded his going with the band to Florida, Purvis found work with the California Ramblers. He also worked with theDorsey Brothers and played fourth trumpet with Fletcher Henderson, although only in a rehearsal capacity.

Purvis’ mental stability was always in question, and he attempted suicide on several occasions. Although he was a brilliant musician, capable of either a hot jazz solo or a difficult passage through the hardest of arrangements, he could not be counted on to arrive anywhere on time. This lack of accountability plagued him throughout his life, and can be traced to his earliest years. In many instances, once Jack Purvis showed up to play an extended engagement, not so coincidentally, there was a spike in petty thefts and burgalaries for the vicinity of that gig.

From 1931 to 1932 he played with a few radio orchestras and worked with Fred Waring. In 1933 he toured the South with Charlie Barnet. He even talked his way into a job with the New Orleans Symphony Orchestra playing The Carnival of Venice. During this time he also worked in Texas as a pilot perhaps smuggling illegal goods out of Mexico.

He moved to California and was successful with radio broadcasting work.  In Los Angeles, Purvis worked for the George Stoll Orchestra as a writer and even worked for Warner Bros. Studios arranging. He composed Legends of Haiti for a one hundred and ten piece orchestra. Afterwards he found work in San Francisco as a chef.

At the end of 1935 he joined Frank Froeba‘s Swing Band in New York.  These 1935 recordings with Froeba were the end of Purvis’ recording career.  He played a couple of weeks with Joe Haymes‘ orchestra and then disappeared for a couple of years. There was a confirmed sighting of him working in a diner in the midwest around this time. It is also speculated that he worked as a ship’s cook on a freighter at the time.

He was arrested in Texas in June 1937, while working as a cook, for his involvement in a robbery in El Paso, Texas. He was tried and convicted and sentenced to jail time inHuntsville Prison.  While in prison he directed the Rhythmic Swingsters, the prison band and also played piano with them. The band regularly broadcast on radio station WBAP in 1938.

Later life

In August 1940, Purvis was conditionally pardoned from prison, but he quickly broke his parole and was sent back to prison for six more years.  Some sources claim he did this deliberately because he missed the prison band.

On September 30, 1946 Purvis was released from prison one last time.  He had a wild reputation and is said to have set hotel rooms on fire.  He seldom stuck with one band for very long and was known to hit the streets as a busker. From this time onward he worked at non-musical careers which included working as a chef, an aviator in Florida, acarpenter, an radio repair-man in San Francisco.  At sometime in his checkered life he was also a mercenary in South America.

According to researcher Paul Larsen, Purvis gassed himself to death in San Francisco, California on March 30, 1962.  Yet Purvis’ death certificate indicates the cause of death to be “fatty degeneration of the liver” rather than death by gas poisoning. Stories persist that a man who looked like (and introduced himself as) Jack Purvis showed up at a band date by cornetist Jim Goodwin and the two men had a long talk about his life on two occasions in 1968.

Hank D’Amico

Posted in Recording Artists of the 1930's and 1940's with tags , , , , , , , , , on April 12, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Hank D’Amico

From Wikipedia

Hank D’Amico, ca. May 1947

Hank D’Amico (March 21, 1915 – December 2, 1965), was an American jazz clarinetist.

D’Amico was born in Rochester, NY. He began playing professionally with Paul Specht‘s band in 1936. That same year, he joined Red Norvo. In 1938, D’Amico began radio broadcasts with his own octet before returning briefly to Norvo’s group in 1939. He played with Bob Crosby’s orchestra in 1940 and 1941, then had his own big band about a year. D’Amico had short stints in the bands of Les Brown,Benny Goodman and Norvo again before working for CBS in New York. He also found time to play with Miff Mole and Tommy Dorsey. D’Amico spent ten years as a staff musician for ABC, and then played with Jack Teagarden in 1954. From that part he mostly worked with small groups, infrequently forming his own band. D’Amico played at the 1964 World’s Fair in New York with The Morey Feld trio.

Lucille Hegamin

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , , on April 12, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Lucille Hegamin

From Wikipedia
Lucille Hegamin
Birth name Lucille Nelson
Born November 29, 1894
Macon, GeorgiaUnited States
Died March 1, 1970 (aged 75)
New York, United States
Genres Blues
Occupations Singer, entertainer
Years active 1910–1934; 1961–1962

Lucille Nelson Hegamin (November 29, 1894 – March 1, 1970) was an American singer and entertainer, and a pioneer African American blues recording artist.

Life and career

Hegamin was born as Lucille Nelson in Macon, GeorgiaUnited States.  From an early age she sang in local church choirs. By the age of 15 she was touring the US South with the Leonard Harper Minstrel Stock Company.  In 1914 she settled in ChicagoIllinois, where, often billed as “The Georgia Peach”, she worked with Tony Jackson and Jelly Roll Morton before marrying pianist, Bill Hegamin.  She later told a biographer: “I was a cabaret artist in those days, and never had to play theatres, and I sang everything from blues to popular songs, in a jazz style. I think I can say without bragging that I made the “St. Louis Blues” popular in Chicago; this was one of my feature numbers.”  Lucille Hegamin’s stylistic influences included Annette Hanshaw and Ruth Etting.

The Hegamins moved to Los Angeles, California in 1918, then to New York City the following year. Bill Hegamin led his wife’s accompanying band, called the Blue Flame Syncopators; Jimmy Wade was a member of this ensemble.

In November 1920, Hegamin became the second African American blues singer to record, after Mamie Smith.  Hegamin made a series of recordings for the Arto record label through 1922, then a few sides for Black SwanLincolnParamount and Columbia. From 1922 through late 1926 she recorded for Cameo Records; from this association she was billed as ‘The Cameo Girl’. Like Mamie Smith, Hegamin sang in a lighter, more pop-tune influenced style than the rougher rural-style blues singers such as Ma Rainey and Bessie Smith who became more popular a few years later. Two of her earliest recordings, “The Jazz Me Blues” and “Arkansas Blues” became classic tunes.

On January 20, 1922, she competed in a blues singing contest against Daisy MartinAlice Leslie Carter and Trixie Smith at the Fifteenth Infantry’s First Band Concert and Dance in New York City. Hegamin placed second to Smith in the contest, which was held at the Manhattan Casino.

In 1926, Hegamin performed in Clarence Williams‘ Review at the Lincoln Theater in New York, then in various reviews in New York and Atlantic City, New Jersey through 1934. In 1929 she appeared on the radio show “Negro Achievement Hour” on WABC, New York.  In 1932 she recorded for Okeh Records.

About 1934 she retired from music as a profession, and worked as a nurse. She came out of retirement to make more records in 1961 and 1962.

Lucille Hegamin died in Harlem Hospital in New York on March 1, 1970,  and was interred in the Cemetery of the Evergreens in Brooklyn, New York.

Mamie Smith in “The Billboard”, April 23, 1921

Posted in Interviews and Articles, Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , on April 11, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

The blues singer Mamie Smith is glorified in this advertisement by Perry Bradford, and mentions that she is recording with Okeh records. The link below will open up in PDF format.

 

Billboard 1921 – April 23 Mamie Smith’s Hits

Teddy Wilson

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , , on April 11, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Teddy Wilson

From Wikipedia
Teddy Wilson
Teddy Wilson (William P Gottlieb).jpg
Teddy Wilson at the Turkish Embassy,Washington, D.C., 1940
© William P. Gottlieb
Background information
Birth name Theodore Shaw Wilson
Born November 24, 1912
Austin, Texas
Died July 31, 1986 (aged 73)
New Britain, Connecticut
Genres Jazz
Occupations Pianist
Instruments Piano
Associated acts Louis Armstrong
Earl Hines
Billie Holiday
Lester Young
Lena Horne
Benny Goodman

Theodore Shaw “Teddy” Wilson (November 24, 1912 – July 31, 1986)  was an American jazz pianist. Described by critic Scott Yanow  as “the definitive swing pianist”, Wilson’s sophisticated and elegant style was featured on the records of many of the biggest names in jazz including Louis ArmstrongLena HorneBenny GoodmanBillie Holiday, and Ella Fitzgerald. With Goodman, he was perhaps the first well-known black musician to play publicly in a racially integrated group. In addition to his extensive work as a sideman, Wilson also led his own groups and recording sessions from the late 1920s to the ’80s.

Biography

Wilson was born in Austin, Texas, on November 24, 1912. He studied piano and violin at Tuskegee Institute in Tuskegee, Alabama. After working in the Lawrence “Speed” Webb band, with Louis Armstrong, and also understudying Earl Hines in Hines’s Grand Terrace Cafe Orchestra, Wilson joined Benny Carter‘s Chocolate Dandies in 1933. In 1935, he joined the Benny Goodman Trio (which consisted of Goodman, Wilson and drummer Gene Krupa, later expanded to the Benny Goodman Quartet with the addition of Lionel Hampton). The trio performed during the big band’s intermissions. By joining the trio, Wilson became the first black musician to perform in public with a previously all-white jazz group.

Noted jazz producer and writer John Hammond was instrumental in getting Wilson a contract with Brunswick, starting in 1935, to record hot swing arrangements of the popular songs of the day, with the growing jukebox trade in mind. He recorded fifty hit records with various singers such as Lena HorneHelen Ward and Billie Holiday, including many of Holiday’s greatest successes. During these years, he also took part in many highly regarded sessions with a wide range of important swing musicians such as Lester YoungRoy EldridgeCharlie ShaversRed NorvoBuck Clayton, and Ben Webster.

Wilson formed his own short-lived big band in 1939, then led a sextet at Café Society from 1940 to 1944. He was dubbed the “Marxist Mozart” by Howard “Stretch” Johnson due to his support for left-wing causes. Wilson performed in benefit concerts for The New Masses journal, for Russian War Relief and he chaired the Artists’ Committee to elect Benjamin J. Davis).  In the 1950s, Wilson taught at the Juilliard School. Wilson can be seen appearing as himself in the 1955 motion picture The Benny Goodman Story. He also worked as music director for the Dick Cavett Show.

Wilson lived quietly in suburban Hillsdale, New Jersey, in the 1960s and 1970s.  He performed as a soloist and with pick-up groups until the final years of his life.

Wilson died in New Britain CT, on July 31, 1986; he was 73. He is buried at Fairview Cemetery in New Britain, Connecticut.

Wilson at a Benny Goodman rehearsal, 1950

Select discography

  • 1949: Teddy Wilson Featuring Billie Holiday
  • 1956: I Got Rhythm
  • 1956: Pres and Teddy
  • 1959: “Gypsy” in Jazz
  • 1972: With Billie in Mind
  • 1972: Moonglow (Black Lion)
  • 1973: Runnin’ Wild (Recorded live at the Montreux Festival) (Black Lion)
  • 1976: Live at Santa Tecla
  • 1980: Teddy Wilson Trio Revisits the Goodman Years
  • 1990: Air Mail Special

As sideman:

  • 1933-1942: Billie Holiday, The Quintessential Billie Holiday (Volumes 1-9)
  • 1935-1939: Benny Goodman, The Complete RCA Victor Small Group Recordings
  • 1938: Benny Goodman, The Famous 1938 Carnegie Hall Jazz Concert

Doc Cheatham

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , on April 11, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Doc Cheatham

From Wikipedia
Doc Cheatham
Doc Cheatham 2.jpg
Photo by Ed Newman
Background information
Birth name Adolphus Anthony Cheatham
Born June 13, 1905
Nashville, TennesseeUnited States
Died June 2, 1997 (aged 91)
Genres Swing
Dixieland
Big band music
Occupations Bandleader
Instruments Trumpet
Vocals

Adolphus Anthony Cheatham, better known as Doc Cheatham (June 13, 1905 – June 2, 1997), was a jazz trumpeter,singer, and bandleader.

After having played in some of the leading jazz groups from the 1920s on, Cheatham enjoyed renewed acclaim in later decades of his career. He himself agreed with the critical assessment that he was probably the only jazz musician to create his best work after the age of 70.

Early life

Cheatham was born in Nashville, Tennessee. He noted there was no jazz music there in his youth; like many in the United States he was introduced to the style by early recordings and touring groups at the end of the 1910s. He abandoned his family’s plans for him to be a pharmacist (although retaining the medically inspired nickname “Doc”) to play music, initially playing soprano and tenor saxophone in addition to trumpet in Nashville’s African American Vaudeville theater. Cheatham later toured in band accompanying blues singers on the Theater Owners Booking Association circuit.  His early jazz influences included Henry Busse and Johnny Dunn, but when he moved to Chicago in 1924 he heard King Oliver. Oliver’s playing was a revelation to Cheatham. Cheatham followed the jazz King around. Oliver gave young Cheatham a mute which Cheatham treasured and performed with for the rest of his career. A further revelation came the following year when Louis Armstrong returned to Chicago. Armstrong would be a lifelong influence on Cheatham.

Working with the name bands

Cheatham played in Albert Wynn‘s band (and occasionally substituted for Armstrong at the Vendome Theater), and recorded on sax with Ma Rainey before moving to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1927, where he worked with the bands of Bobby Leeand Wilber de Paris before moving to New York City the following year. After a short stint with Chick Webb he left to tourEurope with Sam Wooding‘s band.

Cheatham returned to the United States in 1930, and played with Marion Handy and McKinney’s Cotton Pickers before landing a job with Cab Calloway. Cheatham was Calloway’s lead trumpeter from 1932 through 1939.

He performed with Benny CarterTeddy WilsonFletcher Henderson, and Claude Hopkins in the 1940s; after World War II he started working regularly with Latin bands in New York City, including the bands of Perez PradoMarcelino GuerraRicardo Ray (on whose catchy, hook-laden album “Jala, Jala Boogaloo, Volume II”, he played exquisitely (but uncredited), particularly on the track “Mr. Trumpet Man”), Machito, and others. The first time Cheatham joined Machito’s band, he was fired because he couldn’t cope with clave rhythm.  Cheatham eventually got the hang of it though. In addition to continuing Latin gigs, he played again with Wilbur de Paris and Sammy Price. He led his own band on Broadway for five years starting in 1960, after which he toured with Benny Goodman.

Later work

In the 1970s, Doc Cheatham made a vigorous self-assessment to improve his playing, including taping himself and critically listening to the recordings, then endeavoring to eliminate all clichés from his playing. The discipline paid off, and Doc received ever-improving critical attention.

His singing career began almost by accident in a Paris recording studio on 2 May 1977. As a level and microphone check at the start of a recording session with Sammy Price’s band, Cheatham sang and scatted his way through a couple of choruses of “What Can I Say Dear After I Say I’m Sorry”. The miking happened to be good from the start and the tape machine was already rolling, and the track was issued on the LP Doc Cheatham: Good for What Ails You. His singing was well received and Cheatham continued to sing in addition to play music for the rest of his career.

Cheatham toured widely in addition to his regular Sunday gig leading the band at Sweet Basil in Manhattan’s Greenwich Village in his final decade. During one of his frequent trips to New Orleans, Louisiana, he met and befriended young trumpet virtuoso Nicholas Payton. In 1996 the two trumpeters and pianist Butch Thompson recorded a CD for Verve RecordsDoc Cheatham and Nicholas Payton, which won them a Grammy Award.

Doc Cheatham continued playing until two days before his death, eleven days shy of his 92nd birthday.

 

Horace Henderson

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , on April 11, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Horace Henderson

From Wikipedia
 
Horace Henderson
Birth name Horace Henderson
Born November 22, 1904
Cuthbert, GeorgiaUnited States
Died August 29, 1988 (aged 83)
Genres Jazz
Occupations Bandleadermusical arrangement
Instruments Piano
Associated acts Fletcher Henderson

Horace W. Henderson (November 22, 1904 – August 29, 1988), the younger brother of Fletcher Henderson, was an American jazzpianistorganistarranger, and bandleader.

Born in Cuthbert, Georgia, while later attending Wilberforce University he formed a band called the Collegians, which included Benny Carter and Rex Stewart. This band was later known as the Horace Henderson Orchestra and then as the Dixie Stompers. Henderson left the band to work with Sammy Stewart, then in 1928 organized a new band called the Collegians.  Don Redman took over this band in 1931; Henderson continued to work as the band’s pianist and arranger before leaving to work for his brother.

He arranged for many of the most important jazz musicians of the era, including his brother. Fletcher Henderson’s book contained about as many of Horace’s arrangements as of Fletcher’s. Although Horace worked continually, led bands, arranged, recorded, and composed into the 1980s, and although he is considered by many the more talented and skillful of the Henderson brothers, Fletcher remained more popular and accomplished more in the field.

Among his better known clients for arrangements, in addition to his brother, were Charlie Barnet, the Casa Loma OrchestraTommy DorseyBenny GoodmanEarl Hines, and Jimmie Lunceford. His best known arrangements are of his own “Hot and Anxious” which later became “In The Mood” and of “Christopher Columbus”, which he was one of the writers of but never got the credit (both for his brother). He also wrote another popular song of the big band era called “Big John Special.” These were three of the defining songs of the period.

At different times in his career, Horace was pianist and musical director for both Lena Horne and Billie Holiday.

Rex Stewart

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , , on April 11, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Rex Stewart

From Wikipedia
 
Rex Stewart
Rex Stewart 1943.jpg
Rex Stewart with Duke Ellington’s orchestra (1943)
Background information
Birth name Rex William Stewart
Born 22 February 1907
Origin Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Died 7 September 1967 (aged 60)
Genres Jazz
Instruments cornet
Associated acts Duke Ellington

Rex Stewart (22 February 1907 – 7 September 1967) was an American jazz cornetist best known for his work with the Duke Ellingtonorchestra.

After stints with Elmer SnowdenFletcher HendersonHorace HendersonMcKinney’s Cotton Pickers, and Luis Russell, Stewart joined the Ellington band in 1934, in replacement of Freddie Jenkins. Ellington arranged many of his pieces to showcase Stewart’s half-valve effects, muted sound, and forceful style.

Stewart co-wrote “Boy Meets Horn” and “Morning Glory” while with Ellington, and frequently supervised outside recording sessions by members of the Ellington band. After eleven years Stewart left to lead his own groups – ” little swing bands, that were a perfect setting for his solo playing.”   He also toured Europe and Australia with Jazz at the Philharmonic from 1947 to 1951. From the early 1950s on he worked in radio and television and published highly regarded jazz criticism. The book Jazz Masters of the Thirties  is a selection of his criticism.

Rex also wrote for Playboy, Downbeat and several other print outlets during his life. He lived in upstate New York after purchasing a 100+ year old farmhouse. He hosted a jazz radio program in Troy, New York and owned a small restaurant for a very short time near a drag racing stadium in Vermont. While living in France, he attended the Cordon Bleu school of cooking and dedicated his life to being a fine cook.

Rex moved to Los Angeles, California to be near his three children – Rex Jr., Helena and Regina. His other son Paul Albert Hardy lived in New York City. While in Los Angeles he re-connected to many of the Ellington side-men who lived there and played a lot of “jam” sessions in clubs in the Los Angeles area. Rex was also one of the regular studio musicians seen on the Steve Allen TV show.

Rex Stewart was a vivacious, funny and talented man. He wrote many articles and was considered an expert on the history of jazz.

McKinney’s Cotton Pickers

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , , on April 11, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

McKinney’s Cotton Pickers

From Wikipedia

McKinney’s Cotton Pickers were an African American jazz band founded in Detroit in 1926 by William McKinney, who expanded his Synco Septet to ten pieces. Cuba Austin took over for McKinney early on drums.

In 1927 Fletcher Henderson‘s arranger and saxophone player Don Redman was invited to become the Cotton Pickers’ musical director,  and he assembled a band which rivalled Henderson’s and Duke Ellington‘s.  Aiding Redman with arrangements and rehearsals with the band was the talented trumpeter-arranger John Nesbitt. The line-up in 1928 was Cuba Austin (drums and vocals), Prince Robinson (clarinet, tenor saxophone), George Thomas (clarinet, alto saxophone, tenor saxophone, vocals; Redman (arranger, clarinet, alto saxophone, baritone saxophone, vocals, and leader), Dave Wilborn (banjo, vocals), Todd Rhodes (piano, celeste), Ralph Escudero (tuba), Nesbitt, Claude Jones(trombone), Milton Senior, Langston Curl (trumpet).

Other bandmembers at one time or another included George Bias (vocals), Benny Carter (clarinet, alto saxophone), Doc Cheatham (trumpet), Bill Coti (vocals), Ed Cuffee(trombone), Sidney de Paris* (trumpet), Lois Deppe (vocals), Leonard Davis* (trumpet), Jimmy Dudley (clarinet, tenor saxophone), Coleman Hawkins* (clarinet, tenor saxophone), Robert Inge (clarinet, (alto saxophone), Quentin Jackson (trombone), Moxey-Hilton Jefferson (clarinet, alto saxophone), James P. Johnson (piano), Buddy Lee (trumpet), Donald King (vocals), Kaiser Marshall* (drums), Frank Marvin (vocals), Theodore McCord (clarinet, tenor saxophone), Jim Napier (vocals), Milton Senior (trumpet), Joe “Fox” Smith* (trumpet, cornet), Rex Stewart (cornet), Billy Taylor (tuba), Fats Waller* (piano, celeste).  Between 1927 and 1931, they were one of the most popular African-American bands. Many of their records for Victor were best sellers. (* were solists who sat in during a short series of late 1929 New York sessions…not regular members.)

In 1931 Redman left to form his own band and was replaced by Benny Carter. The Cotton Pickers disbanded in 1934, unable to make money during the Depression. Manager of the band was Jean Goldkette (who arranged for the group to record “Birmingham Bertha” for him in July 1929, released on Victor under his own name).

A New McKinney’s Cotton Pickers was organized in the early 1970s by David Hutson, using the original Don Redman arrangements. They recorded several albums and featured original banjoist Dave Wilborn, who was believed to have been the only surviving original member at the time.

McKinney’s Cotton Pickers’ performance of “Milenberg Joys” was used as the theme tune of Robert Parker’s 1980s radio series “Jazz Classics in Digital Stereo”.

Anson Weeks

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , , , on April 10, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Anson Weeks

From Wikipedia
 

Anson Weeks (February 14, 1896, Oakland, California – February 7, 1969, Sacramento, California) was leader of a popular West Coast dance band in the late 1920s through the 1960s, primarily in San Francisco. His first recording was in Oakland on February 7, 1925, but it was not issued.

He formed his first band in 1924 and had key hotel jobs in Oakland and Sacramento. By the late 1920s he was a popular regional orchestra and started recording for Columbia in 1928. In 1932, he signed with Brunswick and recorded prolifically for them through 1935, during this time, his was one of their premier and nationally popular bands. He later did a session forDecca in 1937. He garnerered favorable attention in late 1931 on the “Lucky Strike Magic Carpet” radio program. His vocalists included Art Wilson, Harriet Lee, Donald NovisBob CrosbyCarl Ravazza, Kay St. Germaine, and Bob Gage.

Weeks was involved in an auto accident in 1941 and was out of the band business for several years, starting up again in the late 1940s. He signed to the local Fantasy label in the early 1950s and did a series of dance albums (“Dancin’ With Anson”), which were quite regionally popular.

His songs include: “I’m Writing You This Little Melody” (theme song), “I’m Sorry Dear”, “Senorita”, “That Same Old Dream”, and “We’ll Get A Bang Out Of Life”.

Death

He died in Sacramento, California in 1969, one week before his 73rd birthday.

McKenzie and Condon’s Chicagoans

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , , , , on April 10, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

McKenzie and Condon’s Chicagoans

From Wikipedia

McKenzie and Condon’s Chicagoans was a jazz band from Chicago, led by banjo player Eddie Condon and sponsored by singer and comb player Red McKenzie.  Their four recordings in December 1927 were important influences on early Chicago style jazz.

The group got together in 1962 for a reunion, to record the album Chicago and All That JazzPee Wee Russell replaced Frank Teschemacher, who had died in 1932, on the clarinet, and Bob Haggart filled in for the retired bassist Jim Lanigan. Trombonist Jack Teagarden joined the group for the sessions.

Recordings

Date Title Writer Notes
1927-12-08 China Boy Phil Boutelje, Dick Winfree
1927-12-08 “Sugar” Milton Ager, Frank Crum, Red NicholsJack Yellen Not to be confused with Maceo Pinkard‘s “Sugar” (1927)
1927-12-16 “Liza” Eddie CondonRed McKenzie, Aaron Rubin Not to be confused with George Gershwin‘s “Liza (All the Clouds’ll Roll Away)
1927-12-16 Nobody’s Sweetheart Ernie ErdmanGus Kahn, Billy Meyers, Elmer Schoebel Also known as “You’re Nobody’s Sweetheart Now”

Personnel

Jim Lanigan

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , on April 10, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Jim Lanigan

From Wikipedia

Jim Lanigan (January 30, 1902 – April 9, 1983) was an American jazz bassist and tubist.

Lanigan learned piano and violin as a child, and played piano and drums in the Austin High School Blue Friars before specializing on bass and tuba. Lanigan was a member of theAustin High Gang, and played with Husk O’Hare (1925), the Mound City Blue BlowersArt Kassel (1926-27), the Chicago Rhythm Kings, the Jungle Kings, and the 1927 McKenzie and Condon’s Chicagoans recordings.

From 1927 to 1931 he played with Ted Fio Rito and worked in orchestras for radio, including NBC Chicago. He played as a sideman in the 1930s and 40s with Jimmy McPartland(1939), Bud Jacobson‘s Jungle Kings (1945), Bud Freeman (1946), and Danny Alvin (1950), but began to concentrate more on music outside of jazz at that time. He played with theChicago Symphony Orchestra from 1937 to 1948, and did extensive work as a studio musician.

Lanigan never recorded a date as a leader. He played in reunion gigs for the Austin High Gang nearly up until the time of his death.

Joe Sullivan

Posted in Recording Artists of the 1930's and 1940's with tags , , , , , , , , on April 10, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Joe Sullivan

From Wikipedia
Joe Sullivan
Joe Sullivan, New York, N.Y., ca. Jan. 1947 (William P. Gottlieb 08241).jpg
Background information
Birth name Michael Joseph O’Sullivan
Born November 4, 1906
ChicagoIllinois, U.S.
Died October 13, 1971 (aged 64)
San FranciscoCalifornia, U.S.
Genres Jazz
Occupations Pianist
Instruments Piano

Michael Joseph “Joe” O’Sullivan (November 4, 1906 – October 13, 1971) was an American jazz pianist.

Sullivan was the ninth child of Irish immigrant parents. He studied classical piano for 12 years and at age 17, he began to play popular music in a club where he was exposed to jazz.[citation needed] He graduated from the Chicago Conservatory and was an important contributor to the Chicago jazz scene of the 1920s. Sullivan’s recording career began towards the end of 1927 when he joinedMcKenzie and Condon’s Chicagoans. Other musicians in his circle included Jimmy McPartlandFrank TeschemacherBud Freeman,Jim Lanigan and Gene Krupa. In 1933, he joined Bing Crosby as his accompanist, recording and making many radio broadcasts. After suffering for two years with tuberculosis, he briefly rejoined Bing Crosby in 1938 and the Bob Crosby Orchestra in 1939.

By the 1950s, Sullivan was largely forgotten, playing solo in San Francisco. Marital difficulties and excessive drinking caused Sullivan to become increasingly unreliable and unable to keep a steady job, either as band member or soloist.

The British poet (and jazz pianist) Roy Fisher celebrated Sullivan’s playing with a poem, “The Thing About Joe Sullivan”, regarded by some critics as one of the best poems about jazz. Fisher also used that title for a book of his selected poems, because (he said) he felt Sullivan was a neglected master who deserved to have his name on the cover of a book.

Discography

  • 1933: Gin Mill Blues (Columbia Records)
  • 1935: Little Rock Getaway (Decca)
  • 1941: Forevermore (Commodore)
  • 1953: Jazz, Vol. 9: Piano (Folkways Records)
  • 1953: Hangover Blues (Brunswick)
  • 1953: New Solos by an Old Master (Riverside)
  • 1966: The Asch Recordings, 1939 to 1947 – Vol. 1: Blues, Gospel, and Jazz (Folkways)
  • 1973: The Musical Moods of Joe Sullivan: Piano (Folkways)

Edmond Hall

Posted in Recording Artists of the 1930's and 1940's with tags , , , , , , , , , on April 10, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Edmond Hall

From Wikipedia
.
Edmond Hall
Replace this image Ed Hall Solo 1956.jpg
Background information
Birth name Edmond Hall
Born May 15, 1901
Reserve, LouisianaUSA
Died February 11, 1967 (aged 65)
Boston, Massachusetts
Genres Swing
New Orleans Jazz
Occupations Clarinetist
Instruments ClarinetAlto- and Baritone-Saxophone
Associated acts Buddy PetitClaude HopkinsBilly HicksHenry “Red” AllenTeddy WilsonLouis Armstrong

Edmond Hall (May 15, 1901 – February 11, 1967) was an American jazz clarinetist and bandleader.

Over his long career Hall worked extensively with many top performers as both a sideman and bandleader, and is perhaps best known for the 1941 chamber jazz song “Profoundly Blue” which is regarded as a classic of pre-WWII jazz.

Biography

Early life

Born in Reserve, Louisiana, about 40 miles (64 km) west of New Orleans on the Mississippi River, Hall and his siblings were born into a very musical family. His father Edward Blainey Hall and mother Caroline Duhe had eight children, Priscilla (1893), Moretta (1895), Viola (1897), Robert (1899), Edmond (1901), Clarence (1903), Edward (1905) and Herbert (1907).

Not only did father Edward play the clarinet in the Onward Brass Band, but on his mother’s side there were musicians as well, Jules Duhe played the trombone, Uncle Lawrence Duhe the clarinet and uncle Edmond the guitar. Robert, Edmond and Herbert would all become clarinetists, but before picking up the clarinet Edmond was taught guitar by his uncle Edmond Duhe. When Ed Hall finally picked up the clarinet, “He could play it within a week. He started Monday and played it Saturday.” his brother Herb recalls in an interview with Manfred Selchow who wrote the most outstanding Edmond Hall Biography (A Bio-Discographical Scrapbook on Edmond Hall), 640 pages, Profoundly Blue, which provided the material for all the information here.

Ed Hall worked as a farm-hand but by 1919 he was tired of it and left for New Orleans, despite his parents’ worries of finding a decent job as a musician. The first New Orleans Band he ever played in was that of Bud Rousell (Bud Russell). He also played with Jack Carey (trombone) and blues cornetist Chris Kelley.

Begins career in music

Hall’s first big break came in late 1920, when he went to a dance at Economy Hall. The legendary Buddy Petit was playing. “When I got inside, it was a revelation”, said Hall. Petit’s clarinet player left the band a just a few days afterwards, and the following Saturday Ed Hall was sitting right up there with those fast New Orleans pioneers. In 1922 Ed Hall left Petit.

Buddy Petit'.jpg

He then joined Lee Collins’ band while being in Florida Pensacola. In 1923 he joined Mack Thomas’ band, from there he went on to play with the “Pensacola Jazzers” where hall met the young trumpeter Charles Williams better known as Cootie Williams. From there he went to play with “Eagle Eye” Shields and left the band, together with Cootie Williams he joined Alonzo Ross’ band the “Alonzo Ross DeLuxe Syncopators” in early 1927. In 1928 the band’s pianist Arthur “Happy” Ford formed a new band and immediately hired Hall and Williams. Williams left at the end of 1928, which was somewhat sad to Hall, since he had taken the young musician under his wing.

In New York

In 1929 Hall went back to New York, where he joined Charlie Skeet’s band, but soon changed yet again to play with Claude Hopkins. The next big step for Hall, since under the leadership of Hopkins the band became enormously popular and in 1930 they got an offer to play at the Savoy Ballroom “The World’s finest Ballroom”. In late 1935 Ed Hall left the Hopkins Band with whom he had been for exactly 6 years. He left because of personal problems he had with the band leader, while playing at the Cotton Club.

Claude Hopkins'.jpg

In 1936 he joined the Billy Hicks band, the “Sizzling Six”. Hall who had been featured mainly on alto and baritone saxophone since 1922, finally had a place as a full-time clarinetist. Meanwhile his new sound on the clarinet had made a full circle and he began recording with the “big stars”. On June 15, 1937 in New York, he had his first recording session with Billie Holiday. Among the band members was Lester Young on tenor saxophone.

Hall stayed with Hicks’ band until early 1939, when no attractive jobs were in sight, he left and stepped into Café Society, joining Joe Sullivan‘s band in late 1937. While playing with Sullivan Hall had many recording dates with different bands and musicians in between the regular job at the Cafe Society with Sullivan.

Barney Josephson, the owner of Cafe Society Downtown and Cafe Society Uptown was very fond of Hall’s playing and after Sullivan left to play solo piano at “Nick’s”, Hall became the “house clarinetist”. Any band that would come in to play, had to get rid of their clarinetist, and take Hall or they would not get the job. Barney Josephson had made that clear. In 1940 Henry “Red” Allen came to play at the Cafe Society and of course Hall was in the band. He spent 9 years at the Cafe Society, playing (also recording in between jobs) with many of the his contemporaries like Bud FreemanTeddy WilsonCharlie ChristianHenry “Red” AllenJ.C. HigginbothamArt Tatum,Big Joe TurnerHot Lips PageZutty SingletonMeade Lux LewisBig Sid CatlettJosh WhiteIda CoxColeman HawkinsHelen WardVic DickensonSidney de ParisWild Bill DavisonEddie HeywoodRoy Eldridge and Jack Teagarden. Wednesday, February 5, 1941 was a special day in Hall’s career, for the first time he was the nominal leader of a recording session.

Billie Hicks'.jpg
Red Allen small.jpg

Edmond Hall joins Teddy Wilson

Late in 1941 Hall left Allen, to join Teddy Wilson who also played at the Café Society. A dream came true for Ed Hall who had been wanting to play with Wilson’s band for a long time. Hall was an excellent sight reader and due to many common performances it only took a few rehearsals and Ed was part of Wilson’s sextet. Around this time Hall’s style changed. His admiration for Benny Goodman and Artie Shaw, caused him to work on his technique, as he had always tried to improve technically. That’s when he tried, to play the Boehm System but soon went back to his beloved Albert System, which he’d play until his death.

Many records under his name as band leader appeared during this period as Edmond Hall’s Blue Note Jazzmen, Edmond Hall Sextet, The Edmond Hall Celeste Quartet, Edmond Hall’s Star Quintet, Ed Hall and the Big City Jazzmen and Edmond Hall’s Swingtet. The recording sessions always took place in between the work hours of the Café Society, including many of the musicians who performed there as well.

Hall had become very popular among the musicians and critics likewise and was frequently invited to the New York Town Hall Concerts led by Eddie Condon.

Edmond Hall becomes a leader

In 1944 Teddy Wilson left and abandoned his sextet, which had been very popular and successful, to form a trio (according to Wilson). Hall and the other Wilson band members were left at the Café Society, not wanting to give up their spot. Hall then was asked by Barney Josephson to front a band of his own. Ed Hall was 43 at the time and had been in the music business for over 25 years, when he finally got his chance. Again critics praise Hall’s playing with his own sextet at the Café Society in July 1944. More recording dates followed for the famous Commodore Records and Blue Note labels.

Cafe Society'.jpg
The 40's.jpg
Ed Hall's Society Crew.jpg

While business at the Café Society was exceedingly good, Hall appeared at the Town Hall Concerts in between. Hall “moved” his band to the Café Society Uptown, where he received just as much praise as he did at the Café Society Downtown. The Hall band would also play for the service men of world war ll. Those live broadcasts, unfortunately have not yet been released on record.

By the end of April 1945 things changed at the Uptown Café Society, causing Hall to leave with his band – the reasons for that remain unclear. However, Hall and his men were back at the Uptown Café just 2 months later. Hall was placed second in the 1945 Esquiremagazine poll in the best clarinet player category, right behind his most admired clarinetist Benny Goodman.

Still at the Uptown Café Society in 1946 Hall and his band would appear at the WHN Gloom Dodger radio show, two days a week, for a longer period of time.

With Louis Armstrong at Carnegie Hall

Early in 1947 Louis Armstrong‘s appearance at the famous New York Carnegie Hall was announced. Edmond Hall and his small combo were picked to accompany Armstrong during half of the program, which was to showcase Armstrong’s musical career. The other half featured Armstrong and his big band.

Armstrong’s own band at the time did not gain any positive reviews and the experience of playing with Hall and his small combo, caused Armstrong to abandon his big orchestra, and to form a small group of his own in spring of 1947, The All Stars.

In the mid-1940s “Bop” had started to ‘drive away’ New Orleans Jazz, and this caused Barney Josephson to bring in new people, after closing the club over the summer. In June 1947 Hall left Café Society, his band members joining other bands, forcing Hall to find another job.

In September 1947 he joined the “All Star Stompers” with Wild Bill Davison, Ralph Sutton and Baby Dodds. Meanwhile business at the old Café Society was bad and Barney Josephson again called upon Edmond Hall to come back. Hall did so, with a new band of his own despite the efforts business at the Uptown Café Society worsened and Barney Josephson closed Uptown for good in December 1947.

Besides the Carnegie Hall recording with Armstrong those (studio recordings) from September–December 1947 (mainly with Punch Millerand his band) were Hall’s last until 1950. After Uptown was closed Hall took his men back to Downtown Café Society, however in June 1948 Hall’s band was replaced with the Dave Martin Trio.

After the 9 year reign at the Cafe Society Ed Hall laid off for a while, looking for a new job. In the fall of 1948 Hall took a job at Boston’s Savoy Cafe, playing with the members ofBob Wilber‘s band who had gone to tour Europe. During this time Hall also accepted jobs outside of Boston and together with pianist George Wein promoted a concert they held on a day off. In retrospect Steve Connolly of the Savoy Cafe asked Hall to bring his own band and succeed Bob Wilber.

Hall’s band, the “Edmond Hall All Stars” began playing the Savoy on April 4, 1949. The band was hailed as “The best band Boston ever had”.

Ed Hall All Stars 49.jpg

Hall left the Savoy in early March 1950, to get back to New York. Playing clubs and festivals, with one job up in San Francisco as well. Things changed again, when on August 3, 1950 Eddie Condon called Hall in San Francisco, asking him to join his band at the Condon Club. Edmond Hall accepted without hesitation.

Hall stayed with Condon, off and on playing other jobs as well, joined by mostly other members from Condon’s band. An example was the “Annual Steamboat Ball” in June 1951. Or the frequent sessions for the “Dr.-Jazz” broadcasts during 1952. Condon’s band were not only a hit at the club but recorded many fine sessions, during Hall’s engagement with the band.

In November 1952 Hall participated in a special concert “Hot Versus Cool” a showdown between the “old” (New Orleans Jazz) and “new” (Bebop) music. The New Orleans musicians were: Jimmy McPartlandVic Dickenson, Hall, Dick CaryJack Lesberg and George Wettling. On the opposite side there was Dizzy GillespieMax RoachAl McKibbonRay AbramsDon Elliott – The record received a top rating of 5 stars in Down Beat. During 1954 Hall would record with many other musucians like Vic DickensonRalph SuttonMel PowellJack Teagarden and Jimmy McPartland, to produce more exceptional music for labels like StoryvilleDecca and Columbia.

Davison, Hall.jpg
1955 at condon's.jpg
Condon, Wild Bill, Ed Hall.jpg

Edmond Hall joins the All Stars

At the end of 1955 Hall left Condon to appear as a guest artist on the Teddy Wilson show. From there he went on to meet with Louis Armstrong, to replace Barney Bigard. Joining Armstrong would prove to be one of the highlights in Hall’s career. The Band left October 1955 for Europe, starting their 3 month tour in Sweden. For Armstrong and his All Stars it was a complete triumph. Hall’s playing was essential to that success, the European audiences reacted euphoric to his playing. Hall enjoyed playing with Armstrong again as much as he enjoyed the trip and the audience’s reaction. There seemed to be a vast improvement, a lifting for the whole band when Ed Hall come on deck. His modern way of playing and unique style not known to clarinet-players at the time, completed the All Stars and Armstrong’s powerful melodies. Which he always played with tremendous authority and punch. Edmond Hall’s clarinet playing had all those characteristics as well. Hall exited the audiences and got great reviews from the critics regarding his playing at the side of Louis Armstrong.

Armstrong and the Halls.jpg
Trummy Louis Barrett, Ed, Squire.jpg

The Band sold out every show in every country during their 3 months Europe tour, giving an extra matinee in Stockholm, Sweden in order to accommodate fans who could not get in to see the first show. Some of the other towns could have supported an extra performance as well but the band’s tight schedule did not permit such activity. Back in the US the band’s terrific success was praised, as Felix Blair of the New York Times wrote: “America’s secret weapon is a blue note in a minor key. Right now its most effective ambassador is Louis SatchmoArmstrong.” Creating the title for a milestone in music history, the “Ambassador Satch” album, which was released under Columbia. February 1956 the combo made Los Angeles, California their home, to shoot the motion picture High Society starring Grace Kelly and Bing Cosby. The entire band had a blast during that time.

Hall and Armstrong 1.jpg
Hall and Armstrong 2.jpg
Louis withe Lotte Lenya.jpg

After a few concerts in the US the band had another engagement in Australia which again was a tremendous success, just like the Europe-tour almost a year before. Again it was Edmond Hall’s outstanding musicianship that deeply impressed the Australian fans and was singled out for praise. The “Quarterly Rag”, Vol.1, No. 4 July 1956 devoted an extended article to Hall. Another article from “Music Maker” (Sidney) May 1956 has this to say: “… as a soloist Hall was outstanding, he brought the house down with his slow, quiet “You Made Me Love You” and the encore “Sweet Georgia Brown” had the crowd yelling for more.” The next concert overseas in Great Britain (May 1956) did not do as well, due to terrible acoustics in the huge Empress Hall. However as before Hall was praised again in 3 articles (The Observer, Manchester Guardian and Jazz Journal) of his exceptional playing and named the only one who came through despite the terrible acoustics. Directly from England The All Stars flew straight to Ghana, Africa for a first appearance. It became the most unbelievable experience in the careers of each band member. They were greeted at the airport by 13 bands, welcoming them with ALL FOR YOU, LOUIS (on Columbia CL 1077). Playing before 5000 people crowds in Europe before, this was the largest crowd Armstrong and his men had played for. 110000 people awaited them for their first concert! Everywhere they went the crowd followed and treated them like royalty.

All Stars in Ghana.jpg

Back n the US they toured from city to city off and on playing for Fundraisers as well, keeping an extremely tight schedule. June 1956 The All Stars opened at Basin Street East in New York with again great success. However critics began to accuse Armstrong of playing the same tunes over and over, which was certainly true, as was the one that most of the All Stars tended to repeat their solos note by note at every concert – with Edmond Hall ALWAYS explicitly excluded from this accusation in any of those write ups. July 14, 1956 was yet another milestone in music and the band’s career. When playing with the New York Philharmonic under Leonard Bernstein. The evenings grand finale was Bernstein conducting the stadium symphony orchestra in an Alfredo Antonini arrangement of “Saint Louis Blues” a nearly 12 minute rendition, changing between the All Stars and the orchestra, with a spectacular solo by Hall. The event was held at Lewisohn Stadium in New York, which drew a crowd of 21000 people!

Leonard Bernstein and Armstrong All Stras.jpg

In addition the event was partially filmed, adding to a documentary which was produced and narrated by Edward R. Murrow called “SATCHMO THE GREAT” It contains many clips of the All Stars with Edmond Hall, while in Europe and Ghana. Unfortunately so far it has not been released on DVD, which is inexplicable. The soundtrack to the film exists on CD and is absolutely outstanding, including Hall’s great solo on Saint Louis Blues with the Bernstein Symphony Orchestra. After the concert Louis was deeply touched by the audience’s reaction and Bernstein’s laudatory speech. (also audible on the CD). The next day The All Stars appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show, before leaving for the midwest to play the Ravina Festival at Highland Park. Again a huge success, with a crowd of 136816 people in attendance, which was yet another record. The next concert was on August 1956, joining other famous musicians to play the Norman Granz Benefit atHollywood Bowl. The concert again was a giant success with a box office high of $32000! More tight scheduled concerts and one-nighters throughout the US followed. December 8, 1956 The All Stars entered Decca studios to record the album “Satchmo – A MUSICAL AUTOBIOGRAPHY”. Again Hall is outstanding on the entire set, with a version of the classic “High Society” – (no link to the movie or the songs played in the movie), an old classic that in the old days would determine the capability of a clarinettist – Halls version here is among the very best ever recorded. February 6, 1957 The All Stars kicked off another grueling tour with 60 stops throughout the US. While playing at a concert in Knoxville Tennessee ( February 26, 1957) someone threw a stick of dynamite over a fence which exploded a few hundred yards away from the municipal building where the band played. The sound of the blast still echoing Armstrong calmed the crowd by saying: “That’s all right folks, it’s just the phone.” Nobody in the mixed audience got excited and the show went on. Louis Armstrong’s routine program gave each of his men permission to do one feature number. Ed Hall usually soloed on High Society, Clarinet Marmalade, You Made Me Love You, Dardanella or Sweet Georgia Brown. Sometimes Louis allowed a second number after Hall had the audiences on their feet! October 27, 1957 The All Stars took off for South America, where they again were greeted by a huge crowd of fans at the airport. There as well Hall was soon a favorite of the fans and was invited to a recording session with a local band (record unfortunately never was released in the US) and became an honorary member of the “Hot Club De Buenos Aires.”

Armstrong in Buenos Aires.jpg

The Argentine tour was again a huge success breaking all records for theatre grosses and fans who could not get enough of the band. The band were also scheduled to play in Chile, Uruguay to Brazil and Venezuela. The South America trip yet another triumph for the All Stars. More touring, one-nighters and another highlight the invitation to play at the Boston State house, where Armstrong was officially named the “Ambassador of good will.”

Ambassador Satch Armstrong.jpg

Ed Hall leaves the All Stars

Around June 25, 1958, after having been on the verge of leaving the All Stars several times before, but so far had been persuaded with raises in salary and pep talk by a joint effort of Armstrong and Manager Joe Glaser, who wanted to keep Hall under any circumstances, Ed Hall had become too tired of traveling and more so tired and bored of playing the same 20 tunes over and over every concert, that he just had to resign. Armstrong was deeply angered by that, not only had Hall handed his notice to Joe Glaser, avoiding Armstrong himself but they had a schedule to play at the upcoming Newport Festival and a return concert at Lewisohn Stadium which had been a great success a year before, with Hall on clarinet. Armstrong surely was aware that there was no other clarinetist who suited his combo and his personal style as well as Hall did. Although Edmond Hall made some excellent recordings during the 1940s with Teddy Wilson, early 1950s with Eddie Condon, Vic Dickenson and Jack Teagarden, his recordings with Louis Armstrong’s All Stars, most likely fueled by Armstrong’s playing, are the most powerful clarinet solos ever recorded. His phrasing, technique and “punch” were at its best while with Armstrong. Hall expressed that he had no problem with or disliked Satchmo in any way, more so, Hall found him to be a real character to work for. It was merely the musical aspect, where he found Armstrong to be “stagnant”, playing the same concert night after night, no matter if it was a dance, a night club, a concert hall. It was always the same. “A guy’s got to do something new once in a while to develop.” Hall adds: “We made records with the All Stars, but we wouldn’t even play them! Just night after night the same concert, until I couldn’t take it anymore. That isn’t jazz.” As mentioned before the second reason was the grueling schedule and traveling around the world and back and forth in the US. Hall recalls: “I was with him exactly 3 years and Louis wouldn’t take a vacation the whole time. That just got too much for me. He was afraid to stop playing for 4 or 5 nights, for fear he’d go bad, that his lips would give out. This was all mental of course.”

His view might have also been supported by the critics write-ups, especially within the last year, who would often single out Hall, emphasizing his outstanding playing with the All Stars.

After Hall had left Armstrong he and his wife Winnie flew to California for a long vacation. Hall himself was not aware of the positive influence of Armstrong on his on musical development. As he used to be much more a swing oriented player he had become pure jazz, which enabled him to draw out the most of his clarinet. Yet during his vacation he practiced a lot, “trying to get Louis out of his system.” The 3 years with Armstrong had given him the most successful, musically and financially years of his life. He also had become part of a famous motion picture as well as part of a filmed documentary on Jazz. Further he had had the opportunity to travel the world, Europe, Great Britain as well as South America and Africa – which was the bands greatest success. But the monotony of the repertoire in the last year as well as the grueling schedules had taken a toll on Hall. After his vacation he met up with old friends like Ralph Sutton and Teddy Wilson, with whom he played August or September 1958 at the “Embers” in New York, “freeing” his mind of the Armstrong repertoire from the last year. He also would play with Condon again. More engagements followed with old friends like Henry “Red” Allen, and J.C. Higginbotham. Still highly regarded Hall was asked to play in Canada as guest star, to play with two local bands, in Cairo and Toronto. The reviews of the concerts were full of praise calling Hall one of the Giants of Jazz. Back in Chicago he’d play a six-week engagement at the “JAZZ Ltd.” Announced as “The Great and Incomparable Louis Armstrong Clarinetist.” Which shows the status and impact Armstrong had in the music industry. After Chicago, in December 1958 Hall went back to the recording studio and recorded “Petit Fleur” under his own Sextet, including old friends from the cafe society as well as trombonist Vic Dickenson. The record was no commercial hit, since then only Rock & Roll and modern Jazz records made really big money. “Petit Fleur” is a perfect example, showing the difference in what Hall was with the All Stars and what he was without them. However Hall was especially pleased about the nice reception of his own compositions on the album. More recordings followed one album even with strings (all songs written by Hall) which was “nice” but not that outstanding.

Edmond Hall goes back to Ghana

Having been highly impressed about the beauty and climate of this country, its friendly people and atmosphere, as well as the fact of Ghana being bare of racial discrimination, which Hall had been victim to in his own country many times, caused the plan to leave the US and settle in Ghana, to possibly form a band and open a music school. On March 7, 1959, Ed and his wife Winnie left New York for an “exploratory trip”. March 27, 1959, the Halls flew back to the US. Fueled by enthusiastic letters from youngsters who heard about Hall’s plan to open a music school in their country, the kind and friendly reception the Halls got and the fact that “One could walk in dignity” over there since there was no racial discrimination, set their plans to settle there for good, coming autumn.

Back in the US, Hall was invited to participate at the “South Sore Jazz Festival” in Milton, Massachusetts. He would play all the annual festivals until his death. June 25 and 26 1959, Ed Hall went back to the recording studio, with most songs written by Ed Hall. The record’s title “Rumpus an Rampart Street” under Edmond Hall and his orchestra.

Halls at airport Ghana small.jpg

October 1959 the Halls depart for Ghana, causing lots of articles in the press. (US and Ghana papers). But what started so enthusiastically ended up in sheer disappointment and on December 17, 1959 the Halls arrived in England to spend the holidays with friends. Hall’s hopes to bring back what originally came from there (Africa), bring back the rhythm in an “educated” form and teach the youngsters, who were overly enthusiastic of learning his technique on clarinet.

Winne and Ed.jpg

Sadly Edmond Hall’s dreams were crushed in just three months. Hall found out that not only did not the once so enthusiastic youngsters practice on a regular basis but gradually stopped coming to the lessons. Hall even had bought clarinets for some of them. Building a solid band also proved impossible: “They wouldn’t take it up full-time and I couldn’t get them to rehearse. They didn’t think there was a future music. It was my intention, to get a band going in order to make a living, then open a studio and start the young ones of on a jazz footing. There is little knowledge of harmony and not much desire to learn. My idea had been to start off with one drummer then add two more, get some stuff going, adding some kind of jazz melody. I hoped to record with this group and if the band was successful, get them around the world a bit. But they don’t do things we do – everything is Yes, but when the day comes…” The Duke of Edinburgh, who had arrived in Ghana for an inspection of the Ghana broadcasting system, attended a jam session, led by Ed Hall, was afterwards introduced and shook hands with Hall. This was the only highlight of Ed Hall’s second trip to Ghana.

Beach of Ghana small.jpg

On December 27, 1959 the Halls flew back to New York. The only thing left in New York was their apartment, which they had not given up; however they had to buy everything new and reorganize. The emigration to Ghana had cost Hall the participation in a big tour of Germany, that he was supposed to have made with Humphrey Lyttelton in January 1960. Playing weekend jobs and occasionally at Condon’s, Hall went back to Toronto, Canada on February 15–20, 1960. Again getting exceptional reviews from critics after the concerts. The 2nd “Annual South Shore Jazz Festival” was on April 7, 1960. Hall again was invited and the head-liner of the show.

Ed Hall gets an invitation from the Czech government, to be featured as a guest star in Gustav Brom‘s band, to tour Hungary and Czechoslovakia. May 28, 1960 the Halls arrive in Prague. The three-month engagement was an incredible success, with audiences of up to 15000 people. With thousands of people wanting to see and hear Ed Hall, rushing backstage, demanding autographs. Even at the hotels they stayed they were overwhelmed with flowers, gifts, asked for photographs and autographs. During this time Hall became a good friend of Gustav Brom and his musicians as well. He was not only satisfied but happy, his spirits high again and the “wounds” of Ghana healed.

Back in the US Hall laid off for a while but never declined to play at “Central Plaza”, when invited, because there were always great musicians, which Hall had known for many years. This time he met Chris Barber, trombonist from England. A few days later Barber fulfilled his dream and invited Hall to play and record a session with him and his band on November 7–8, 1960.

In Denmark and Germany

After a great year Hall starts 1961 with a trip to Denmark, flying to Copenhagen on February 27, 1961. He joins “Papa Bue’s Viking Jazz Band” as guest star. after the concerts and again great reviews, Hall and Papa Bue’s band left to tour Germany for 5/6 days, playing at the Sportpalast in Berlin. On March 15, 1961 Edmond Hall arrives in Stuttgart for a radio broadcast – recording session. On March 16/17 1961 Hall went back to Denmark, playing with a group of young musicians, the “Cardinals” and other bands until his return to the US in early April.

Hall in Europe.jpg

After assembling a new band the “Hall-American-Jazz-Stars” he opened at the new “Condon’s” in New York, where many prominent musicians and movie actors came into the club to listen to Hall. Originally the engagement was for 4 weeks but due the band’s success it went well into the summer of 1961.

Hall was supposed to join Papa Bue’s Band to tour Germany, he even had signed the contract and despite knowing about his popularity in Germany, Hall ended up touring with Yves Montand through Canada and the US. Most likely that Montand offered Hall a salary he simply could not refuse. The tour lasted 5 months. During the tour Hall had time to participate in another recording session (February 1962), joiningLeonard Gaskin‘s All Stars. After the tour he went back to record yet another session with the Marlowe Morris Quintet, before picking up at Condon’s again. April 1961 Hall plays at the ‘Fourth Annual Milton Jazz Concert” together with Doc Cheatham. Once again Hall was being singled out for praise in reviews. Still at Condon’s he left to play in Toronto again, while clarinetist Buddy DeFranco was in town as well. The concerts’ reviews left Hall singled out as the “victor” once again. “He (Edmond Hall) will be 61 years old in two weeks and he is the most dynamic performer in Jazz today.” – P. Scott in Globe and Mail 05/05/1962.

Back at Condon’s Hall was invited to another recording session with “The Dukes of Dixiland”. November 1962 Hall was back again in Europe to tour with Chris Barber, recording and touring England, Germany and Switzerland. The band would play to over 13000 people at their first 3 concerts in Germany where the tour started. Back home again Hall accepted occasional jobs, off and on showing up at Condon’s. He assembled the Edmond Hall Quartet which opened up at Eddie Condon’s on February 18, 1963. The engagement lasted until October 1963. The job at Condon’s was only interrupted by short breaks for out of town jobs, featuring Hall as guest star at festivals as well as a few benefit concerts. The Hall band continued working well into 1964. April 26, 1963 the 5th “Annual Milton Jazz Concert” had Edmond Hall, his friend Vic Dickenson and Bobby Hackett as front-liners. September 14 & 15, 1963 Hall was invited to play at “Dick Gibson’s Colorado Jazz Party” since Hall was Gibson’s favorite clarinet player Hall was invited to all the following annual parties. Then Hall and his quartet played at “Conolly’s Star Dust Room” in Roxbury Massachusetts throughout September 1963. Hall also appeared on some Jam sessions during that time as well as at session in Natick at Paul Meymaris home, who was a good friend of Hall and also his dentist. By 1964 Edmond Hall and his wife had settled from New York to Cambridge Massachusetts for good. The face of music had changed dramatically and the request for old-time Jazz had diminished drastically. The lack of jobs in the US made Hall think of another tour to Europe, contacting Gustav Brom whom which he played with in Czechoslovakia, having had a very successful tour in 1960. Hall appeared, again with friend trombonist Vic Dickenson and Buck Clayton at “Dick Schmidt’s Sixth Annual South Shore Jazz Concert”. In July 1964 Hall was invited to play the “Newport Jazz Festival”, for the opening night’s “GREAT MOMENTS IN JAZZ”, which featured a complete star line-up, with many of Hall’s friends. The festival was a financial and musical success.

Last years

Winnie and Ed 1965.jpg

George Wein put together a package of different bands, Hall as featured star with the Dukes of Dixiland (Barrett Deems on drums) and started touring Japan from July 10–16, 1964. Again Hall was given praise to by critics as having been the hit of the show. (Leonard Feather in New Yorker Post, 08/02/1964) Back in New York, Ed Hall joins Jimmy McPartland‘s band for a few weeks, to play at “The Strollers”. July 1964 Hall played at Carnegie Hall for “Salute to Eddie Condon”. The concert drew over 1000 people and was hailed a success. A “reconstruction session” of the concert was held and televised on March 27, 1965. Hall continued to appear at Jazz festivals (often with friend Vic Dickenson), so he did at the second “Dick Gibson Colorado Jazz Party”, again with great success and good companionship. A true friend of the Halls surgeon Dr. O. A. Fulcher was at the party as well and got his friends a follow-up job of 4 weeks in Odessa, Texas, sparking what would become the “Odessa Jazz Party”. There Hall played with old friend Ralph Sutton who got another job at his wife’s restaurant which had just been opened. The job lasted all winter, into March. The Seventh Annual South Shore Jazz Festival in Milton was on April 24, 1965, Featuring Hall and Wild Bill Davison who had been playing together many times (especially at Condon’s in the early 1950s). Hall played more of the recurring festivals as well as another concert in Toronto, Canada, which lasted from November 22 – December 19, 1965. The concert review was beyond praise for Hall. Calling the 64 year old “The world’s greatest Jazz Clarinetist ever – the only super-star left in the field of Jazz”. Winter 1965/66 Hall played the Monticello restaurant, which lasted 3–4 months. with some one-nighters in between. The job at the restaurant was proof of the diminishing popularity of Jazz, as Hall often played in front of a little to no audience and little to no-one really listening or appreciating the talent of a world famous jazz-man. As the jobs got rarer Edmond Hall would even have played for little as $50 just to play. but his wife Winnie did not let him unless the offer was at least $70–$75. By then Hall was semi retired and would show up unexpectedly at a nearby pub called “Bovi’s Tavern“, where a local band Tomasso & his Jewels of Dixiland would play, to join them. According to Tomasso they never knew when Hall would show up and Hall did that for a period of about six months, without any contract and for free, just to play and get his “kicks” out of it. April 29, 1966 was the “Eight Annual South Shore Jazz Concert” with Hall and Doc Cheatham as the stars. June 1966 he played at the “Dummer Academy” as well as at a concert at Princeton University, which was partially recorded. Some smaller jobs followed, until the next “Annual Newport Jazz Festival” at the “Lewisohn Stadium”, which was in September 1966, followed by another “Gibson’s Party” at the “Annual Jazz Festival” in Aspen, Colorado. Again featuring many greats like Hall, Teddy Wilson, Bud FreemanCutty Cutshall a.o.

A big Break came on November 1966, when plans for a Europe tour were made. Hall was to play with Alan Elsdon‘s band during the tour, which started in England on November 2. 1966. November 21, 1966 Hall flew to Hamburg to meet up with the guys from Papa Bue’s Viking Jazzband, of which he would be part of during the next stage of the tour, through Germany, Denmark and Sweden. After touring Sweden Hall went back to Denmark to record for the label Storyville at the Rosenberg Studo in Copenhagen. These recordings showing the 65 year old Hall still in excellent control of his instrument, besides the great sound quality. These recordings would be the last studio recordings of Edmond Hall.

1965 Sunnie's Rendezvous.jpg

Last concerts

Hall was back home for Christmas. On January 1967 there was another important engagement the “John Hammonds 30th Anniversary Concert – Spirituals to Swing” at the grand Carnegie Hall in New York. Hall was invited as he belonged to a group called the “Cafe Society Band”, which was featured at the concert. The next important concert was the “Second Annual Boston Globe Jazz Festival” on January 21, 1967.

Cafe Society Band 1967.jpg

February 3. 1967 Hall played at the “Governor Dummer Academy” with George Poor‘s band, together with Bobby Hackett as the featured stars. The concert was as always a success and luckily it was recorded and is available on CD as “Edmond Hall’s last Concert”. On that record Hall plays as if his life had just started, with great power – listening to it is amazing since he plays much better and more powerful than on many records he made after the days with Louis Armstrong (including the record Petit Fleur!) His technique is very clean and there is no sign of him slowing down, yet on February, Wednesday 12, 1967 at 11 A.M. Edmond Hall died. He had shoveled snow from the side-walk in front of his house, then he got in his car to go somewhere. While driving he realized something happened to him and steered the car to the curb. Edmond Hall died in his car of a heart attack, he was 65.

Edmond Hall (1901-1967).jpg

The music world and friends were in shock after the untimely passing of Hall, his wife Winnie remembers: “Edmond never had been ill, as long as I knew him, but in the last years, when jobs became rarer, he became seriously doubtful about himself and his artistry. Edmond just wanted to play – kept saying “All I want is a job”. You know, Edmond died of a broken heart!”

Medically nobody certainly can die of a “broken heart”, but grief definitely can “break a heart” and kill a man. Edmond Hall was too proud to tell the world how much he needed it – his music, the appreciation of his colleagues, the big applause of the excited audience, and the acknowledgment of the critics – all that counted much more than money. Ed Hall was what he played, the gentle, mild mannered man with the fiery, powerful and distinct melodies and syncopation that came out of his Albert Clarinet, in his very own way, instantly recognizable, which set him apart from any other clarinetist.

Private life

On April 1922 while playing in Buddy Petit’s Band Ed Hall married a 17 year old girl Octavia Stewart in Reserve. Hall was 20 and Octavia 17. The marriage was prompted by the imminent arrival of son Elton Edmond Hall, who was born on July 20, 1922, but died as a child on December 3. 1934.

On May 12, 1938 he married his beloved (second) wife Winnie. Winnifred Henry came out of Cambridge Massachusetts. Ed first met her while playing with the Hopkins Band 3 years earlier, at the Ruggles Hall in Boston. They had no children.

Ed Hall was constantly practicing his clarinet even on his days off.

Winnie would sometimes be part of his travels (especially overseas). They had friends in England whom they visited frequently

Throughout his career into the mid-1950s Hall was confronted with race discrimination, like so many. Some accounts are recorded where even the mild mannered Hall could not keep quiet – one in 1951 while playing at Condon’s when a film crew came in and wanted Hall to play the background track but be replaced with Pee Wee Russell for the actual shooting. Hall refused and called his union. Condon and the other musicians supported him in the end they made two versions one the company had suggested and one as it should have been with Hall. The reason was because the film company would lose a large audience in the south, if displaying a black man in the band. In the end the CORRECT version with Hall was the only one released.

Hall also recalled frequently being talked to by police about the way he parked his car, whereas other guys in the group got away with it.

On a trip up the coast from New York to San Francisco in his Jaguar, Winnie accompanying him, there was one night were they could not “find” a hotel and had to spend the night in their car.

In 1952 Hall, Buzzy Drootin and Ralph Sutton appeared as the Ralph Sutton Trio in Saint Louis, where they played the “Encore Lounge” for several weeks. They were the first mixed trio there. One day they went over to a restaurant which was next door, whose owner would come over frequently and listen to the Trio play. They got to know him as they also frequently spoke. They walked in everybody said hello and they were seated by the waitress. After waiting for 10–15 minutes she came back, apologizing that the kitchen was closed. They knew immediately what was going on, the point however was, that the owner was their friend, who knew Edmond and the others, he even liked them, but he was afraid to stand up, afraid of what the other customers would say. Ed Hall got out immediately…

Ed Hall was known as a polite, gentle, reserved, modest man. Some describe him as kind, never judging any of the performances of his contemporaries. Hall composed around 38 songs from which his most successful came in the 1940s while playing at the Society Cafe. Yet his best solo playing was undoubtedly with the Louis Armstrong All Stars. Next to Armstrong Hall made what they had become, as many critics’ articles emphasize. The All Stars would musically never be quite the same after Hall had left.

The Halls lived a “simple” life but Edmond and his wife Winnie, both had a passion for expensive and fast cars, which was the only luxury they would afford.

Ed's cars.jpg

Trivia

– Ed Hall owned 3 Albert System Clarinets, one made in Germany, one made in America the third made in France. The latter was a gift from a retiring Philharmonic player and Hall’s favorite clarinet.

– Hall’s favorite drummer was Sidney (BIG SID) Catlett.

– Hall rated Buddy Petit’s playing higher than Armstrong’s, of course Petit was the first big break for Hall and Petit failed (despite several offers) to make a recording, so we will not ever really know.

– Amongst fellow musicians Hall was rated to be the best dressed

– Hall did not drink alcohol at all, when playing at the “Storyville” the menu had different names for the beverages, referring to the different greats who played there: “Jelly Roll’s Request” was a mix of imported rum, apple jack, simple syrup, “Louis Laugh” was cream, coffee, brandy, “Kid Ory’s Kick” was brandy, curacao, anisette, “Edmond’s Favorite” was lemonade (to name a few) – this was of course referring to Hall’s drinking attitude.

– Hall loved expensive and fast cars, the only luxury in his live – he owned a Jaguar XK 120, a 1953 Jaguar Mark Vll, and a Mercedes 170

– Hall’s other passion was shooting pool, although he was not good at it, he could not wait until the end of a set, to shoot pool.

– Ed Hall would go on frequent walks “to get his exercise”

– 1957 Hall and the Armstrong All Stars played at the United States Penitentiary of Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. The band’s fee was a free meal. The All Stars were the first band to provide free music for the inmates of a correctional institution. Other Artists would follow their example (Connie Francis, Count Basie, Mills Brothers, etc.)

– During the film work on High Society, Hall’s dentist had to come by and take care of two worn off crowns on two of Hall’s front upper teeth.

– During the engagement in Czechoslovakia (1960) all the hotels were full and the musicians received lodging at an obscure hotel. However the office for foreigners offered Hall (as guest of our country) an apartment in an exclusive international hotel. Hall did not accept the offer and said: “I remain to live with my colleagues. What’s good for them is also good for me.” This shows part of Hall’s character!

– 1945 Hall wins Esquire Magazine Silver Award for clarinet, right after his most admired clarinetist Benny Goodman

– 1961 Hall received a certificate for nomination as one of the outstanding jazz artists of 1961 from Playboy Magazine

– 1961 Hall was awarded as the best Clarinetist by the “English Melody Maker”

Quotes

“For jazz clarinet give me Ed Hall – His feel for hot music is perfect!” – Benny Goodman

“As a soloist, Hall was outstanding. He brought the house down with his slow quiet “YOU MADE ME LOVE YOU” and the encore “SWEET GEORGIA BROWN” had the crowd yelling for more.” – Music Maker (Sidney) May 1956 (wit Armstrong All Stars)

“Outstanding among the band members were pianist Billy Kyle and Clarinetist Edmond Hall. Hall a highly rated performer in the U.S., got through with his message with apparent ease, and rightly deserved his share of the applause.” – Music Maker (Brisbaine) May 1956 (wit Armstrong All Stars)

“In the more musical portions of the program, which happens to be the segments devoted to jazz, the expected also occurred. Clarinetist Edmond Hall once more showed, with every note he blew, the best musicianship of any performer on stage.” – The Globe & Mail (Toronto) 02/25/1958 (wit Armstrong All Stars)

“The show wasn’t all Satchmo, clarinetist Edmond Hall, who nearly stole the whole shebang with skirling renditions of “SWEET GEORGIA BROWN” and “YOU MADE ME LOVE YOU.” The Hartford Courant 04/26/58 (wit Armstrong All Stars) “Edmond Hall’s return visit to Basin Street was an outstanding success. Playing with even more verve and excitement, This was the best clarinet we remember him play. Featuring numbers from his new album the fresh material made a pleasant change and Edmond Hall must be one of the hardest swinging musicians playing today.” Coda March 1960

Armstrong Telegram.jpg

“He is a boy from my hometown, you know, and we have known each other for years. Been the best of friends and, you know, he is a fine clarinet man and I just want you to know that I am all for him. Edmond played with us so many years, may the Lord bless him, you know.”LOUIS ARMSTRONG – Trumpet

“Edmond Hall Influenced a lot of clarinet players by his unique sound. Many people copied or tried to copy his sound, which is a great compliment. I met Edmond and his wife at a party Atco (records) gave me in their studio. They were a charming couple. Ed was a gentleman all around – and we got along very well.” ACKER BILK – Clarinet

“Edmond Hall was a great clarinetist and a fine old southern style gentleman. I really enjoyed touring with him.” CHRIS BARBER – Trombone

“Edmond Hall was an unbelievable player. I used to watch him, but I never heard him make a mistake. He was just a perfectionist. And he was wonderful, big hearted and a kind person and very, very much a gentleman. I remember once, I was building a house and I was talking to the guys in the band. about I had run out of money. And I said: “I have to go down more feet and I need more money!” And Edmond said: “How Much?” And he gave it to me. Condon’s was the highlight of my life. At Condon’s it was New Years every night. And it was a real pleasure to work there and to play with those guys. There was never a bad musician in that group. And Edmond Hall to me remains the best clarinet player I have ever heard.” WILD BILL DAVISON – Cornet

“Ed Hall – YEAH! He was a great cat and a fine musician. Edmond and Trummy were the nicest guys. Ed is my man and I truly miss him.” BARRETT DEEMS – Drums

“I never realized how great Edmond Hall really was until I got to work with him. Edmond was a giant on the clarinet. He was just a very nice and gentle man, never wanted trouble with people, never was really angry. I had a wonderful relationship with him.” BUZZY DROOTIN – Drums

“His clarinet sounded like a human voice. What Louis Armstrong was for the trumpet was Edmond Hall on the clarinet. Could talk on his instrument.” EDDIE DURHAM – Trombone

“I have to say I have played with many USA musicians visiting the UK, and Edmond Hall was the best and most enjoyable of all. A great man indeed.” ALAN ELSDON – Trumpet

“The first time I met Edmond Hall was when he was with Teddy Wilson. That was a good band. But the first time I really worked with him was with Louis. In fact he was my room mate in Louis’ band, and it was such a pleasure working with him, we had a lot of fun together. Edmond worked on that clarinet all the time. I remember Lake Tahoe rooming with him, he said: “Man, you better go now, I gotta practice now!” Yes, I got to know him very good from rooming with him. He never drank alcohol, never ate a lot. He told me: “I can’t breathe after a big meal!” See the difference to me in Edmond and Barney is… Barney was beautiful and lyrical, Edmond punched, he popped it out, they were two of the greatest clarinetists, but their styles were different. Edmond had punch, the front line was always really poppin’. He would be among any top clarinet players in the world. He played SWEET GEORGIA BROWN and CLARINET MARMALADE and the one I loved most: DARDANELLA. It was a beautiful arrangement he did with Billy Kyle. Oh man, he really played that… he played the socks off that tune. We also made that record on MACK THE KNIFE and Edmond played a wonderful solo on that one. Ed Hall was a quiet person, very dignified. But you wouldn’t believe he liked racing cars. He loved driving expensive, fast cars. This was his kind of relaxation. Edmond Hall to me was one of the most sensitive musicians, as far as people were concerned. He always worried about the underdog. I loved him for that. That is one thing I will always keep in my heart, how much he was for the underdog.TRUMMY YOUNG – Trombone

Russell Procope

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , , on April 9, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Russell Procope

From Wikipedia

Russell Procope

Russell Procope (August 11, 1908 – January 21, 1981), an American clarinettist and alto saxophonist, was known best for his long tenure in the reed section of Duke Ellington‘s orchestra, where he was one of its two signature clarinet soloists.

Before Ellington

Procope was born in New York City, and grew up in San Juan Hill, where he went to school with Benny Carter. His first instrument was the violin, but he switched to clarinet and alto saxophone. He began his professional career in 1926 as a member of Billy Freeman’s orchestra. At the age of twenty he recorded with Jelly Roll Morton, and went on to play with bands led by Benny Carter, Chick Webb(1929-1930), Fletcher Henderson (spring of 1931 to 1934), Tiny BradshawTeddy HillKing Oliver, and Willie Bryant.

Fletcher Henderson’s band was dissolved in 1934. Along with several other ex-Henderson musicians, Procope went into Benny Carter’s orchestra. He also worked for a time with the Tiny Bradshaw and Willie Bryant bands before joining Teddy Hill in 1935. During his stay with Teddy Hill’s orchestra the trumpet section included, at various times, Roy Eldridge, Bill Coleman, Frank Newton, and Dizzy Gillespie, while trombonist Dickie Wells and tenor-saxophonist Chu Berry were two other distinguished soloists who played with the band. It was a member of this orchestra that Russell Procope made his first trip to Europe in 1937; Teddy Hill’s band formed part of “The Cotton Club Revue,” an all-coloured show, which during its European tour appeared at the London Palladium.

In 1938 Procope replaced Pete Brown in John Kirby‘s sextet, with whom he played exclusively alto sax until 1945 (with an interruption forWorld War II). It was with Kirby that he began to make his name. Kirby’s band included Charlie Shavers (trumpet), Buster Bailey (clarinet), Procope (alto-sax), Billy Kyle (piano) and O’Neil Spencer (drums). This group was billed as “The Biggest Little Band In The World” – performing intricate, tightly-woven small-band orchestrations, combining precision with relaxation and a high standard of solo playing. In some way John Kirby’s music contributed elements to the experiments which were to be pursued by jazz modernists during the middle Forties.

From 1942 until the end of World War II, Procope served in the U.S. armed forces.

Ellington and afterwards

Procope joined the Ellington orchestra in 1946, standing in for Otto Hardwicke for one night in Worcester, Massachusetts, and staying until Ellington’s death in 1974. Procope came to Europe again as a member of this band during the summer of 1950. Like all members of the Ellington reed section except for alto saxophone titan Johnny Hodges and marathon tenor saxophonist Paul Gonsalves, Procope doubled on the clarinet, and it was on that instrument that he made his reputation. Though he was a fine saxophonist and could (and did) play tenor as well as alto saxophone with authority, Procope was most highly regarded for his woody, understated clarinet solos, a warm contrast to fellow reed section member Jimmy Hamilton‘s cheerful, breezy style. (An excellent, immediate hearing of the contrast between the two clarinetists can be heard on Ellington’s three-part suite “Idiom ’59”; Ellington handed Procope the solo for the slower tempoed opening part, before handing Hamilton the first clarinet solo and the bridge blues solo on the more swinging second part.) Procope was also highly regarded personally within and outside the Ellington band. “He was”, wrote Ellington in Music is My Mistress, “an utterly sober and reliable musician, always to be depended upon.”

After Ellington’s death, Procope toured with Brooks Kerr‘s trio.

In 1956, Russell Procope recorded “The Persuasive Sax of Russ Procope” under the London Records label. Procope played the alto-saxophone, along with Remo Biondi (rhythm guitar), Earl Backus (solo guitar), Paul Jordan (piano) Mel Schmidt (Bass), and Frank Rullo (drums). Although Russell Procope’s early playing reflected the influence of Benny Carter, he had evolved a highly individual style. It combined an essentially lyrical approach with a forceful, swinging attack.

Maggie Jones

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , on April 9, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Maggie Jones

From Wikipedia
Maggie Jones
Birth name Fae Barnes
Also known as The Texas Nightingale
Born c.1900
HillsboroTexasUnited States
Died Unknown
Genres Blues
Occupations Singerpianist
Instruments Vocalspiano
Years active 1922—1933

Maggie Jones (c.1900—unknown) was an American blues singer and pianist, who recorded thirty-eight songs between 1923 and 1926. She was billed as “The Texas Nightingale.”  Jones is best remembered for her songs, “Single Woman’s Blues,” “Undertaker’s Blues,” and “Northbound Blues.”

Biography

She was born Fae Barnes in HillsboroTexas.  Her year of birth is most regularly cited as 1900, although this has not been proven. She relocated to New York in 1922, where she performed in local nightclubs. She appeared at the Princess Theater in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania in 1922, and toured the TOBA theater circuit until ca. 1926.

Her debut recording session was on July 26, 1923, for Black Swan Records, where she became the first singer from Texas to record a side. Her recording career saw Jones appear on several record labels including Black Swan, VictorPathé and Paramount, although the bulk of her work was released by Columbia. On Black Swan and Paramount she was billed as Fae (or Faye) Barnes; on Pathé and Columbia she recorded as Maggie Jones. It is unknown whether marriage played any part in her name change.

Over a three-year period, her accompaniment was variously supplied by notables such as Louis ArmstrongFletcher HendersonCharlie Green, and Elmer Snowden. Jones is especially noted for her six sides on which she was backed by Fletcher Henderson and Louis Armstrong; author Derrick Stewart-Baxter singled out “Good Time Flat Blues” as “her masterpiece”.  With Fletcher Henderson and Charlie Green she recorded “North Bound Blues”, which contained trenchant references to the South’s Jim Crow laws that are unusual for a classic female blues singer.  By October 3, 1926, Jones had cut her final disc. In 1927 she performed with the Clarence Muse Vaudeville Company and sang in Hall Johnson‘s choir at the Roxy Theater in New York City.

In 1928–1929 Jones appeared with Bill Robinson in the Broadway production of Lew Leslie‘s revueBlackbirds of 1928, which toured the US and Canada.  She often worked outside the music industry, including co-owning a clothes store in New York. By the early 1930s Jones moved on to Dallas, Texas, and ran her own revue troupe which performed in Fort Worth, Texas. In 1934 she appeared in the All American Cabaret in Fort Worth. She subsequently disappeared from the public eye.

Her total recording output is available on Maggie Jones, Vol. 1 (1923-1925) and Maggie Jones & Gladys Bentley: Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 2 (May 1925-June 1926)/Gladys Bentley (1928-1929).

Leroy Carr

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , on April 9, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Leroy Carr

From Wikipedia
Leroy Carr
Leroy Carr.jpg
Background information
Born March 27, 1905
NashvilleTennesseeUnited States
Died April 29, 1935 (aged 30)
IndianapolisIndiana, United States
Genres Chicago BluesPiedmont blues
Instruments Piano

Leroy Carr (March 27, 1905 – April 29, 1935)  was an American blues singersongwriter and pianist, who developed a laid-back,crooning technique and whose popularity and style influenced such artists as Nat King Cole and Ray Charles. He first became famous for “How Long, How Long Blues” on Vocalion Records in 1928.

Life and career

Carr was born in Nashville, Tennessee. Although his recording career was cut short by an early death, Carr left behind a large body of work.  He had a long-time partnership with guitarist Scrapper Blackwell. His light bluesy piano combined with Blackwell’s melodic jazz guitar to attract a sophisticated black audience. Carr’s vocal style moved blues singing toward an urban sophistication, influencing such singers as T-Bone WalkerCharles BrownAmos MilburnJimmy WitherspoonRay Charles among others.

Count Basie and Jimmy Rushing used some of Carr’s songs and Basie’s band shows the influence of Carr’s piano style.

His music has been covered by notable artists such as Robert JohnsonRay CharlesBig Bill BroonzyMoon MullicanChampion Jack DupreeLonnie Donegan and Memphis Slim.

Carr died of nephritis shortly after his thirtieth birthday.

Sidney Bechet

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , on April 9, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Sidney Bechet

From Wikipedia
Sidney Bechet
Left: Sidney Bechet. Right: Louis Armstrong.

Left: Sidney Bechet. Right: Louis Armstrong. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Sidney Bechet in 1922

Background information
Born May 14, 1897
New OrleansLouisianaU.S.
Died May 14, 1959 (aged 62)
GarchesFrance
Genres Jazz
Dixieland
Occupations Clarinetist
Saxophonist
Composer
Instruments Clarinet
Soprano saxophone
Years active 1908–1957
Associated acts Louis Armstrong
Tommy Ladnier

Sidney Bechet (May 14, 1897 – May 14, 1959) was an American jazz saxophonistclarinetist, and composer.

He was one of the first important soloists in jazz (beating cornetist and trumpeter Louis Armstrong to the recording studio by several months  and later playing duets with Armstrong), and was perhaps the first notable jazz saxophonist. Forceful delivery, well-constructed improvisations, and a distinctive, wide vibrato characterized Bechet’s playing.

Bechet’s erratic temperament hampered his career, however, and not until the late 1940s did he earn wide acclaim.

Biography

Bechet’s childhood home in the 7th Ward of New Orleans.

Bust in Juan-les-Pins

Bechet was born in New Orleans in 1897 to a middle-class Creole of color family. Sidney’s older brother Leonard Bechet (1877–1952) was a part-time trombonist and bandleader. Sidney Bechet quickly learned to play several musical instruments kept around the house, mostly by teaching himself; he soon decided to specialize in clarinet. At the age of six, Sidney started playing along with his brother’s band at a family birthday party, debuting his talents to acclaim. Later in his youth, Bechet studied with such renowned Creole clarinetists as Lorenzo Tio, “Big Eye” Louis Nelson Delisle, and George Baquet.

Soon after, Bechet began to play in many New Orleans ensembles, improvising with what was “acceptable” for jazz at that time (obbligatos, with scales and arpeggios, and “variating” the melody). These ensembles included parade work with Henry Allen’s celebrated Brass Band, the Olympia Orchestra, and John Robichaux’s “genteel” dance orchestra. In 1911-1912, Bechet performed with Bunk Johnson in the Eagle Band of New Orleans, and in 1913-1914, with King Oliver in the Olympia Band.

Although Bechet spent his childhood and adolescence in New Orleans, from 1914 to 1917 he was touring and traveling, going as far north as Chicago, and frequently teaming up with Freddie Keppard, another notable Creole musician. In the spring of 1919, Bechet traveled to New York, where he joined Will Marion Cook‘s Syncopated Orchestra. Soon after, the orchestra journeyed to Europe where, almost immediately upon arrival, they performed at the Royal Philharmonic Hall in London. The group was warmly received, and Bechet was especially popular, attracting attention near and far.

While in London, Bechet discovered the straight soprano saxophone, and quickly developed a style quite unlike his warm, reedy clarinet tone. His saxophone sound could be described as “emotional”, “reckless”, and “large”. He would often use a very broad vibrato, similar to what was common for some New Orleans clarinetists at the time.

After being convicted of assaulting a woman, Bechet was imprisoned in London from September 13 to 26, 1922. He was deported back to the United States, leaving Southampton on November 3 and arriving in New York on November 13, 1922.

On July 30, 1923, he began recording; it is some of his earliest surviving studio work. The session was led by Clarence Williams, a pianist and songwriter, better known at that time for his music publishing and record producing. Bechet recorded “Wild Cat Blues” and “Kansas City Man Blues”. “Wild Cat Blues” is in a multi-thematic ragtime tradition, with four themes, at sixteen bars each, and “Kansas City Man Blues” is a genuine 12-bar blues. Bechet interpreted and played each uniquely, and with outstanding creativity and innovation for the time.

On September 15, 1925, Bechet and other members of the Revue Nègre, including Josephine Baker, sailed to Europe, arriving atCherbourg, France, on September 22. The revue opened at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées,  Paris, on October 2. Bechet toured Europe with various bands, reaching as far as Russia in mid-1926. In 1928, he led his own small band at the famous Bricktop’s Club inMontmartre, Paris.

Bechet was jailed  in Paris when a woman passer-by was wounded during a shoot-out.  The most common version of the story, as related in Ken Burns‘s jazz documentary, reports that the initial shoot-out started when another musician/producer told Bechet that he was playing the wrong chord. Bechet challenged the man to a duel.  Other sources assert that Bechet was essentially ambushed by a rival musician.

After his release, Bechet was deported to New York. Having arrived right after the stock-market crash of 1929, Bechet joined Noble Sissle’s orchestra. They returned to Europe to tour in Berlin, Germany and Russia.

In 1932, Bechet returned to New York City to lead a band with trumpeter Tommy Ladnier. The band, consisting of six members, performed at the Savoy Ballroom. He went on to play with Lorenzo Tio, and also got to know Roy Eldridge, another trumpeter.

Over time Bechet had increasing difficulty finding musical gigs; he eventually started a tailor shop with Ladnier. During this time, they were visited by various musicians, and played in the back of their shop. Throughout the 1940s, Bechet played in several bands, but his financial situation did not change until the end of that decade.

By the end of the 1940s, Bechet tired of struggling to make music in the United States. His contract with Jazz Limited, a Chicago-based record label, was limiting the events where he could perform, for instance excluding the 1948 Festival of Europe in Nice. He believed that the jazz scene in the US had little left to offer him and that was getting stale.

Bechet relocated to France in 1950 after performing as a soloist at the Paris Jazz Fair. His performance at the fair resulted in a surge in his popularity in France. After that, Bechet had little problem finding well-paid work in France. In 1951, Bechet married Elisabeth Ziegler in Antibes, France.

In 1953, he signed a recording contract with French Vogue, which lasted for the rest of his life.  He recorded many hit tunes, including “Les Oignons“, “Promenade aux Champ Elysees,” and the international hit “Petite Fleur“. He also composed a classical ballet score in the late Romantic style of Tchaikovsky, called La Nuit est sorcière (The Night Is a Witch). Existentialists in France called him “le dieu”.

Bechet died in Paris from lung cancer on May 14, 1959 on his sixty-second birthday. Shortly before his death, he dictated his poetic autobiography, Treat It Gentle.

Career

Bechet successfully composed in jazz, pop-tune, and extended concert work forms. He knew how to read music but chose not to, due to his highly developed inner ear; he developed his own fingering system and never played section parts in a big band or swing-style combo.  His recordings have often been reissued.

Sidney Bechet’s primary instruments were the clarinet and the soprano sax. His playing style is intense and passionate, and had a wide vibrato. He was also known to be very proficient with his instruments and a master at improvisation (both individual and collective). Bechet liked to have his sound dominate in a performance, and trumpeters found it very difficult to play alongside him.

Bechet’s song Si tu vois ma mère was prominently featured in the Woody Allen film Midnight in Paris (2011).

Some of the highlights of his career include 1923 sides with Louis Armstrong in the Clarence Williams Blue Five; the 1932, 1940, 1941 New Orleans Feetwarmers sides; a 1938 Tommy Ladnier Orchestra session (“Weary Blues”, “Really the Blues”); a hit 1939 recording of “Summertime“; and various versions of his own composition, “Petite Fleur“.

In 1939, Bechet co-led a group with pianist Willie “The Lion” Smith that recorded several early versions of what was later called Latin jazz, adapting traditional méringuerhumbaand Haitian songs to the jazz idiom.

Bechet in New York in 1947

On July 28, 1940, Sidney Bechet made a guest appearance on NBC Radio‘s The Chamber Music Society of Lower Basin Street show, playing two of his show pieces (“Shake It and Break It” and “St. Louis Blues“) with Henry Levine’s Dixieland band. Levine invited Bechet into the RCA Victor recording studio (on 24th Street in New York City), where Bechet lent his soprano sax to Levine’s traditional arrangement of “Muskrat Ramble.”

On April 18, 1941, as an early experiment in overdubbing at Victor, Bechet recorded a version of the pop song “The Sheik of Araby“, playing six different instruments: clarinetsoprano saxophonetenor saxophonepianobass, and drums. A hitherto unissued master of this recording was included in the 1965 LP Bechet of New Orleans, issued by RCA Victor as LPV-510. On the liner notes, George Hoeffer quotes Bechet as follows:

“I started by playing The Sheik on piano, and played the drums while listening to the piano. I meant to play all the rhythm instruments, but got all mixed up and grabbed my soprano, then the bass, then the tenor saxophone, and finally finished up with the clarinet.”

In 1944, 1946, and 1953 he recorded and performed in concert with the Chicago jazz pianist and vibraphonist Max Miller, private recordings that are part of the Max Miller archive and have never been released. These concerts and recordings are covered completely inJohn Chilton‘s authoritative book on Bechet.

Bechet was an important influence on the alto saxophonist Johnny Hodges, who studied with him as a teenager.

Legacy and honors

  • In 1919, Ernest Ansermet, a Swiss classical conductor, wrote a tribute to Bechet, one of the earliest (if not the first) to a jazz musician from the classical field of music, linking Bechet’s music with that of Bach.
  • In 1968, Bechet was inducted into the Down Beat Jazz Hall of Fame.
  • The New York Times music writer Robert Palmer wrote of Bechet: “by combining the ‘cry’ of the blues players and the finesse of the Creoles into his ‘own way,’ Sidney Bechet created a style which moved the emotions even as it dazzled the mind.”
  • “Bechet to me was the very epitome of jazz … everything he played in his whole life was completely original. I honestly think he was the most unique man to ever be in this music.” — Duke Ellington.
  • The British poet Philip Larkin wrote an ode to Bechet in The Whitsun Weddings.

In popular culture

Sugar Blue, the renowned blues harmonica player, took his name from the Bechet recording “Sugar Blues”, saying:

“I needed a nickname … all the good ones were taken! You know ‘Muddy Waters’, ‘Blind Lemon’, ‘Sonny Boy’ … until one night a friend and I were leaving a concert — a Doc Watson concert — when somebody threw out of the window a box full of old 78s: I picked one up and it said “Sugar Blues” by Sidney Bechet … That’s it! I thought it was perfect … so here I am”.

  • Bechet is said to have inspired the character of the saxophonist “Pablo” in the novel Steppenwolf. Hermann Hesse likely learned about jazz by listening to his playing in Europe in the 1920s.
  • In the novel Replay by Ken Grimwood, Bechet is featured performing at an underground Paris jazz club in the novel. This appearance is anachronistic as the scene takes place in 1963; Bechet died in 1959.

In music

  • Bob Dorough, who played with Bechet, recorded a tribute song, called “Something for Sydney,” on his Right On My Way Home album.
  • Van Morrison mentions Bechet in his song “See Me Through Part II (Just A Closer Walk With Thee)”.
  • The French chanteuse Patricia Kaas recorded the song, “L’Enterrement de Sidney Bechet” (“The Funeral of Sidney Bechet”), on her 1990 album Scène de vie.
  • Raquel Bitton pays tribute to Sydney Bechet in her CD Paris Blues, singing “Petite Fleur” (2006).
  • Radiohead used his single “Egyptian Fantasy” as the exit song for their 2012 tour.

In film/TV

  • In the 1997 documentary Wild Man BluesWoody Allen, the director and clarinetist, repeatedly referred to Bechet. He named one of his children adopted with his wife Soon-Yi Previn after Bechet.
  • Bechet is portrayed by Jeffrey Wright in two episodes of the television series The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles.
  • In the 2009 Disney animated feature The Princess and the Frog, Bechet is mentioned by Louis, the trumpet playing alligator, during the musical number “When We’re Human.”

Partial discography

Singles

  • “Blues In Thirds” – 1940
  • “Dear Old Southland” – 1940
  • “Egyptian Fantasy” -1941
  • “Muskrat Ramble” – 1944
  • “Blue Horizon” – 1944

Memphis Minnie

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , , , on April 9, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Memphis Minnie

From Wikipedia
Memphis Minnie
Portrait (ca. 1930) on Minnie's gravemarker

Portrait (ca. 1930) on Minnie’s gravemarker (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Portrait (ca. 1930) on Minnie’s gravemarker

Background information
Birth name Lizzie Douglas
Born June 3, 1897
AlgiersLouisianaUnited States
Died August 6, 1973 (aged 76)
MemphisTennessee, United States
Genres Blues
Occupations Guitaristvocalistsongwriter
Instruments Guitar, electric guitar, bass,banjodrums
Years active 1920s–1950s
Labels OkehColumbiaVocalion,DeccaBluebirdCheckerJOB

Memphis Minnie was a Blues guitarist, vocalist, and songwriter from the early 1930s to the 1950s. She was born in Algiers, Louisiana in 1897 as Lizzie Douglas. She had many songs, some of the most famous being “Bumble Bee”, “Hoodoo Lady”, and “I Want Something For You”. Her performances and songwriting made her well known in a genre dominated mostly by men. She died on August 6, 1973 and is buried in Memphis, Tennessee.

Biography

Lizzie Douglas (a.k.a. Memphis Minnie) was born on June 3, 1897 in Algiers, Louisiana. She was the eldest from her 13 other siblings. Her parents Abe and Gertrude Douglas nicknamed her the Kid during her early childhood. At the age of 7 she and her family moved toWalls, Mississippi, which was just south of Memphis. The following year after she moved, she received her first guitar for Christmas. She began to practice and learn how to play both the banjo and the guitar and it was seen that she had a great talent as a musician. When she first began performing she did not use her first name Lizzie, but played under the name Kid Douglas. When she was 13 years old she ran away from her home to live on Beale Street in Memphis, Tennessee. She would play on street corners for most of her teenage years and would eventually go home when she ran out of money. She began to get noticed singing and playing guitar on the street corners. This brought an opportunity for her to tour, travel, and play with the Ringling Brothers Circus. Eventually she came back to Beale Street and got consumed in the blues scene. At the time, women, whiskey, and cocaine were high in demand with the people and places she would be around. She made her money by playing guitar, singing, and prostitution, which was not uncommon at the time. Most of the female performers were prostitutes because of financial desperation. It was said “She received $12 for her services-an outrageous fee for the time.” (Memphis Minnie Biography,1). She was known as a woman that was very strong and that could take care of herself.

She had been married three times in her life; first with Will Weldon (a.k.a. Casey Bill) sometime in the 1920s, then Joe McCoy (1929 – 1934), and finally to Earnest Lawlars (a.k.a. Little Son Joe), in 1939. She and McCoy would perform together during their marriage. During this time, a talent scout from Columbia Records discovered her. When she and McCoy went to record in New York, she decided to change her name to Memphis Minnie. During the next few years she and McCoy released many singles and duets. She released the song “Bumble Bee” in 1930, which ended up being one of her favorite songs, and led her to a recording contract with the labelVocalion. Under this label, they continued to produce recording for two years, one of them being “I’m Talking About You”, which was one of her more popular songs. They soon decided to leave Vocalion and move to Chicago. She and McCoy introduced country blues to the urban environment and became very well known.

Memphis Minnie continued to have success throughout the years recording under many different labels like Decca Records and Chess Records. Some believe her fame was the reason for her divorce with McCoy due to jealousy and resentment towards her. She remarried after to Earnest Lawlars (a.k.a. Little Son Joe) and began recording material with him. She became very well known in the blues industry and ended up being one of the most famous blues performers of all time, competing with both men and women.

She continued to record throughout the 50’s, but her health began to become a problem for her. She retired from her musical career and ended up going back to Memphis. “Periodically, she would appear on Memphis radio stations to encourage young blues musicians. As the Garons wrote in Women With Guitar, “She never laid her guitar down, until she could literally no longer pick it up.”” She suffered a stroke in 1960, which caused her to be bound by wheelchair. The following year her husband, Earnest “Little Son Joe” Lawlars died. She had another stroke a short while after and eventually ended up in the Jell Nursing Home. She could no longer survive on her social security income so magazines wrote about her and readers sent her money for assistance. On August 6, 1973 she died of a stroke. She was buried in an unmarked grave at the New Hope Cemetery in Memphis. A headstone paid for by Bonnie Raitt was erected by the Mt. Zion Memorial Fund on 13 October 1996 with 35 family members in attendance including her sister, numerous nieces (including Laverne Baker) and nephews. After her death some of her old work began to surface and some of her songs were featured on blues compilations. She was one of the first 20 blues artists that were inducted in the Blues Hall of Fame.

Career

There’s a famous anecdote from this period regarding a guitar contest between Minnie and Big Bill Broonzy. In 1933, when Big Bill Broonzy was very popular in Chicago, a blues contest between him and Memphis Minnie took place in a nightclub. As Broonzy tells the story, in his autobiography Big Bill Blues, a jury of fellow musicians awarded Minnie the prize of a bottle of whiskey and a bottle of gin for her performance of “Chauffeur Blues” and “Looking the World Over”.

Before renewing her contract with Vocalion in 1934 she recorded twenty sides for Decca and eight for Bluebird, her last session for Bluebird accompanied by Casey Bill Weldon. Minnie and Joe recorded recorded for the last time together in September 1934. According to several reports, McCoy’s increasing jealousy of Minnie’s fame and success caused the breakup. Minnie toured a great deal in the ’30s, mostly in the south. It was during this period that Bob Wills and some of his Texas Playboys saw her playing in Texas; they would later make her “What’s The Matter With The Mill?” a part of their repertoires. By 1935 Minnie had settled in under the supervision of Lester Melrose and was able to easily handle the transition from rural-downhome blues to a more sophisticated sound. Back on her own, Minnie began to experiment with different styles and sounds. She recorded four sides for the Bluebird label in 1935 in August of that year, she returned to the Vocalion label. Minnie had teamed up with manager Lester Melrose, the single most powerful and influential executive in the blues industry during the 1930s and 1940s. By the end of the 1930s, Minnie had recorded nearly 20 sides for Decca Records and eight sides for theBluebird Records.

In 1939, Minnie returned to the Vocation label. Her recordings with Son Joe are in duet style, with piano, bass or drums added on some sessions. Minnie and Little Son Joe also began to release material on Okeh Records in the 1940s. The couple continued to record together throughout the decade. In May 1941 Minnie recorded her biggest hit, “Me And My Chauffeur Blues.” A follow-up date yielded two more blues standards, “Looking The World Over” and Son’s “Black Rat Swing (issued as by Mr. Memphis Minnie).” At the dawn of the 1940s Minnie and Joe continued to work at their “home club”, Chicago’s popular 708 club where they were often joined by Big BillSunnyland Slim, or Snooky Pryor. They also played at dozens of the other better known Chicago nightclubs. The forties treated Minnie and Son Joe well and they performed both together and separately depending on finances, (they could make more money playing separate gigs). Minnie, presided over Blue Monday parties at Ruby Lee Gatewood’s Tavern playing an electrified National arch top in front of a band that included bass and drums. The poet Langston Hughes saw her perform New Year’s Eve 1942, at the 230 Club, and was thoroughly overwhelmed by her “scientific” (i.e. loud) sound. He described the sound of her electric guitar as “a musical version of electric welders plus a rolling mill”. Clearly she had by that time embraced the next phase of the blues.

Later in the 1940s Minnie lived in Indianapolis, Indiana and Detroit, Michigan, returning to Chicago in the early 1950s.  From the 1950s on, however, public interest in her music declined, and in 1957 she and Lawlers returned to Memphis. Lawlers died in 1961.

Personal life

Her family called her “Kid” throughout her childhood because she never liked the name “Lizzie.”   Her younger sister Daisy is the only surviving sibling of the Douglas family. Daisy and Kid atttended elementary school together in Brunswick, Tennessee at a school called Morning Grove School.  At the age of seven, her family moved to Walls Mississippi, a town not too far from Memphis, Tennessee. In 1910, at the age of 13, she ran away from home to live on Beale Street in Memphis, Tennessee although she would periodically return to her family’s farm whenever she ran out of money.  The majority of the time, she played her guitar and sang on the street corners.

Her sidewalk performances eventually led to a four year tour of the South with the Ringling Brothers Circus from 1916 to 1920.  She was known for being an independent woman who knew how to take care of herself and when a man ever tried to pester her or do her wrong she would go after them with a pocket knife, her guitar, or anything she can get her hands on.  She chewed tobacco all the time including whenever she sang or played her guitar. She always had a mug at hand in case she ever wanted to spit. Most of the music she made was autobiographical; Minnie expressed a lot of her personal life in through her music. In the 1930s when she would finish traveling and performing in several different states, Minnie would go back to her friends’ homes with nowhere else to go. Minnie’s mother died in 1922 when Minnie was 25 years old. Her father decided to move back to Walls Mississippi where he died thirteen years later in 1935.

Minnie was married three times. Although there is no evidence of their marriage certificate, her first husband was Will Weldon who she married in the early 1920s. Her second husband was guitarist and mandolin player Joe McCoy (aka Kansas Joe McCoy) whom she married in 1929. That same year, she and Kansas Joe McCoy began to perform together. They were discovered by a talent scout of Columbia Records in front of a barber shop where they were playing for dimes.  Together, they went to New York to record their music and this is when she decided to change her name to Memphis Minnie. They filed for divorce in 1934 because McCoy became increasingly jealous of Minnie’s rise to fame and success. In 1939, she met guitarist Earnest Lawlers (aka Little Son Joe). He became her new musical partner and they married shortly thereafter. Son Joe attributed songs to her including “Key to The World” in which he addresses her as “the woman I got now” and calls her “the key to the world.” By the late 1940s, clubs began hiring younger and cheaper artists to play shows at their venues so Columbia began dropping Blues artists including Memphis Minnie.

Minnie was not religious and seldom went to church, in fact the only time she would ever go to church was to see Gospel groups perform (Garon 36). She had a stroke in 1960 which made her bound to a wheelchair for the rest of her life which ended on August 6 of 1973. The home she once lived in still exists today at 1355 Adelaide Street in Memphis, Tennessee.

Death

Memphis Minnie’s grave (2008)

After her health began to fail in the mid 1950s, Minnie returned to Memphis and retired from performing and recording. She spent her twilight years in a nursing home in Memphis where she died of a stroke in 1973.  She is buried at the New Hope Baptist Church Cemetery in WallsDeSoto County, Mississippi. A headstone paid for by Bonnie Raitt was erected by the Mt. Zion Memorial Fund on 13 October 1996 with 35 family members in attendance including her sister, numerous nieces (including Laverne Baker) and nephews. The ceremony was taped for broadcast by the BBC.

Her headstone is marked:

Lizzie “Kid” Douglas Lawlers
aka Memphis Minnie

The inscription on the back of her gravestone reads:

The hundreds of sides Minnie recorded are the perfect material to teach us about the blues. For the blues are at once general, and particular, speaking for millions, but in a highly singular, individual voice. Listening to Minnie’s songs we hear her fantasies, her dreams, her desires, but we will hear them as if they were our own.

Cootie Williams

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , on April 8, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Cootie Williams

From Wikipedia
Cootie Williams
Cootie Williams (Gottlieb1).jpg
Williams circa 1945-1955
Background information
Birth name Charles Melvin Williams
Born July 10, 1911
Died September 15, 1985(aged 74)
Genres Jazzjump blues,[1] R&B
Instruments Trumpet
Years active 1925–1975
Associated acts Duke Ellington

Charles Melvin “Cootie” Williams (July 10, 1911 – September 15, 1985) was an American jazzjump blues,  and rhythm and blues trumpeter.

Biography

Born in Mobile, AlabamaUnited States, Williams began his professional career with the Young Family band, which included saxophonist Lester Young, when he was 14 years old.  In 1928, he made his first recordings with pianist James P. Johnson in New York, where he also worked briefly in the bands of Chick Webb and Fletcher Henderson.  He rose to prominence as a member of Duke Ellington‘s orchestra, with which he performed from 1929 to 1940. He also recorded his own sessions during this time, both freelance and with other Ellington sidemen. In 1940 he joined Benny Goodman‘s orchestra, a highly publicized move that caused quite a stir at the time  (commemorated by Raymond Scott with the song “When Cootie Left the Duke”),  then in 1941 formed his own orchestra, in which over the years he employed Charlie ParkerEddie “Lockjaw” DavisBud PowellEddie Vinson, and other important young players.

In 1947, Williams wrote the song “Cowpox Boogie” while recuperating from a bout with smallpox. He contracted the disease from a vaccination he insisted all band members receive.

He began to play more rhythm and blues in the late 1940s. In the 1950s, he toured with small groups and fell into obscurity. In 1962, he rejoined Ellington and stayed with the orchestra until 1974, after Ellington’s death. In 1975, he performed during the Super Bowl IX halftime show.

Cootie Williams was renowned for his growling “jungle” style trumpet playing (in the tradition of trumpeter Bubber Miley and trombonistJoe “Tricky Sam” Nanton) and for his use of the plunger mute, and was reputed to have inspired Wynton Marsalis‘s use of it.

Williams also sang occasionally, a notable vocal collaboration with Ellington was the piece, Echoes of the Jungle.

Williams is a 1991 inductee of the Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame.

According to Williams he got his nickname when, as a boy, his father took him to a band concert. When it was over his father asked him what he’d heard and the lad replied “Cootie,cootie, cootie”.

Cootie Williams died in New York on September 15, 1985, at age 74.

Victoria Spivey

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , on April 8, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Victoria Spivey

From Wikipedia
Victoria Spivey
Birth name Victoria Regina Spivey
Born October 15, 1906
HoustonTexasUnited States
Died October 3, 1976 (aged 69)
New York, United States
Genres Blues
Occupations Singersongwriter
Instruments Vocalspiano
Labels Okeh
RCA Victor
Vocalion
Decca
Prestige Bluesville
Spivey

Victoria Spivey (October 15, 1906 – October 3, 1976)  was an American blues singer and songwriter. During a recording career that spanned forty years, from 1926 to the mid 1960s, she worked with Louis ArmstrongKing OliverClarence WilliamsLuis Russell,Lonnie Johnson, and Bob Dylan  She also performed in vaudeville and clubs, sometimes with her sister, Addie “Sweet Pease” Spivey. Among her compositions are “Black Snake Blues”, “Dope Head Blues” and “Organ Grinder Blues”. In 1962 she initiated her own recording label, Spivey Records.

Life and career

She was born Victoria Regina Spivey in HoustonTexas, United States,  the daughter of Grant and Addie (Smith) Spivey. Her father was a part-time musician and a flagman for the railroad; her mother was a nurse. Her sisters were Addie “Sweet Peas” Spivey (1910–1943), also a singer and musician, who recorded for several major record labels between 1929 and 1937; and Elton Island Spivey (1900–1971), who also followed a professional singing career.

Spivey’s first professional experience was in a family string band led by her father in Houston. After Grant Spivey died, the seven-year-old Victoria played on her own at local parties and, in 1918, was hired to accompany films at the Lincoln Theater in Dallas.  As a teenager, she worked in local bars, nightclubs, and buffet flats, mostly alone, but occasionally with singer-guitarists such as Blind Lemon Jefferson. In 1926, she moved to St. LouisMissouri, where she was signed by Okeh Records. Her first recording, “Black Snake Blues”, did well, and her association with the record label continued. She made numerous Okeh sides in New York until 1929, then switched to the RCA Victor label. Between 1931 and 1937, more recordings followed on the Vocalion and Decca labels,  and, working out of New York, she maintained an active performance schedule. Spivey’s recorded accompanists included King OliverLouis ArmstrongLonnie Johnson, and Red Allen. She recorded many of her own songs, which dwelt on disease, crime and outré sexual images.

The Depression did not put an end to Spivey’s musical career; she found a new outlet for her talent in the year of the crash, when film director King Vidor cast her to play “Missy Rose” in his first sound filmHallelujah! (1929).  Through the 1930s and 1940s, Spivey continued to work in musical films and stage shows, often with her husband, vaudevilledancer Billy Adams, including the Hellzapoppin’ Revue.

In 1951, Spivey retired from show business to play the pipe organ and lead a church choir, but she returned to secular music in 1961, when she was reunited with an old singing partner, Lonnie Johnson, to appear on four tracks on his Prestige Bluesville albumIdle Hours. The folk music revival of the 1960s gave her further opportunities to make at least a semblance of a comeback. She recorded again for Prestige Bluesville, sharing an album Songs We Taught Your Mother with fellow veterans Alberta Hunter and Lucille Hegamin and began making personal appearances at festivals and clubs.

In 1962, Spivey and jazz historian Len Kunstadt launched Spivey Records, a low-budget label dedicated to blues and related music. They recorded prolifically such performers asSippie Wallace, Lucille Hegamin, Otis RushOtis SpannWillie DixonRoosevelt SykesBig Joe TurnerBuddy Tate and Hannah Sylvester, as well as newer artists includingLuther Johnson, Brenda Bell, Washboard Doc, Bill Dicey, Robert RossSugar BluePaul Oscher, Danny Russo and Larry Johnson.

In March 1962, Bob Dylan contributed harmonica and back-up vocals, accompanying Victoria Spivey and Big Joe Williams on a recording for Spivey Records. The recordings were released on Three Kings And The Queen (Spivey LP 1004) and Kings And The Queen Volume Two (Spivey LP 1014). (Dylan was listed under his own name on the record covers.)  In 1964 Spivey made her only recording with an all-white band: the Connecticut based Easy Riders Jazz Band, led by trombonist Big Bill Bissonnette. It was released first on an LP and later re-released on compact disc.

Spivey married four times; her husbands included Ruben Floyd and Billy Adams.

Victoria Spivey died in New York on October 3, 1976, at the age of 69, from an internal haemorrhage.

Joe Haymes

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , on April 8, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Joe Haymes

From Wikipedia

Joseph Lawrence Haymes (10 February 1907 – 10 July 1964) was an American jazz bandleader and arranger.

Born in Marshfield, Missouri, Haymes relocated with his family to Springfield, Missouri, after his railroader father was killed in an accident. Joe attended Greenwood Laboratory School in Springfield and was a drummer in the local Boy Scout Band; as a youth he also learned the piano. Entering Drury College in 1926, he played locally with his own dance band before being hired as arranger by Ted Weems in 1928 and leaving school. Haymes arranged the hit “Piccolo Pete“, among many others, for Weems, setting a new, highly jazz-informed style for the orchestra.

Haymes struck out on his own again in 1930, leading a band in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Billed as “a Ted Weems unit”, Joe continued to write Weems’ arrangements. During 1931 vocal trio The Merry Macs toured with the band. Relocating to New York City by 1932, the Haymes orchestra was briefly one of the country’s hottest dance bands, with a particular knack for jazz novelties and recording on all 3 major labels, but in late 1933 he sold the band to actor-leader Buddy Rogers, beginning a habit of selling orchestras to others.

Early in 1934, Haymes put together a swing group with assistance from arranger Spud Murphy, but after Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey split in 1935, Tommy arranged a deal with Haymes to take over the latter’s group. Haymes himself hired several of Charlie Barnet‘s musicians for a new band, which recorded for ARC from 1935-1937 but was only modestly successful.

Haymes toured as an arranger with Les Brown in 1938, re-formed in 1939, and then found work writing and arranging anonymously for radio. He was briefly inducted into the U.S. Army in 1942, where he served as a medical orderly. On his return, he continued arranging for Hollywood studios from the 1940s into the late 1950s, interrupted by spells with Phil Harris and Johnnie Lee Wills. Haymes’ chief employer during the 50s was Lawrence Welk‘s television show, although he sometimes performed solo in L.A. area piano bars.

Death

About 1960, he relocated to Dallas, Texas, then home to several semi-retired bandleaders (Ted Weems chief among them) who occasionally employed his scoring skills. Never married, Haymes died of heart failure at age 57.

Other

Among the players in Haymes’s orchestras were Johnny MincePee Wee ErwinToots MondelloChris GriffinSterling BoseBud FreemanWalt Yoder, and Lee Castle. He is buried in his native Marshfield, Missouri.

Ben Webster

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , , on April 8, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Ben Webster

From Wikipedia
 
Ben Webster
Ben Webster.jpg
Background information
Birth name Benjamin Francis Webster
Also known as “The Brute”
“Frog”
Born March 27, 1909
Origin Kansas City, MissouriUnited States
Died September 20, 1973 (aged 64)
AmsterdamNetherlands
Genres Jazz
Occupations Saxophonist
Instruments Tenor saxophone
Associated acts Coleman Hawkins
Oscar Peterson
Duke Ellington

Benjamin Francis Webster (March 27, 1909 – September 20, 1973), a.k.a. “The Brute” or “Frog,” was an influential Americanjazz tenor saxophonist. Webster, born in Kansas City, Missouri, was considered one of the three most important “swing tenors” along with Coleman Hawkins and Lester Young. Known affectionately as “The Brute”,  he had a tough, raspy, and brutal tone on stomps (with his own distinctive growls), yet on ballads he played with warmth and sentiment. Stylistically he was indebted to alto star Johnny Hodges, who, he said, taught him to play his instrument.

   

Early life and career

Webster learned to play piano and violin at an early age, before learning to play the saxophone, although he did return to the piano from time to time, even recording on the instrument occasionally. Once Budd Johnson showed him some basics on the saxophone, Webster began to play that instrument in the Young Family Band (which at the time included Lester Young). Kansas City at this point was a melting pot from which emerged some of the biggest names in 1930s jazz, and Webster joined Bennie Moten‘s legendary 1932 band that included Count BasieOran “Hot Lips” Page and Walter Page. This era has been recreated in Robert Altman‘s film Kansas City.

Webster spent time with quite a few orchestras in the 1930s, including Andy Kirk, the Fletcher Henderson Orchestra in 1934, thenBenny CarterWillie BryantCab Calloway, and the short-lived Teddy Wilson big band.

With Ellington

Playing with Duke Ellington‘s orchestra for the first time in 1935, by 1940 Ben Webster had become its first major tenor soloist. He credited Johnny Hodges, Ellington’s alto soloist, as a major influence on his playing. During the next three years he was on many famous recordings, including “Cotton Tail” and “All Too Soon“; his contribution (together with that of bassist Jimmy Blanton) was so important that Ellington’s orchestra during that period is known as the Blanton–Webster band. Webster left the band in 1943 after an angry altercation, during which he allegedly cut up one of Ellington’s suits.[citation needed]

After Ellington

After leaving Ellington in 1943, Webster worked on 52nd Street in New York City; recorded frequently as both a leader and a sideman; had short periods with Raymond ScottJohn Kirby, and Sid Catlett, as well as with Jay McShann‘s band, which also featured blues shouter Jimmy Witherspoon. In 1948 he returned briefly to the Ellington orchestra for a few months.

In 1953 he recorded King of the Tenors with pianist Oscar Peterson, who would be an important collaborator for Webster throughout the decade. Along with Peterson, trumpeter Harry ‘Sweets’ Edison and others he was by now touring and recording with Norman Granz‘s Jazz at the Philharmonic organisation. Coleman Hawkins Encounters Ben Webster with fellow tenor saxophonist Coleman Hawkins was recorded on December 16, 1957 along with Peterson, Herb Ellis (guitar), Ray Brown (bass), and Alvin Stoller (drums). The Hawkins and Webster recording is a jazz classic, the coming together of two giants of the tenor saxophone, who had first met back in Kansas City.

In 1956 he recorded a classic set with pianist Art Tatum, supported by bassist Red Callender and drummer Bill Douglass.

The final decade, in Europe

Webster generally worked steadily but in 1964 he moved permanently to join other American jazz musicians in Europe, where he played when he pleased during his last decade. He lived in London for one year, followed by four years in Amsterdam and made his last home in Copenhagen in 1969. Webster appeared as a sax player in a low-rent cabaret club in the 1970 Danish blue film titled Quiet Days In Clichy. In 1971 Webster reunited with Duke Ellington and his big band for a couple of shows at the Tivoli Gardens in Denmark and he recorded “live” in France with Earl Hines.  He also recorded or performed with Buck Clayton, Bill Coleman and Teddy Wilson.

Death

Webster suffered a cerebral hemorrhage in Amsterdam, North Holland in September 1973, following a performance at the Twee Spieghels in Leiden, and died on the 20th. His body was cremated in Copenhagen and his ashes were buried in the Assistens Cemetery in the Nørrebro section of the city. Although not all that flexible or modern, remaining rooted in the blues and swing-era ballads, Webster could swing with the best and his tone was a later influence on such diverse players as Archie SheppLew TabackinScott Hamilton,David Murray, and Bennie Wallace.

Legacy

After Webster’s death, Billy Moore Jr. created The Ben Webster Foundation, together with the trustee of Webster’s estate. Since Webster’s only legal heir, Harley Robinson in Los Angeles, gladly assigned his rights to the foundation, The Ben Webster Foundation was confirmed by The Queen of Denmark‘s Seal in 1976. In the Foundation’s trust deed, one of the initial paragraphs reads: “to support the dissemination of jazz in Denmark”.

It is a beneficial Foundation, which channels Webster’s annual royalties to musicians, both in Denmark and the U.S. An annual Ben Webster Prize is awarded to a young outstanding musician. The prize is not large, but considered highly prestigious. Over the years, several American musicians have visited Denmark with the help of the Foundation, and concerts, a few recordings, and other jazz-related events have been supported.

Webster’s private collection of jazz recordings and memorabilia is archived in the jazz collections at the University Library of Southern Denmark, Odense.

Ben Webster has a street named after him in southern Copenhagen, “Ben Websters Vej” (eng. Ben Webster Street).

Original Memphis Five

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , , on April 8, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Original Memphis Five

From Wikipedia
Original Memphis Five
Also known as Ladd’s Black Aces
Carolina Cotton Pickers
Genres Jazz
Years active 1917–1990
Labels GennettColumbia
Past members Phil Napoleon
Frank Signorelli
Jimmy Lytell
Miff Mole
Jimmy Durante
Tommy Dorsey
Jimmy Dorsey

The Original Memphis Five was an early jazz quintet founded in 1917 by trumpeter Phil Napoleon and pianist Frank SignorelliJimmy Lytell was a member from 1922 to 1925. The group made many recordings between 1921 and 1931, sometimes under different names, including Ladd’s Black Aces  and Carolina Cotton Pickers. Richard Cook and Brian Morton, writing for The Penguin Guide to Jazz, refer to the group as “one of the key small groups of the ’20s.”

The group formed around 1917.  The name Original Memphis Five was first used in 1920, and applied to various small groups of white musicians throughout the decade.  The Ladd’s Black Aces name was used from 1921 until 1924.  Cook and Morton identify Jimmy Lytell and Miff Mole as standout musicians in the group.  Jimmy Durante played piano with Ladd’s Black Aces, while both Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey were members of the Original Memphis Five. 

Both Red Nichols and Miff Mole later led their own groups named Original Memphis Five.  Phil Napoleon, however, would continue using the group name until 1990.  An example of two of their recordings for Columbia was “Mobile Blues” and “How Come You Do Me Like You Do” on Columbia # 260-D in 1924.

Drug Stores and the Victrola in 1929

Posted in Phonographs That Played 78 rpm records with tags , , , , , , , on April 7, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

I stumbled across a couple of interesting advertisements for the Victrola from two different Drug Stores in Alberta, Canda. The first ad is from The Westaskiwin Times, March 28, 1929 for the Northern Drug Co. of Westakiwin, Alberta.

 

Victrola Advertisement-Wetaskiwin Times March 28, 1929

 

 

The second advertisement is from the Western Globe, April 11, 1929 placed by McDemid Drug Co., Lacombe, Alberta.

 

Victrola Advertisement-Western Globe April 11, 1929

RCA Victor Phonograph/Radio Combo-Spiegel Catalog_16 May Stern Co. 1933 Chicago, Illinois

Posted in Phonographs That Played 78 rpm records with tags , , , , , on April 7, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Recently, scanning through the internet, I came across an interesting 1933 Spiegel Catalog from Chicago, Illinois, depicting an RCA Victor Phonograph/Radio combination with an offer to include 78 rpm dance records with it.

 

Spiegel Catalog_16 May Stern Co. 1933 Chicago, Illinois

Ace Brigode Recordings

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , on April 7, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Ace Brigode Recordings

From Wikipedia
 
 

Ace Brigode’s band varied in number and players. His band included Eddie Allen, Ignaz Berber, Fred Brohez, Nick Cortez, Lucien Criner, Al Delaney, Penn Fay, Mark Fisher, Cliff Gamet, Billy Hayes, Gene Fogarthy, Jeremy Freshour, Don Juille, Teddy King, Abe Lincoln, Bud Lincoln, Happy Masefield, Dillon Ober, Max Pitt, John Poston, C. Sexton, Frank Skinner, Bob Tinsley, Al Tresize, Ray Welch, and others. On some labels the recordings are attributed to other names such as Corona Dance Orchestra and Denza Dance Band.

Ace Brigode & his Ten Virginians

1923

November 26 (Okeh Records)

  • You, Darling, You
  • Oklahoma Indian Jazz
  • Dreams Daddy
  • More

Ace Brigode & his Fourteen Virginians

1924

c. March 18 (Okeh Records)

  • Colorado-Waltz
  • Monavanna

April 4 (Okeh Records)

  • Never Again
  • Don’t Mind the Rain

c. June 30 (Okeh Records)

  • Don’t Take Your Troubles to Bed
  • Only You!

c. August 13 (Okeh Records)

  • Dreary Weather
  • Follow the Swallow

c. October 13 (Okeh Records)

  • Bye Bye, Baby
  • A Sun-Kist Cottage (in California)

 

1925

January 13 (Columbia Records)

  • Alabamy Bound
  • A Sun-Kist Cottage (in California)

January 23 (Edison Records)

  • Ever-Lovin’ Bee
  • In the Shade of a Sheltering Tree

February 20 (Edison Records)

  • Tokio Blues
  • I’ll See You in My Dreams

March 10 (Columbia Records)

  • What a Smile Can Do
  • When I Think of You

March 25 (Edison Records)

  • Fooling
  • When I Think of You

c. April 24 (Cameo Records)

  • My Sugar
  • Wondering

April 30 (Columbia Records)

  • Sleeping Beauty’s Wedding
  • Yes, Sir! That’s My Baby v.2

June 2 (Columbia Records)

  • Wait’ll it’s Moonlight
  • Make Those Naughty Eyes Behave

July 15 (Columbia Records)

  • Alone at Last
  • I’m Tired of Everything but You

c. September 1 (Cameo Records)

  • Close Your Eyes
  • Tweedle-Dee, Tweedle-Doo (You’ll Love Me, I’ll Love You)

October 6 (Columbia Records)

  • Normandy
  • Why Aren’t Yez Eatin’ More Oranges?

Ace Brigode and his Orchestra

1940

January 23 (Vocalion Records)

  • Charley, My Boy
  • Why Shuold  I Cry Over You?
  • I’m Givin’ You Warning
  • You Know You Belong To Somebody Else (So Why Don’t You Leave Me Alone?)

The Rhythm Boys

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's, Recording Artists Who Appeared in Film with tags , , , , , , , , , , on April 7, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

The Rhythm Boys

From Wikipedia

The Rhythm Boys were a male singing trio consisting of Bing CrosbyHarry Barris and Al Rinker. Crosby and Rinker began performing together in 1925 and were recruited by Paul Whiteman in late 1926. Pianist/singer/songwriter Barris joined the team in 1927. They made a number of recordings with the Whiteman Orchestra and released singles in their own right with Barris on piano. They appeared with the Whiteman orchestra in the film King of Jazz (Universal Pictures, 1930), in which they sang Mississippi MudSo the Bluebirds and the Blackbirds Got TogetherI’m a FishermanBench in the Park, and Happy Feet.

In May 1930, after three and a half years with Paul Whiteman, The Rhythm Boys left and took up residency at the Ambassador Hotel’s Cocoanut Grove night club performing there with Gus Arnheim‘s Orchestra. Many of these nightly performances were broadcast live from the club along the Pacific coast. They recorded one song, Them There Eyes, with Arnheim’s Orchestra for RCA Victor in November 1930.

They appeared in the 1931 film Confessions of a Co-Ed where they sang Ya Got Love and Crosby sang Out of Nowhere.

The group disbanded when in mid-May 1931 they walked out on their contract with the Cocoanut Grove and were subsequently banned by the American Federation Of Musicians. Crosby, who had previously made some short films for Mack Sennett and a few solo records while still with the group, effectively launched his phenomenal solo career in 1931. They reunited briefly to appear on the Paul Whiteman Presents radio show broadcast on July 4, 1943.

Fred Rich

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , , on April 7, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Fred Rich

From Wikipedia

Frederic Efrem “Fred” Rich (January 31, 1898 – September 8, 1956) was a Polish-born American bandleader and composer who was active from the 1920s to the 1950s. Among the famous musicians in his band included the Dorsey BrothersJoe VenutiBunny Berigan and Benny Goodman. In the early 1930s, Elmer Feldkamp was one of his vocalists.

Fred Rich was born in WarsawPoland. Rich was a pianist and he formed his own band in the 1920s. His theme songs were “I’m Always Chasing Rainbows” and “So Beats My Heart For You.” Between 1925-1928, he toured Europe. Rich enjoyed a long stay at the famous Waldorf-Astoria in New York City. After this, he began leading studio band that featured many famous musicians. He recorded for OkehColumbiaParamountCamden and Vocalion and several others, often recording under the names Fred Richards, the Astorites, the Hotel Astor Band (Rich and his band served as their house band for a time in the 1920s) and many others. In the late 1930s, he would become a musical director for various radio stations and in 1942, he moved onto a staff position with United Artists Studios in Hollywood, where he was to remain for most of his career.

Like many prolific leaders of bands and studio groups, most of Rich’s records are typical ordinary dance fare of the era. However, during the period between November 1929 and March 1931, there was a scattering of outstanding hot jazz versions of popular tunes, with notable solos by Bunny BeriganTommy DorseyJimmy DorseyJoe VenutiEddie Lang, and others. These celebrated recordings include:

  • A Peach Of A Pair (October 29, 1930)
  • I Got Rhythm (October 29, 1930)
  • Cheerful Little Earful (November 19, 1930)
  • I’m Tickled Pink With A Blue-Eyed Baby (November 19, 1930)

As “Freddie Rich,” he recorded dozens of popular-title piano rolls in the 1920s for the Aeolian Company, both for its reproducing Duo-Art system and its 88 note Mel-O-Dee label.

In 1945, Rich was badly injured when he suffered a fall. As a result, he suffered from partial paralysis. But despite this, Rich continued to lead studio bands into the 1950s. Fred Rich died on September 8, 1956 in California aged 58 after a long illness.

A pianist, Fred Rich has a number of song credits to his name, including “Blue Tahitian Moonlight,” “Time Will Tell” and “On The Riviera.” He also wrote scores for many movies.

Bob Haring

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , on April 7, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Bob Haring

From Wikipedia

Bob Haring (1896-?) was an American popular music bandleader of the 1920s and early 1930s.

Haring began recording as the music director of the then-new Cameo Records label beginning in 1922 under a plethora of pseudonyms, such as The Caroliners, The Lincoln Dance Orchestra, The Society Night Club Orchestra, King Solomon and His Miners, etc. (Cameo was one of the primary ‘dime store’ labels in the 1920s and Haring’s sessions there were also issued on Plaza/ARC’s other labels, including RomeoPerfectOriole and others.)

In 1925, Haring signed a contract with Brunswick Records. His best recordings were issued on the Brunswick label, one of the three major recordings labels in the 1920s. His first commercial recording for Brunswick was made on May 16, 1925 as the leader of the Regent Club Orchestra. The Regent Club Orchestra focused on playing waltzes. It was at this time that Haring that lush song for which he became famous in the late 1920s. Due to the popularity of his recordings, Haring became the leader of the The Colonial Club Orchestra in May 1926. This orchestra that focused on fox-trot dance music played in an elegant style with the occasional tango and waltz. Later that year, in July 1926, Haring appeared on the label for the first time under his own name as Bob Haring & His Orchestra. In all of these recordings, Haring emphasized a classy society sound by extensively using string instruments, such as violins, to carry the melody. This is especially evident in his elegant waltz recordings, mostly issued as The Regent Club Orchestra.

By April 1929, Haring had been appointed the musical director for the Brunswick recording laboratories in New York City “to supervise musical arrangements in connection with recording.”  Bob Haring continued to record for Brunswick Records until the Warner Bros. took over the company in April 1930 and the subsequent reorganization that took place led to the non-renewal of Haring’s contract in March 1931. Haring then recorded for ARC (Banner, Oriole, Perfect, Romeo) through July, 1931. Haring continued to work in radio, however, until the introduction of swing music drastically changed the public’s taste in music around 1935.

Haring’s discography is difficult to trace, since many of the sides he performed on do not actually list his name. However, several dozen sessions on which Haring led or arranged an orchestra have been catalogued by discographers, mostly falling between 1920 and 1931.

His recordings with The Colonial Club Orchestra and The Regent Club Orchestra for Brunswick were his most popular in terms of sales.

George Olsen

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , , on April 7, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

George Olsen

From Wikipedia

The label of a contemporary European issue of George Olsen’s 1925 hit recording of Jerome Kern‘s Who?.

George Edward Olsen, Sr. (March 18, 1893 – March 18, 1971) was an American band-leader. Born in Portland, Oregon, he played the drums and attended the University of Michigan, where he was drum major. Here he formed his band, George Olsen and his Music, which continued in the Portland area. He then made the cross-county transition to Broadway, appearing in Kid Boots, the Ziegfeld Follies of 1924, and Good News.

George Olsen and his Music were prolific Victor recording artists and their records are among the most numerous found by record collectors today, testifying to their original popularity. He and his orchestra were in Eddie Cantor‘s 1928 Broadway hit Whoopee!, and in the 1930 movie version. In the Follies George met a singer, Ethel Shutta, who sings and dances memorably in Whoopee!, and they married, appearing together in nightclubs and on radio. They had two children, George, Jr. and Charles; following a divorce, Olsen opened a restaurant in Paramus, New Jersey.[citation needed]

Olsen signed with Victor in 1924 and remained as one of Victor’s most popular bands through 1933 when he signed with Columbia. He stayed with Columbia through January, 1934. He recorded a single session in 1938 for Decca, and one final date for the rare Varsity label in 1940.

Olsen’s bands, though excellent, produced few stars. Singer-saxophonist Fred MacMurray passed through in 1930 on his way to eventual movie stardom, recording a vocal on I’m in the Market for You. Olsen’s long-time alto saxist and singer, Fran Frey, with his distinctive, reedy bass-baritone, was perhaps the best known Olsenite until he left in 1933 for a career as a music director in radio.

In 1936, Olsen became leader of Orville Knapp‘s band after Knapp died in a plane crash. Olsen was chosen to lead the band by Knapp’s widow.  Morale problems plagued the group, and in 1938, after many musicians had already left, the group disbanded.

A resident of Paramus, New Jersey, George Olsen ran a popular local restaurant there on Paramus Road for many years before he died there on March 18, 1971.

Phonographs and Records in the T. Eaton Company Catalog of 1926

Posted in Phonographs That Played 78 rpm records, Records in Canada with tags , , , , , , , on April 6, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

One of the foremost department stores in Canada was the T. Eaton Company. and they marketed many of their store items through mail order catalogues. Here are two pictures from the Spring 1926 catalog depicting the phonographs they sold, the various supplies for phonographs, and a list of the Victor records sold by them.

 

 

Eaton's Catalogue 1926.jpg 2Eaton's Catalogue 1926

Freddy Martin

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's, Recording Artists Who Appeared in Film with tags , , , , , , , , on April 6, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Freddy Martin

From Wikipedia
Freddy Martin
FreddyMartinStageDoorCanteen2.jpg
Martin in the 1943 film Stage Door Canteen
Background information
Born December 9, 1906
Origin ClevelandOhioUnited States
Died September 30, 1983 (aged 76)
Genres Jazz
Occupations Musicianbandleader
Instruments Saxophone

Frederick Alfred (Freddy) Martin (December 9, 1906 – September 30, 1983) was an American bandleader and tenor saxophonist.

Early life

Martin was born in ClevelandOhio.  Raised largely in an orphanage and with various relatives, Martin started out playing drums, then switched to C-melody saxophone and later tenor saxophone, the latter the one he would be identified with. Early on, he had intended to become a journalist. He had hoped that he would earn enough money from his musical work to enter Ohio State University, but instead, he wound up becoming an accomplished musician. Martin led his own band while he was in high school, then played in various local bands. After working on a ship’s band, Martin joined the Mason-Dixon band, then joined Arnold Johnson and Jack Albin. It was with Albin’s “Hotel Pennsylvania Music” that he made his first recordings, for Columbia‘s Harmony, Velvet Tone, and Clarion 50 cent labels in 1930.

Early career

Cropped screenshot of Freddy Martin from the f...

Cropped screenshot of Freddy Martin from the film Stage Door Canteen. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Martin in 1943

After a couple of years, his skill began attracting other musicians. One such musician was Guy Lombardo, who would remain friends with Martin throughout his life. After graduation from high school, Martin accepted a job at the H.N. White musical instrument company. When Lombardo was playing in Cleveland, Martin tried giving Lombardo some saxophones, which proved unsuccessful. Fortunately, Lombardo did get to hear Freddy’s band. One night, when Guy could not do a certain date, he suggested that Freddy’s band could fill in for him. The band did very well and that’s how Martin’s career really got started. But the band broke up and he did not form a permanent band until 1931 at the Bossert Hotel in Brooklyn.

At the Bossert Marine Room, Freddy pioneered the “Tenor Band” style that swept the sweet-music industry. With his own tenor sax as melodic lead, Martin fronted an all-tenor sax section with just two brasses and a violin trio plus rhythm. The rich, lilting style quickly spawned imitators in hotels and ballrooms nationwide. “Tenor bands”, usually with just the three tenors and one trumpet, could occasionally be found playing for older dancers well into the 1980s.

The Martin band recorded first for Columbia Records in 1932. As the company was broke and signing no new contracts, the band switched toBrunswick Records after one session and remained with that label till 1938. Afterwards Martin appeared on RCA‘s Bluebird and Victor Records. The band also recorded pseudonymously in the early ’30s, backing singers such as Will Osborne.

Martin took his band into many prestigious hotels, including the Roosevelt Grill in New York City and the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. A fixture on radio, his sponsored shows included NBC‘s Maybelline Penthouse Serenade of 1937. But Martin’s real success came in 1941 with an arrangement from the first movement of Tchaikovsky‘s B-flat piano concerto. Martin recorded the piece instrumentally, but soon lyrics were put in and it was re-cut as “Tonight We Love” with Clyde Rogers’ vocal—becoming his biggest hit.

The success of “Tonight We Love” prompted Martin to adopt other classical themes as well, which featured the band’s pianists Jack Fina, Murray Arnold and Barclay Allen. At this time Freddy enlarged the orchestra to a strength of six violins, four brasses and a like number of saxes.

Musical style

Freddy Martin was nicknamed “Mr. Silvertone” by saxophonist Johnny HodgesChu Berry named Freddy Martin his favorite saxophonist. He has also been idolized by many other saxophonists, including Eddie Miller. Although his playing has been admired by so many jazz musicians, Freddy Martin never tried to be a jazz musician. Martin always led a sweet styled band. Unlike most sweet bands that just played dull music, Martin’s band turned out to be one of the most musical and most melodic of all the typical hotel-room sweet bands. According to George T. Simon, Freddy’s band was “one of the most pleasant, most relaxed dance bands that ever flowed across the band scene.”

He used the banner “Music In The Martin Manner.” Russ Morgan used a similar banner when he finally landed a radio series with his own band in 1936. (Morgan’s title was “Music In The Morgan Manner”.) Russ had been playing in Freddy’s band and the two were good friends for years. Russ even used some of Freddy’s arrangements when he started his band.

Later career

Martin also had a good ear for singers. At one time or another, Martin employed Merv GriffinBuddy Clark, pianists Sid Appleman and Terry Shand, saxophonist Elmer Feldkamp, Stuart Wade (his most impressive male singer), violinist Eddie Stone, and many others. Helen Ward was a singer for Martin just before she joined Benny Goodman‘s new band.

Martin’s popularity as a bandleader led him to Hollywood in the 1940s where he and his band appeared in a handful of films, including Seven Days’ Leave (1942), Stage Door Canteen (1943) and Melody Time (1948), among others.

In the 1950s and 1960s Martin continued to perform on the radio and also appeared on TV. Untroubled by changing musical tastes, he continued to work at major venues and was musical director for Elvis Presley‘s first appearance in Las Vegas. Still in demand for hotel work, Martin entered the 1970s with an engagement at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. In the early 1970s, he was part of two tours of one-nighters that were known as The Big Band Cavalcade. Among the other performers on the show were Margaret Whiting,Bob CrosbyFrankie CarleBuddy MorrowArt Mooney and George Shearing. When the tours ended, Martin returned to the West Coast. In 1977, Martin was asked to lead Guy Lombardo’s band when Lombardo was hospitalized with a heart condition.

Martin continued leading his band until the early 1980s, although by then, he was semi-retired. Freddy Martin died on September 30, 1983, in a Newport Beach hospital after a lingering illness. He was 76 years old.

The 1947 song “Pico and Sepulveda” was recorded by Martin under the alias of “Felix Figueroa and his Orchestra” and was frequently featured on Dr. Demento‘s syndicated radio show.  It was also featured in the surrealist film Forbidden Zone.

Bunny Berigan

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , on April 6, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Bunny Berigan

From Wikipedia
 
Bunny Berigan
Birth name Roland Bernard Berigan
Born November 2, 1908
Hilbert, Wisconsin, United States
Died June 2, 1942 (aged 33)
New York City, United States
Genres Jazz
Occupations Trumpetersinger
Instruments Trumpet
Years active 1930-1942

Roland Bernard “Bunny” Berigan (November 2, 1908 – June 2, 1942) was an American jazz trumpeter who rose to fame during theswing era, but whose career and influence were shortened by a losing battle with alcoholism that ended with his early death at age 33 from cirrhosis. Although he composed some jazz instrumentals like “Chicken and Waffles” and “Blues”, Berigan was best known for his virtuoso jazz trumpeting. His 1937 classic recording “I Can’t Get Started” was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1975.

Early life and career

Berigan was born in Hilbert, Wisconsin,  the son of William Patrick  Berigan and Mary Catherine (Mayme) Schlitzberg, and raised inFox Lake, Wisconsin. A musical child prodigy, having learned the violin and trumpet at an early age, Berigan played in local orchestrasby his mid-teens before joining the successful Hal Kemp orchestra in 1930. Berigan’s first recorded trumpet solos came with the Kemp orchestra, and he was with the unit when they toured England and a few other European countries later in 1930.

Shortly after the Kemp unit returned to the U.S. in late 1930, Berigan, like fellow trumpeter Manny Klein, the Dorsey Brothers and Artie Shaw, became a sought-after studio musician in New York. Fred RichFreddy Martin and Ben Selvin were just some conductors who sought his services for record dates. He joined the staff of CBS radio network musicians in early 1931. Berigan recorded his first vocal, “At Your Command,” with Rich that year. From late 1932 through late 1933, Berigan was a member of Paul Whiteman’sorchestra, before playing with Abe Lyman’s band briefly in 1934.

He returned to freelancing in the New York recording studios and working on staff at CBS radio in 1934. He recorded as a sideman on hundreds of commercial records, most notably with the Dorsey Brothers and on Glenn Miller’s earliest recording date as a leader in 1935, playing on “Solo Hop“. At the same time, however, Berigan made an association that began his ascent to fame in his own right: he joined Benny Goodman’s jazz oriented dance band. Legendary jazz talent scout and producer John Hammond, who also became Goodman’s brother-in-law in due course, later wrote that he helped persuade Gene Krupa to re-join Goodman, with whom he’d had an earlier falling-out, by mentioning that Berigan, whom Krupa admired, was already committed to the new ensemble. With Berigan and Krupa both on-board, the Goodman band made the legendary, often disheartening tour that ended with their unexpectedly headline-making stand at the Palomar Ballroom in Los Angeles, the stand often credited with the “formal” launch of the swing era.  Berigan recorded a number of classic solos while with Goodman, including on “King Porter Stomp,” “Sometimes I’m Happy,” and “Blue Skies.”

Fame

Berigan left Goodman to return again to freelancing as a recording and radio musician in Manhattan. During this time (late 1935 and throughout 1936), he began to record regularly under his own name, and continued to back singers such as Bing Crosby, Mildred Bailey, and Billie Holiday. He spend some time with Tommy Dorsey‘s orchestra in late 1936 and early 1937, working as a jazz soloist on Dorsey’s radio program and on several records. His solo on the Dorsey hit recording “Marie” became considered one of his signature performances. In 1937, Berigan assembled a band to record and tour under his name, picking the then-little known Ira Gershwin/Vernon Duke composition, “I Can’t Get Started” as his theme song. Berigan’s bravura trumpet work and curiously attractive vocal made his recorded performance of it for Victor the biggest hit of his career. Berigan modeled his trumpet style in part on Louis Armstrong’s style, and often acknowledged Armstrong as his own idol, but he was no Armstrong clone. He had a trumpet sound that was unique, and very individual jazz ideas. Armstrong, for his part, recognized Berigan’s talents, and praised them both before and after Berigan’s death.

Bandleader

Berigan got the itch to lead his own band full-time and did so from early 1937 until June 1942, with one six-month hiatus in 1940, when he became a sideman in Tommy Dorsey’s band. Some of the records he made with his own bands were equal in quality to the sides he cut with Goodman and Dorsey. But a series of misfortunes as well as Berigan’s alcoholism worked against his financial success as a bandleader. Bunny also began a torrid affair with singer Lee Wiley in 1936, which lasted into 1940. The various stresses of bandleading drove Berigan to drink even more heavily. Nevertheless, musicians considered him an excellent bandleader. Among the notable players who worked in the Berigan band were: drummersBuddy RichDave ToughGeorge Wettling, Johnny Blowers, and Jack Sperling; alto saxophonists/clarinetistsGus Bivona, Joe Dixon, and Andy Fitzgerald; vocalistsDanny RichardsRuth Bradley and Kathleen Lane; pianistJoe Bushkin, trombonist/arrangerRay Conniff, trombonist Sonny Lee; bassists Hank Wayland, and Morty Stulmaker, trumpeters Carl“Bama” WarwickSteve Lipkins, and Les Elgart; tenor saxophonists Georgie Auld,and Don Lodice; and pianist/arrangerJoe Lippman.

Berigan was regularly featured on CBS Radio‘s Saturday Night Swing Club broadcasts from 1936 into 1937. This network radio show helped further popularize jazz as the swing era reached its apogee. For the balance of the 1930s, he sometimes appeared on this program as a guest.

Final years and Death

Berigan’s business troubles drove him to declare bankruptcy in 1939, and shortly after to join Tommy Dorsey as a featured jazz soloist. By September 1940, Berigan briefly led a new small group, but soon reorganized a touring big band. Berigan led moderately successful big bands from the fall of 1940 into early 1942, and was on the comeback trail when his health declined alarmingly. In April 1942, Berigan was hospitalized with pneumonia in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. But his doctors discovered worse news: that cirrhosis had severely damaged his liver. He was advised to stop drinking and stop playing the trumpet for an undetermined length of time. Berigan couldn’t do either. He returned to his band on tour, and played for a few weeks before he returned to New York City and suffered a massive hemorrhage on May 31, 1942. He died two days later in Polyclinic Hospital at age 33. He was survived by his wife, Donna, and his two young daughters, Patricia, 10, and Joyce, 6.

He was buried in St. Mary’s Cemetery south of Fox Lake.

Legacy

His 1937 recording of “I Can’t Get Started” was used in the film Save the Tiger (1973), the Roman Polanski film Chinatown (1974), and a Martin Scorsese short film,The Big Shave(1967). Woody Allen has used Berigan’s music occasionally in his films. In 2010, his Victor recording of “Heigh-Ho” was used on a Gap clothing TV commercial. Berigan’s name was used frequently in the comic strip “Crankshaft.” Fox Lake, Wisconsin has kept his memory and influence alive with an annual Bunny Berigan Jazz Jubilee since the early 1970s. Most of Berigan’s recordings are currently available, and two full-length biographies of him have been published.

Compositions by Bunny Berigan

Bunny Berigan’s compositions (really informally created jam tunes) include “Chicken and Waffles”, released as Decca 18117 in 1935 as by Bunny’s Blue Boys, and “Blues”, released in 1935 as Decca 18116, also with the Blue Boys.

Honors

In 1975, Bunny Berigan’s 1937 recording “I Can’t Get Started” on Victor as VICTOR 25728-A was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.

He was inducted in the ASCAP Jazz Wall of Fame in 2008. [6]

Dick McDonough

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , on April 6, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Dick McDonough

From Wikipedia

Dick McDonough

Dick McDonough (1904-May 25, 1938) was an influential American jazz guitarist and composer. His major recordings included “Dr. Heckle and Mr. Jibe” with the Dorsey Brothers Orchestra with Johnny Mercer, “Stage Fright” with Carl Kress, “Chasin’ a Buck”, “Feelin’ No Pain”, recorded in 1927 with Red Nichols, and “Chicken a la Swing”.

Career

McDonough played with Red Nichols in 1927 as a banjoist, and soon after played with Paul Whiteman. After exchanging banjo for guitar, he did extensive work as a session musician in the 1930s and played with Jimmy and Tommy DorseyThe Boswell SistersJoe VenutiBenny GoodmanMiff MoleAdrian RolliniRed NorvoJack TeagardenJohnny MercerBillie HolidayPee Wee RussellFrankie TrumbauerGlenn Miller, and Gene Gifford among others. He and Carl Kress recorded as a guitar duet in the mid-1930s as well. He played in the Jam Session at Victor with Fats Waller, Tommy Dorsey, Bunny Berigan, and George Wettling.

McDonough was an alcoholic and died as a result of this in 1938.

Compositions by Dick McDonough

Dick McDonough compositions included “Dr. Heckle and Mr. Jibe”, which was recorded by the Dorsey Brothers Orchestra with Johnny Mercer on vocals, “Chicken a la Swing”, “Stage Fright”, “Chasin’ a Buck”, and “Danzon”.

Red Norvo

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's, Recording Artists Who Appeared in Film with tags , , , , , , , , , on April 6, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Red Norvo

From Wikipedia
Red Norvo
GottleibRedNorvo.jpg
Red Norvo c. February 1947. Photo by William P. Gottlieb.
Background information
Birth name Kenneth Norville
Born 31 March 1908
Origin BeardstownIllinoisUnited States
Died 6 April 1999 (aged 91)
Genres Jazz
Occupations Vibraphonist, composer
Instruments Vibraphonemarimbaxylophone
Associated acts Paul WhitemanBenny Goodman,Charlie BarnetWoody Herman

Red Norvo (March 31, 1908 – April 6, 1999) was one of jazz‘s early vibraphonists, known as “Mr. Swing”. He helped establish thexylophonemarimba and later the vibraphone as viable jazz instruments. His major recordings included “Dance of the Octopus”, “Bughouse”, “Knockin’ on Wood”, “Congo Blues”, and “Hole in the Wall”.

Career

Red Norvo was born Kenneth Norville in Beardstown, Illinois. The story goes that he sold his pet pony to help pay for his first marimba. Norvo’s career began in Chicago with a band called “The Collegians”, in 1925. He played with many other bands, including an all-marimba band on the vaudeville circuit, and the bands of Paul WhitemanBenny GoodmanCharlie Barnet, and Woody Herman. Norvo recorded with Mildred Bailey (his wife), Billie HolidayDinah Shore and Frank Sinatra, among others. Together, Red and Mildred were known as “Mr. and Mrs. Swing.” He also appeared in the film Screaming Mimi (1958), playing himself and in Ocean’s 11 (1960 film) backing Dean Martin‘s “Ain’t That a Kick in the Head?“.

In 1933 he recorded two sessions for Brunswick under his own name. The first “Knockin’ on Wood” and “Hole in the Wall” pleased Brunswick’s recording director Jack Kapp and he was booked for another session. This time, Kapp was out of town and Norvo went ahead and recorded two of the earliest, most modern pieces of chamber jazz yet recorded: Bix Beiderbecke‘s “In a Mist” and Norvo’s own “Dance of the Octopus”. Playing marimba instead of xylophone in the second session, he was accompanied by Benny Goodmanin a rare performance playing a bass clarinet,  Dick McDonough on guitar and Artie Bernstein on slap bass. Kapp was outraged when he heard the recordings and tore up Norvo’s contract and threw him out. Nevertheless, this modern record remained in print all through the 1930s.

Norvo recorded 8 modern swing sides for Columbia in 1934–1935, and 15 sides of Decca and their short-lived Champion label series in 1936 (strangely enough, Jack Kapp ran Decca, so they must’ve patched things up by then).

Starting in 1936 through 1942, Norvo formed a Swing Orchestra and recorded for ARC first on their Brunswick label, then Vocalion and finally Columbia, after CBS bought out the ARC company. Featuring the brilliant arrangements of Eddie Sauter and often featuringMildred Bailey as vocalist, this series of recordings were among the more sophisticated and elegant swing records of the era.

In 1938, Red Norvo and His Orchestra reached number one with their recordings of “Please Be Kind”, which was number one for two weeks, and “Says My Heart”, with lead vocals by Mildred Bailey, which was number one for four weeks on the pop charts, reaching number one during the week of June 18, 1938.

In June 1945, while a member of the Benny Goodman Sextet, he recorded a session for Comet records using a sextet which featured members of the Goodman group and alsoCharlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie. He said: “Bird and Diz were dirty words for musicians of my generation. But jazz had always gone through changes and in 1945 we were in the middle of another one. Bird and Diz were saying new things in an exciting way. I had a free hand so I gambled”.

In 1949, while trying to find work near home on the West Coast and running into difficulties with large groups, Norvo formed a trio with the novel combination of vibes, guitar, and bass.  When the original guitarist and bassist quit (Mundell Lowe and Red Kelly), he brought in two previously little-known players. Tal Farlow became one of the most important of the post-War generation of guitarists, in part because the demands of the trio led him to explore new levels of both speed and harmonic richness on the instrument. Farlow left the group in 1953 and guitarist Jimmy Raney took his place. Charles Mingus‘s prominence as a bass player increased through this group, though its reportoire did not reflect the major career he would develop as a composer. Mingus left in 1951 and Red Mitchell replaced him. The Norvo, Farlow and Mingus trio recorded two LPs for Savoy.

In 1959 Norvo’s group played concerts in Australia with Frank Sinatra; Blue Note released these recordings in 1997. Red Norvo and his group also made several appearances onThe Dinah Shore Chevy Show in the late 1950s and early ’60s.

Norvo recorded and toured throughout his career until a stroke in the mid-1980s forced him into retirement (although he developed hearing problems long before his stroke). He died at a convalescent home in Santa Monica, California at the age of 91.

Compositions by Red Norvo

Red Norvo composed the following instrumentals during his career: “Dance of the Octopus”, “Bughouse” with Irving Mills and Teddy Wilson, “The Night is Blue”, “A Cigarette and a Silhouette”, “Congo Blues”, “Seein’ Red”, “Blues in E Flat”, “Hole in the Wall”, “Knockin’ on Wood”, “Decca Stomp”, “Tomboy”, and “1-2-3-4 Jump”.

Mildred Bailey

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , on April 6, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Mildred Bailey

From Wikipedia
 
Mildred Bailey
Mildred Bailey (Gottlieb 00411).jpg
Portrait of Mildred Bailey, Carnegie Hall (?), New York, ca. April 1947
Background information
Born February 27, 1907
Tekoa, WashingtonWashington,United States
Died December 12, 1951 (age 44)
PoughkeepsieNew York, United States
Genres Jazz
Occupations Singer
Instruments Vocals
Associated acts Red NorvoBing Crosby

Mildred Rinker Bailey (February 27, 1907 – December 12, 1951) was a popular and influential American jazz singer during the 1930s, known as “The Queen of Swing”, “The Rockin’ Chair Lady” and “Mrs. Swing”. Some of her best known hits are “It’s So Peaceful in the Country”, “Trust In Me”, “Where Are You”, “I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart”, “Small Fry”, “Please Be Kind“, “Darn That Dream“, “Rockin’ Chair“, “Blame It On My Last Affair”, and “Says My Heart”.

Biography

Born Mildred Rinker in Tekoa,  Washington, her mother, Josephine, was an enrolled member of the Coeur d’Alene Tribe  and a devout Roman Catholic.  Her father, Charles, played fiddle and called square dances. Her mother played piano every evening after supper and taught Mildred to play and sing. Her brothers were the vocalist and composer Al Rinker, and the lyricist Charles Rinker.

Career

At the age of seventeen, Bailey moved to Seattle and worked as a sheet music demonstrator at Woolworth’s. She married and divorced Ted Bailey, keeping his last name because she thought it sounded more American than Rinker.  With the help of her second husband, Benny Stafford, she became an established blues and jazz singer on the West Coast. According to Gary Giddins‘ book Bing Crosby – A Pocketful of Dreams – The Early Years 1903-1940, in 1925 she secured work for her brotherAl Rinker, and his partnerBing Crosby. Giddins further states that Crosby first heard of Louis Armstrong and other Chicago black jazz records from Bailey’s own record collection. Crosby helped Bailey in turn by introducing her to Paul Whiteman. She sang with Paul Whiteman’s band from 1929 to 1933 (Whiteman had a popular radio program and when Bailey debuted with her version of “Moaning Low” in 1929, public reaction was immediate, although she did not start recording with Whiteman until late 1931).

Her first two records were as uncredited vocalist for an Eddie Lang Orchestra session in 1929 (“What Kind O’ Man Is You?”, an obscure Hoagy Carmichael song that was only issued in the UK) and a 1930 recording of “I Like To Do Things For You” for Frankie Trumbauer. She was Whiteman’s popular female vocalist through 1932 (recording in a smooth crooning style), when she left the band due to salary disagreements. She then recorded a series of records for Brunswick in 1933 (accompanied by The Dorsey Brothers), as well an all-star session with Benny Goodman‘s studio band in 1934 that featured Coleman Hawkins.

In the mid-1930s, she recorded with her third husband Red Norvo. A dynamic couple, they earned the nicknames “Mr. and Mrs. Swing”. During this period (1936–1939) Norvo recorded for Brunswick (with Bailey as primary vocalist) and Bailey recorded her own set of recordings for Vocalion, often with Norvo’s band. Some of her recordings instead featured members of Count Basie‘s band. Despite her divorce from Norvo, she and Red would continue to record together until 1945. Suffering from diabetes and depression (during her adult life Bailey was overweight), she only made a few recordings following World War II.

Mildred Bailey died December 12, 1951, in Poughkeepsie, New York, of heart failure, aged 44, chiefly due to her diabetes. Her ashes were scattered. Red Norvo outlived Bailey by nearly half a century, dying in April 1999, a week after his 91st birthday.

Notable recordings

The following are some of Bailey’s most well-known swing recordings

  • “I’d Love To Take Orders From You” (1935)
  • Someday, Sweetheart” (1935)
  • “When Day Is Done” (1935)
  • Honeysuckle Rose” (1935)
  • Squeeze Me” (1935)
  • “‘Long About Midnight” (1936)
  • Where Are You?” (1937)
  • Rockin’ Chair” (1937)
  • “It’s The Natural Thing To Do” (1937)
  • “Bob White (Whatcha Gonna Swing Tonight?)” (1937)
  • Thanks for the Memory” (1938)
  • “Please Be Kind” (1938)
  • “Says My Heart” (1938)
  • “Born To Swing” (1938)
  • Darn That Dream” (1939)
  • “Love’s A Necessary Thing” (1939)
  • “I’m Glad There is You” (1939)
  • “I Don’t Stand a Ghost of a Chance with You” (1939)
  • The Lamp Is Low” (1939)

In 1939, Bailey fronted a six-side, mostly blues session as “Mildred Bailey and her Oxford Greys” for Vocalion, which featured a small mixed-race combo of Mary Lou Williams(piano), Floyd Smith (electric guitar), John Williams (bass) and Eddie Dougherty (drums).

Number one hits

In 1938, Bailey had two number one hits with Red Norvo. “Please Be Kind” was number one for two weeks. She also sang lead vocals on “Says My Heart” by Red Norvo and his Orchestra, which was number one for four weeks on the pop charts. “Says My Heart” reached number one during the week of June 18, 1938. Bailey sang lead vocals on “Darn That Dream”, recorded by Benny Goodman and His Orchestra, which reached number one for one week in March, 1940 on the U.S. pop singles chart.

Honors

In 1989, Bailey was inducted into the Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame.

Daisy Martin

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , , , on April 5, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Daisy Martin

From Wikipedia

Daisy Martin (fl. c.1914–c.1925) was an African American actress and blues singer in the classic female blues style.

She toured America’s eastern and midwestern states in black vaudeville in the 1910s and early 1920s.  In 1914 she appeared in the revue My Friend From Kentucky at the National Theater in ChicagoIllinois.  In 1917 she performed in the musical comedy My People, which also featured Sam Gray and Julia Moody.  In 1920 she appeared at the Strand Theatre in Chicago in the revue Hello 1919.

Martin was one of the first black women to sing blues on recordings when she recorded for the Gennett and Okeh labels in April 1921.  On her first sides, “Royal Garden Blues” and “Spread Yo’ Stuff”, she was accompanied by the Five Jazz Bell Hops, whose identities are unknown. In total she recorded 16 sides, ending with her final session in July 1923.

On January 20, 1922 she competed against Lucille HegaminAlice Leslie Carter and the eventual winner Trixie Smith in a blues-singing contest at the Manhattan Casino in New York City.  For this contest, which was a highlight of the Fifteenth Infantry’s First Band Concert and Dance, Noble Sissle was master of ceremonies, and Fiorello la Guardia served as one of the judges.

Blues writer Steve Tracy wrote in 1997 that “Martin is really not one of the better vaudeville blues singers, possessed as she is of a soprano voice with a very stilted vibrato effect”. Few of the players who accompanied her on record have been identified, but the band for one of her sessions included Gus Aiken, Jake Frazier, and Garvin Bushell.

Wellman Braud

Posted in Recording Artist's of the 1920's and 1930's with tags , , , , , , , , on April 5, 2013 by the78rpmrecordspins

Wellman Braud

From Wikipedia
 
Wellman Braud
Also known as Wellman Breaux
Born January 25, 1891
St. James ParishLouisianaUnited States
Died October 29, 1966 (aged 75)
Los AngelesCalifornia United States
Genres Jazz
Occupations MusicianBandleader
Instruments Double basstrombonetuba,violin
Years active 1910–1966
Associated acts Duke EllingtonJimmie Noone,Wilber SweatmanSpirits of Rhythm

Wellman Braud (January 25, 1891 – October 29, 1966) was a Creole American jazz upright bassist. His family sometimes spelled their last name “Breaux”, pronounced “Bro”.

Born in St. James ParishLouisiana, Braud came to New Orleans, in his early teens. He was playing violin and the upright bass and leading a trio in venues in the Storyville District before 1910. He moved to Chicago, Illinois in 1917. In 1923 he went to London with the Plantation Orchestra, in which he doubled on bass and trombone. Next he moved to New York City where he played with Wilber Sweatman‘s band before joining Duke Ellington. It has been noted by Branford Marsalis that Braud was the first to utilize the walking bass** style that has been a mainstay in modern jazz [opposed to the ‘two-beat’ pattern the tuba plays in the New Orleans style]. His vigorous melodic bass playing, alternately plucking, slapping, and bowing, was an important feature of the early Ellington Orchestra sound in the 1920s and 1930s. Braud’s playing on Ellington’s regular radio broadcasts and recordings helped popularize the slap style of string bass playing, as well as encouraging many dance bands of the time to switch from using a tuba to an Upright bass. (Like many of his contemporary New Orleans bassists, Braud doubled on tuba, and he recorded on that instrument on some sides with Ellington.)

In 1936 Braud co-managed a short lived Harlem club with Jimmie Noone, and recorded with the group Spirits of Rhythm from 1935 to 1937. He played with other New York bands including those of Kaiser Marshall, Hot Lips Page, and Sidney Bechet, and returned for a while to Ellington in 1944. In 1956 he joined the Kid Ory Band with whom he stayed for years.

He is a distant relative of Branford Marsalis and Branford’s brothers through their mother’s side.

He died in Los AngelesCalifornia.