Mary Lou Williams is probably the most
important female African-American jazz pianist. Williams was also a fine
songwriter and arranger and she worked with major figures in jazz including
Benny Goodman and Duke Ellington. Williams was born Mary Scruggs in Atlanta, Georgia,
in 1910.
Williams played with Duke Ellington’s band,
The Washingtonians, in 1925. By the late Twenties she was pianist in the Andy
Kirk’s band, “The Twelve Clouds of Joy.” While with Kirk, Williams supplied the
band with the songs, “Cloudy,” and “Little Joe from Chicago.” Williams made her first recordings
with Kirk in 1929/30 and recorded the piano solo sides, “Drag ‘Em” and “Night
Life.” These solo sides would see Williams become a national name and brought
her to the attention of Benny Goodman, Earl Hines, and Tommy Dorsey who all
hired her as an arranger.
Williams became involved in the bebop
movement of the Forties and wound up as a mentor of sorts for the likes of
Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker.
In the Sixties, Williams began recording
religious jazz music, and she continued recording prolifically until her death
in 1981.
Williams best recordings can be heard on
the following albums: “Mary Lou Williams Trio” (1944), “Signs of the Zodiac”
(1945), “Piano Solos” (1946), “Black Christ of the Andes” (1964), “Zoning”
(1974), “Mary Lou’s Mass” (1975), “The Chronological Classics: Mary Lou
Williams 1927-1940” (1995), “The Chronological Classics: Mary Lou Williams
1944-1945” (1998) and The Chronological Classics: Mary Lou Williams 1945-1947”
(1999).
The great
jazz trumpeter, Dizzy Gillespie, was one of the musicians at the forefront of
the development of be-bop music in the Fifties. Gillespie was born John Birkes
Gillespie in Cheraw, South Carolina, in 1917. Gillespie earned the moniker,
“Dizzy,” for his ebullient personality and antics while performing.
After
hearing the great Roy Eldridge on the radio as a child, Gillespie decide then
and there that he, too, wanted to be a jazz trumpeter. Gillespie got his start
in New York City, in 1935, playing in the bands of Teddy Hill and Edgar Hayes.
It was with the Teddy Hill Orchestra that Gillespie would make his first
recording, “King Porter Stomp.” Gillespie stayed with Hill for one year and
then freelanced with several bands for a while before finally winding up in Cab
Callaway’s Orchestra in 1939. Calloway would fire Gillespie three years later
following an altercation between the two men.
In 1943, Gillespie
would join Earl Hines band which featured Charlie Parker and was beginning to create
a new music which would become bebop. From there, it was on to the Billie
Ekstine band, which also featured Parker. He would later leave the Ekstine band
because he wanted to play in a smaller ensemble.
In the
mid-Forties, Gillespie, Parker and other jazz musicians such as Max Roach, Bud
Powell, Thelonious Monk, and Kenny Clark would meet at clubs such as Minton’s
Playhouse and Monroe’s Uptown to jam and experiment. It was at these jams that
bebop was born.
Gillespie
would become a member of the “Quintet,” the legendary be-bop supergroup formed
in Toronto in 1953, with Parker, Powell, Charles Mingus and Max Roach.
Following his one-show tenure with the Quintet, Gillespie would form his own
Dizzy Gillespie Orchestra.
Among the
best of the classic sides that Gillespie recorded in the Forties and Fifties
are: “A Night in Tunisia,” “Salt Peanuts,” “Hot House,” “Manteca,” “Perdido,”
and “Night and Day.”
Gillespie’s
best albums begin with the Quintet. His “Salt Peanuts” from the album “Live at
Massey Hall” is perhaps the best moment of many brilliant moments on that live
recording of the Quintet’s only show. Other fine Gillespie albums include,
“Dizzy In Paris” (1953), “For Musicians Only” (1958), ”Gillespiana” (1960),
“Groovin’ High” (1953).
After Gillespie
had had his fill of bebop, he became interested in Afro-Cuban music. Gillespie
died in 1993.
William
Christopher Handy will forever be remembered as “The Father of the Blues.” It
was Handy who was most responsible for taking this regional folk music of the
American South and turning it into another form of popular American music.
Handy
was working as a popular minstrel bandleader when he heard blues music for the
first time while stopping over in the Mississippi Delta. Handy would eventually
write the first popular blues songs, “Memphis Blues,” ”St. Louis Blues,” Yellow
Dog Blues,” and “Hesitating Blues.”
Handy
was born in Florence, Alabama, in 1873. His father was pastor of a church in a
nearby town. Handy’s upbringing was strict and his pious father viewed secular
music and anything associated with it as instruments of the devil. It was with
much secrecy then, that young W.C. Handy purchased his first instrument, a
guitar. When his father found the guitar, Handy was instructed to return it.
Handy moved on to organ and eventually acquired a cornet, the instrument with
which he would be forever associated.
Handy
joined a local band as a cornetist during his teens-a fact that he kept hidden
from his parents. During the 1890s Handy traveled around Alabama in various
bands playing the minstrel music that was popular at the time and working odd
jobs to make ends meet. He eventually became the leader of the Mahara’s Colored
Minstrels and toured The South with that band for three years.
From
1900-1902, Handy was recruited as a music teacher at the Alabama Agricultural
and Mechanical College for Negroes. Handy’s frustration with the college’s emphasis
on European classical music and apparent lack of appreciation for American
styles led to his resignation from his post.
Handy
quickly rejoined his old band and set off on the road again. It was while on
tour with the band in the Mississippi Delta that Handy heard the blues, a music
that he described at the time as “the weirdest music I had ever heard.” Handy
studied the blues as played by locals during subsequent visits to the
Mississippi Delta, and by the time Handy and his band had relocated to Memphis,
Tennessee, in 1909, the blues was part of his repertoire. Handy wrote what is
often coined as the first blues song, “Memphis Blues,” as a theme song for a
Memphis mayoral candidate, Edward Crump. The song was originally titled, “Mr.
Crump.”
Handy
wrote subsequent songs with “blues” in the title such as “Beale Street Blues”
and “St. Louis Blues” and became one of the first African-Americans to become
wealthy by publishing songs. Handy moved his publishing business to New York
City, in 1917, and set up offices in Times Square.
In
early 1917, The Original Dixieland Jazz Band had made the first jazz recording
with a side titled, “Livery Stable Blues.” Handy organized a band called Handy’s
Orchestra of Memphis to make his own recordings for Columbia. The resulting
sides contained music that was closer to blues than that which was recorded by
jazz bands. Handy was not enamored with this new music, jazz, and tried to
stick to tradition.
Handy
recorded for various labels from 1917 to 1924 and recorded versions of his own
songs, “Memphis Blues,” “Yellow Dog Blues,” and “St. Louis Blues,” among
others. Handy’s renditions of these classic tunes are not considered as
classics of the era, but they are of tremendous historical rather than
aesthetic interest.
Among
the limited compilation albums that may be found on Handy’s recordings are “Father
of the Blues” (1980) and “Martin Scorsese Presents the Blues: A Musical Journey”
(2003).
Drummer Art
Blakey and his band, The Jazz Messengers, are the pioneers of a jazz sub-genre
called “hard bop”. Hard bop takes the fundamentals of be-bop and adds elements
of rhythm and blues. The idea behind hard bop was to make be-bop music more
danceable and perhaps, more palatable to mainstream music fans.
Art
Blakey was born in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, in 1919, and by the
Fifties, his virtuosic and incessant drumming would put him at the forefront of
the be-bop genre along with Dizzy Gilliespie, Thelonious Monk and others.
In 1954,
he formed the band, The Jazz Messengers, which became a training ground for up
and coming young jazz musicians. New
Orleans trumpet prodigy Wynton Marsalis would get his
professional start as a member of the band. Among the best of the Art Blakey
and The Jazz Messengers albums are “A Night at Birdland” (Volumes 1-3) (1954), “The
Jazz Messengers” (1956), “A Night in Tunisia” (1957), “Drum Suite” (1957), “Art
Blakey’s Jazz Messengers with Thelonious Monk” (1958), “Ritual” (1959),
“Moanin’”(1959), “The Big Beat”
(1960),“Mosaic” (1961) “Free for All,”
“A Night in Tunisia” (1961), and “Indestructible” (1965).
Both
Dorsey Brothers were major figures in the development of jazz music and
especially, swing. Tommy Dorsey is the man who gave a young Frank Sinatra’s
burgeoning career a major boost.
Thomas
Francis Dorsey Jr. was born in Shenandoah, Pennsylvania, in 1905. He was the
younger brother of Jimmy Dorsey, who was born in Shenandoah the previous year.
Both brothers would become huge big band music stars. Both boys studied music
as children, with Jimmy playing saxophone, trumpet and clarinet, while Tommy
concentrated ontrombone. At Jimmy's
recommendation, 15-year-old Tommy replaced Russ Morgan in the Scranton Sirens.
The
brothers worked with many bands during the Twenties including a stint with the
Paul Whiteman Orchestra, before recording their first side “Coquette,” on the Okeh
label in 1928. They were signed to Decca Records in 1934, and enjoyed a major
hit with “I Believe in Miracles.”
Conflict between the brothers, which at times escalated to fistfights, resulted
in Tommy dissolving the partnership and forming his own orchestra in 1935.
Teaming up with former members of the Joe Haymes Orchestra, he signed with RCA/Victor
in 1935 and released the first in a string of major hits, “On Treasure Island.”
In 1940, Tommy Dorsey acquired Frank Sinatra from The Harry James Orchestra,
resulting in more hits and the establishment of Sinatra as a star.
During the Forties, Tommy Dorsey’s orchestra featured some of the best
musicians in swing such as Bunny Berigan and Gene Kroupa. Jimmy Dorsey
dissolved his own band in 1953, and joined Tommy’s band, with the two becoming
“The Dorsey Brothers” once more.
In 1956, Tommy Dorsey died of choking. His former orchestra has continued into
the 21st century, with Jimmy Dorsey taking charge until his death, in 1957.
Compilations
of the Dorsey Brothers recordings and those of the bands of Tommy and Jimmy
Dorsey are easily found.
Art Tatum
is considered by many to be the greatest pianist in the history of jazz music
whose technical skills were unrivaled. Tatum’s unmistakable sound was the
result of his prodigious speed, harmonic inventiveness and swinging style which
featured the frequent use of thrilling cadenzas. He playing was drawn from the
stride style of James P. Johnson and Fats Waller and the more modern approach
of Earl Hines. When a young Oscar Peterson first heard a recording of Tatum and
was told that the recording was the work of a single pianist, Peterson refused
to touch a piano for a week.
Tatum was
born in Toledo, Ohio, in 1909. His parents were both
musicians at a local Toledo
church. As a child, Tatum developed cataracts and eventually lost sight in one
eye completely, while being left with only partial sight in the other. Tatum
was a child prodigy at the piano and learned to play by ear while listening to
church hymns and music on the radio. In 1925, he would begin learning music and
braille at a school for the blind.
By 1933, Tatum
was in New York City,
and he began to make a name for himself at piano playing competitions known as
“cutting contests.” It was at one of these contests that Tatum famously
out-dueled stride legends James P. Johnson, Willie “The Lion” Smith and Fats
Waller with spectacular versions of “Tea for Two” and “Tiger Rag.” While Tatum
was working at the Onyx Club in March of 1933, he recorded his first four sides
for the Brunswick
label. For the remainder of the Thirties, he toured around the Midwest and had
stints in Chicago and trips out to Los Angeles before returning to New York.
In the Forties,
Tatum recorded with singer Big Joe Turner for Decca Records and formed a trio
with guitarist Tiny Grimes and bassist, Slam Stewart. By the end of the Forties,
Tatum had returned to solo performing and continued solo until his death in
1956.
Any
compilation of Tatum’s incredible recordings is a must-have. The best of these
include, “Piano Starts Here” (1968), “The Complete Capitol Recordings” (Volumes
1-2) (1989), “Classic Early Solos” (1991), “The Chronological Classics: Art
Tatum 1934-1940” (1991), and “The Complete Capitol Recordings of Art Tatum”
(1997).
James
Price Johnson was born in New Brunswick, New Jersey, in 1894. He was a ragtime
turned stride pianist whose composition, “The Charleston,” became one of the
anthems of the “jazz age” of the Twenties. Johnson and Jelly Roll Morton were
probably the two pianists most responsible for taking ragtime music and turning
it into jazz via the piano.
Although
he started out playing ragtime music in the tradition of Scott Joplin, Johnson
became the innovator of a jazz sub-genre of piano playing that was dubbed, “stride.”
This piano style got its name from the walking or “striding” sound produced by
the pianist’s left hand. Stride piano incorporated elements of the blues and it
allowed for on the spot improvisation which is an essential characteristic of
jazz music. Ragtime was a rigidly composed form of music which stifled improvisation.
Johnson
was a prolific composer, and he wrote some of the most familiar compositions of
the roaring Twenties. Aside from the Charleston, he penned, “You’ve Got to Be
Modernistic,” “If I Could Be with You One Hour Tonight,” “Carolina Shout,”
“Keep Off The Grass,” and “Old Fashioned Love,” among others. In addition to
jazz and pop tunes, Johnson wrote waltzes, ballets and symphonic pieces.
Johnson’s
finest recordings can be found on a number of compilation albums including the
multi-volume “Chronological Classics: James P. Johnson” (1996) series and “Snowy
Morning Blues” (1991), “Harlem Stride Piano” (1992), and “Father of Stride
Piano” (2001).
The Original Dixieland Jazz Band was originally
an off-shoot of Stein’s Dixie Jass Band and started out under the leadership of
cornetist, Nick LaRocca. By 1917, the band had moved from Chicago to New York,
where in February of that year, they would make the first-ever jazz recording,
“Livery Stable Blues/Dixie Jass Band One Step” for Victor.
The recording was a huge commercial
success, and it introduced jazz to a nationwide audience. The huge sales of
that first recording motivated other record labels to record jazz and thus
sparked the spread of the music.
The initial incarnation of the band
recorded several other excellent sides including, “Darktown Strutter’s Ball,” “Ostrich
Walk,” and “Tiger Rag.” Their music was typical early Dixieland jazz, but the
ODJB had some of the finest musicians in jazz music at the time including
Larocca on cornet, “Daddy” Edwards on trombone, Henry Ragas on piano, and Larry
Shields on clarinet.
The ODJB was a white band, and Larocca was
a proud member of the white race who always maintained that it was not African-Americans
who had created jazz, but white musicians. Larocca’a overt racism has probably
hurt the reputation of the ODJB and encouraged many observers to write them off
as simply a bunch of second-rate white musicians who only had the opportunity
to make the first jazz recording due to the institutionalized racism of the
time. However, this is clearly not the case. Freddie Keppard, an
African-American cornetist, turned down the opportunity to make the first jazz
recording, in 1916.
The ODJB reunited several times in the Thirties and toured Europe. Drummer Tony
Sbarbaro was the only original member to appear on all the band’s recordings
between 1917 and 1938.
Several compilations of the band’s early
sides can be found including, “The Complete Original Dixieland Jazz Band
(1917-1938)” (1995). The band also appears on several compilations of early
recorded jazz.
Guitarist Django Reinhardt and violinist Stephane Grappelli were probably the two greatest European jazz musicians of the 20th century. Both men were founders and members of an outfit known as the Quintet of The Hot Club of France, a jazz ensemble that recorded during the Forties.
Reinhardt, born in Liberchies, Pont-a-Celles, Belgium, was a gypsy guitar prodigy. When he was eighteen, his hand was so badly burned by a fire in his caravan that two fingers on his left hand were rendered useless. His family and friends thought that any future career plans as a musician had been prematurely snuffed out, but Reinhardt adapted and learned to play with just the index and middle finger on his fret hand. Despite his handicap, Reinhardt still earned a reputation as one of the greatest guitarists in the history of popular music.
In 1934, Reinhardt, jazz violin virtuoso, Stephane Grappelli, brother and fellow guitarist, Joesph Reinhardt, guitarist Roger Chaput and bassist Louis Vola formed the “Quintette du Hot Club de France” and recorded some of the best jazz of the Thirties and Forties.
During his tenure with the Quintet of the Hot Club of France, Reinhardt recorded the classic selections, “Minor Swing,” “Djangology,” “Runnin” Wild,” “Paramount Stomp,” :Belleville,” and “Night and Day.”
The Hot Club recorded in the swing style that was the vogue of the mid and late Thirties. The band would disband in 1939, only to reform in the Forties with a different line up of sidemen supporting Django Reinhardt and Stephane Grappelli.
Reinhardt died in 1953 at the age of 43, while Grappelli would continue playing and recording until his death in 1997, a month shy of his 90th birthday.
Django Reinhardt would leave behind a legacy of musical brilliance and serve as an inspiration and major influence on countless guitarists from rock, country, jazz, and even classical music.
Rock guitarists, Jerry Garcia of the Grateful Dead and Tony Iommi of Black Sabbath, both suffered serious injuries to their hands early in their careers and credit Reinhardt as a huge inspiration in overcoming their respective injuries.
Reinhardt and the Quintet of the Hot Club of France appear on numerous fine compilation albums.
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Drummer Art
Blakey and his band, The Jazz Messengers, are the pioneers of a jazz sub-genre
called “hard bop”. Hard bop takes the fundamentals of be-bop and adds elements
of rhythm and blues. The idea behind hard bop was to make be-bop music more
danceable and perhaps, more palatable to mainstream music fans.
Art
Blakey was born in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, in 1919, and by the
Fifties, his virtuosic and incessant drumming would put him at the forefront of
the be-bop genre along with Dizzy Gilliespie, Thelonious Monk and others.
Julia Lee
was among the best female jazz singers and pianists of the Thirties and Forties.
Lee was born in Boonville, Missouri, in 1902, and grew up in Kansas City.
Lee began
her career in the Twenties as a pianist with several bands including the band
of her brother, George Lee. She made her recording debut in 1927 as a pianist
for Jesse Stone. In 1935, Lee embarked on her own solo career and made her
first recordings on for Capitol Records in 1945.
During the
Forties, Lee scored a number of R&B hits including, “Gotta Gimme Whatcha
Got,” “Snatch and Grab It,” “King Size Papa,” and “My Man Stands Out.” She was
accompanied on these recordings by the likes of Red Nichols, Jay McShan, Benny
Carter, and Red Norvo.
Lee’s
classic recordings can be found on the following albums: Classics Julia Lee
1927-1946” (1995) and “Classics Julia Lee 1947” (1995).
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Most jazz
critics consider Roy "Little Jazz" Eldridge as the successor of Louis Armstrong in the evolution
of jazz trumpet players. Armstrong is almost universally considered as the
greatest jazz trumpeter in history; however, Eldridge is viewed as the musician
who took the hot New Orleans style of Armstrong and turned it into something
new.
Eldridge was
notable for his rough and speedy technique, particularly when playing high
notes on the trumpet. A now almost forgotten trumpeter, Jabbo Smith, who rivaled
the virtuosity of Armstrong in the late Twenties, was a huge influence on
Eldridge, as was Armstrong.
In terms of jazz
cornet/trumpet greatness, the progression is loosely as follows: Buddy
Bolden-Freddie Keppard-King Oliver-Louis Armstrong-Roy Eldridge-Dizzy
Gillespie-Miles Davis-Clifford Brown.
Eldridge was
born to a musical family in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1911. As a child,
Eldridge became a drummer in the band of his brother, Joe, before his brother
convinced him to pick up the trumpet. By the age of 20, he had started his own
band in Pittsburgh and then left that band to join the band of Horace
Henderson, brother of the great New York bandleader, Fletcher Henderson.
Shortly thereafter, in 1930, Eldridge moved to New York City.
In New York, Eldridge
found work with a number of dance bands, and by 1935, while as a member of the
Teddy Hill Orchestra, Eldridge made his first recordings. Eldridge would
eventually land a gig with the Fletcher Henderson Orchestra from 1935-36,
becoming Henderson’s star soloist by lending his hot solos to the Henderson
classics, “Christopher Columbus” and “Blue Lou.”
Eldridge later
moved on to work with white bands led by Gene Kroupa, and later, Artie Shaw.
The presence of an African-American musician in a white band was a rarity in
the segregated America of the Thirties. In the post-war era, Eldridge became one
of the leading musicians that toured under the banner of “Jazz at the
Philharmonic.” He also freelanced with the bands of Count Basie, Ella Fitzgerald
and Benny Goodman.
Eldridge’s best
recordings include, “Drummer Man” (1956) with Gene Kroupa, “Rockin’ Chair”
(1956), “Little Jazz” (1989), anda
number of compilations dedicated to his music. Eldridge died in 1989.
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Sidney Bechet was a musical child prodigy born in New Orleans, Louisiana, in 1897. Bechet was so musically advanced as a child that he had already played with many of the top bands in New Orleans. Bechet was one of a few jazz musicians of his generation who could rival Louis Armstrong’s brilliance as a soloist.
In 1917, Bechet moved to Chicago. After a tour of Europe, Bechet returned to America with a new instrument, the soprano saxophone and he soon established himself as a master of the instrument. Bechet made his recording debut in 1923 with Clarence Williams. He appeared with Louis Armstrong on a classic session with the Clarence Williams Blue Five that produced superb sides such as “Cake Walkin’ Babies from Home.”
From 1925 to 1929, Bechet lived and played in Europe. While in Paris, Bechet became involved in a daylight gun fight with another musician that resulted in injuries to innocent bystanders. Bechet was imprisoned for a year as a result, and was deported upon release.
During the depression, Bechet supplemented his income by running a tailor shop with trumpeter Tommy Ladnier. Bechet and Ladnier subsequently recorded several outstanding sides of New Orleans jazz under the name, “New Orleans Feetwarmers.” In 1938, Bechet scored a big hit with his stirring rendition of the standard, “Summertime.”
Bechet returned to France in 1952 and continued to record hit jazz records. Bechet died in Paris, in 1959.
Bechet’s recordings can be found on a number of fine compilation albums, including the great two-volume, “Jazz Classics” (1950) and "Chronological Classics."
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Benny
Goodman and long-time rival, Artie Shaw, are the two greatest and best-known
white clarinetists in the history of jazz. Both men achieved huge commercial
and critical success during their respective careers. It was Goodman, however,
who would forever be identified with the title, “King of Swing,” for his role
in the invention of the most popular jazz subgenre during the height of the
music’s popularity.
Benny
Goodman was born in Chicago,
Illinois, in 1909. His parents
were Jewish immigrants from the Russian Empire who struggled to provide for
their large family. Despite the family’s relative poverty, David Goodman
arranged for music lessons for three of his sons, including Benny, at a local Chicago synagogue. After
a year’s training, Benny Goodman, aged eleven, joined a boys’ club band and
received further musical training from the club’s director, and later from a
classically-trained clarinetist. With this solid foundation, Goodman would
launch a career that would span seven decades and would span musical genres
from early classic jazz to classical music.
Goodman’s
began his jazz career as a clarinetist in the Ben Pollack Orchestra at the age
of sixteen. He would make his first recording with the Pollack Orchestra in
1926. He would continue performing and recording with the Pollack Orchestra and
its various off-shoots until 1929. During this frenetic period, Goodman also
recorded with nationally- known bands of Ben Selvin, Red Nichols, and Ted
Lewis. He also recorded under his own name with trombonist Glenn Miller and
others as “Benny Goodman’s Boys.”
In the
early Thirties, John Hammond of Columbia records arranged for Goodman to record
in the company of other stellar jazz musicians in a jazz “all star” band. Other
members of the band included pianist Teddy Wilson and drummer Gene Kroupa, two
musicians that would form the core of the rhythm section of Goodman’s later orchestra.
In 1935, Goodman expressed interest in appearing on the nationwide radio dance
music show, “Let’s Dance.” At the advice of John Hammond, Goodman secured
“swinging” arrangements of songs from Fletcher Henderson, leader of one of New York’s best jazz
orchestras. These arrangements helped make Goodman a hit with the West Coast
audience that heard his performance.
On the
strength of the Let’s Dance performance and the rave reviews of Goodman’s
recordings of “King Porter Stop” and “Sometimes I’m Happy” with Fletcher
Henderson arrangements, a large and enthusiastic crowd of young fans were
waiting in Oakland, California when the band played a show there
in August of 1935. When the Goodman band began to play, the crowd went wild.
The same reaction greeted the band in Los
Angeles during the debut of a three week engagement at
the Palomar Ballroom in August, 1935. During the three-week engagement the “Jitterbug”
dance was born, and along with it, the “Swing Era.”
In the
wake of the tremendous success of the Goodman band in California, Fletcher Henderson disbanded his
great orchestra and become Goodman’s full-time arranger. With the addition of
Henderson and pianist Teddy Wilson, both African-Americans, Goodman’s band became
the first racially-integrated jazz band in America. Goodman would later add
another African-American, the great Charlie Christian, on guitar.
Goodman was
coined, “The King of Swing” in 1937, and was secured as such when his orchestra
became the first jazz band to play New
York’s Carnegie Hall, in 1938. The concert, which
included members of Count Basie’s and Duke Ellington’s orchestras, was a true
test for jazz music as an art form. If the high-brow Carnegie Hall set could be
moved by jazz, the music would earn a much needed stamp of approval from the
music establishment. After an uninspired start, the Goodman Orchestra slowly
built momentum and climaxed with an epic version of “Sing, Sing, Sing”
featuring spectacular solos by Goodman and pianist, Jess Stacy.
In 1939,
John Hammond introduced the electric guitarist, Charlie Christian, to Goodman
as a prospective band member. Despite initial doubts, Goodman was greatly
impressed with Christian’s playing and included him in the Benny Goodman Sextet
for the next two years. The sextet recordings with Christian including “Rose
Room,” “Breakfast Feud,” and “Grand Slam” are some of the finest recordings in
jazz history.
Goodman
continued to have tremendous success as a big band leader until the mid-Forties
when swing music began to lose steam. Goodman flirted with be-bop music and
even formed a bebop band before finally denouncing the music. In 1949, at the
age of 40, Goodman turned his back on jazz to devote himself to the study of
classical music. Following a lengthy retirement from jazz, Goodman died of a
heart attack in 1986.
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Bessie Smith was known as the “Empress of
the Blues,” so it’s only fitting that her mentor and senior, Ma Rainey, should
be forever remembered as “The Mother of the Blues.” Ma Rainey was born Gertrude
Pridgett in Columbus, Georgia, in 1886. She acquired the
moniker, “Ma,” after she married William “Pa” Rainey in 1904.
Rainey began performing music when she was
12-years-old, and she and her husband eventually became members of the
legendary touring ensemble, F.S. Walcott’s Rabbit’s Foot Minstrels. From 1914,
the Raineys became known as “Rainey and Rainey, Assassins of the Blues.” Ma
Rainey eventually met Bessie Smith, and she acted as a mentor for the younger
singer.
Mamie Smith became the first African-American
woman to make a blues record in 1920, and the sensation that her recording,
“Crazy Blues,” stirred led to record companies searching out other African-American
blues singers. Paramount
discovered Rainey in1923, and enabled her to make her first recordings. She
went to Chicago
in late 1923 to make her first record “Bad Luck Blues,” Bo-Weevil Blues,” and
“Moonshine Blues.”
Rainey would record over 100 sides for Paramount over the next
five years. She was marketed as “Mother of the Blues” among other tags. In 1924,
she recorded with the young Louis Armstrong on “See See Rider Blues,” “Jelly
Bean Blues,” and “Countin’ the Blues.”
As the Thirties approached, Rainey’s brand
of Vaudeville blues was beginning to lose popularity, and Paramount failed to renew her recording
contract. Rainey died in Rome,
Georgia, in
1939, of a heart attack.
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Alberta Hunter was
one of the first female blues singers to record. She was born in Memphis, Tennessee,
in 1895, and made her first recordings, “Bring Back the Joys/ How Long, Sweet
Daddy, How Long,” in 1921, for the Black Swan label. By 1922, she had moved on to
the Paramount label and established herself as
one of the most prolific blues performers of the early Twenties.
Hunter continued to
perform and record late into her long life. She died in New York City in 1984 and the age of 89. Among
several compilation albums of Hunter’s music are “Complete Recorded Works”
(Volumes 1-4) (1996) and “Young Alberta Hunter: The 20’s and 30’s” (1996).
Johnson was one of the best of the early acoustic
blues guitarists. He possessed a technical proficiency that separated him from
his peers, and he was always in high demand as a session guitarist for blues
and jazz recordings. Johnson was a fine vocalist as well, and his prodigious
chops made him a hot recording property in the Twenties.
The place and date of his birth are the subject of
some debate, although many believe his birthplace to be New Orleans. It is known for sure that
Johnson was raised in New Orleans and later
moved to St. Louis
in the Twenties where he began recording for Okeh Records. That label would
release his first side, “Mr. Johnson’s Blues,” in 1925. Johnson recorded
numerous sides for the label including, “Very Lonesome Blues,” “Lonesome Jail
Blues,” Five o’clock Blues,” “Backwater Blues,” and many others.
Johnson lent his nimble guitar skills to Louis Armstrong’s Hot Five recordings in
1927. The next year, Johnson and the white jazz guitarist, Eddie Lang, made
some of the first racially-integrated jazz recordings. Johnson’s career
suffered during the Depression Era of the Thirties when Okeh went bankrupt and
he relocated to Canada.
Johnson died in 1970, in Toronto,
from injuries he had suffered in a car accident.
Like most other musicians of his era, Johnson’s work
is best heard on any number of compilation albums. “Blues in My Fingers: The
Essential Recordings of Lonnie Johnson” (1994), and “Complete Recorded Works
1925-1932” (1991) are the best compilations available for this artist.