Tuesday, February 09, 2010

JOE MANERI


Italian-American jazz composer, saxophone and clarinet player Joseph Gabriel Esther "Joe" Maneri was born on February 9, 1927, in the Brooklyn, New York City.After decades of obscurity, Maneri's distinctive saxophone and clarinet works gained praise and relative fame in the 1990s. To conventional Western sensibilities, some of his passages may sound 'out-of-tune'- but there is a consistent, internal logic to his unorthodox playing; critic Charlie Wilmoth describes Maneri's playing as "a slippery, space-filled alien blues".


Maneri played clarinet and saxophone in various dance bands and on the Catskill circuit as a teenager, often performing traditional Greek,Turkish and Syrian music or Klezmer at weddings and other gatherings. He would later incorporate some elements of such music in his own compositions. He studied with Josef Schmid (not the tenor but a conductor and student of Alban Berg) for a decade before being commissioned by conductor Erich Leinsdorf to write a piano concerto for the Boston Symphony Orchestra, which was rehearsed but never performed in concert.


Maneri was impressed by the music of Arnold Schoenberg and organized a jazz ensemble that performed some twelve tone music. (His later music is, however, not in the twelve-tone technique.)


All his recording show a synthesis of Maneri's experience with vernacular musics of American immigrants and his understanding of twelve-tone composition along with a developed style of "free" improvisation, analogous to the contemporaneous innovations by Sun Ra and Ornette Coleman.



Joe continued his teaching, but performed and recorded rarely until the early 1990s, when his son Mat Maneri coaxed him into more public appearances. Maneri gained significant attention, and released a number of recordings, often on ECM Records. In 2003, 24 of Maneri's poems, written in his own language, were included in the anthology Asemia.
On May, 2009, three months before his death, Maneri was awarded an Honorary Doctorate from New England Conservatory.


He passed away August, 2009.
Joe Maneri plays and talks about his music.
Reference - Wikipédia

Monday, February 08, 2010

PONY POINDEXTER


O saxofonista de jazz Norwood "Pony" Poindexter, nasceu no 8 de Fevereiro de 1926, em Nova Orleans, Louisiana. Aprendeu primeiro a tocar a clarineta, mas depois, se desenvolveu para o saxofone alto e tenor.


Em 1940 foi aluno de Sidney Desvigne e em seguida frequentou o Conservatório de Candell em Oakland, onde fixou residencia. No período entre 1947 e 1950, tocou na banda de Billy Eckstine.


Em 1950 tocou num quarteto liderado por Vernon Alley, de 51 a 52 permaneceu com o vibrafonista Lionel Hampton e em 52 trabalhou na Orquestra de Stan Kenton. O compositor Neal Hefti escreveu "Little Pony" em sua homenagem e a música passou a ser executada pela Orquestra de Count Basie.


No final da década de 50, Poindexter tocou frequentemente, ora como lider ou acompanhante, nas sessões de gravação com Charlie Parker, Nat King Cole,T-Bone Walker e Jimmy Witherspoon.


De 51 a 64 fez "back up" para Lambert, Hendricks e Ross, que juntos, gravaram uma versão vocal de "Little Pony". Poindexter, foi um dos primeiros saxofonistas de bebop a utilizar o saxofone soprano no inicio dos anos 60, quando gravou com Eric Dolphy e Dexter Gordon.


Em 1962 foi morar em Paris e por lá gravou com Ross, Phil Woods e Lee Konitz. Depois mudou-se para a Espanha e em seguida para Alemanha onde também residiu por uns tempos. Em 1977 estava de volta à São Francisco e voltou a gravar.


Publicou a sua autobiografia "Pony Express", porém, na época de seu falecimento em Abril de 1988, encontrava-se em completo ostracismo, esquecido por todos.

Pony plays as sideman to Wes Montgomery's solo of "Summertime"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6-nABElb72Y


Jazz saxophonist Norwood "Pony" Poindexter, was born on February, 8, 1926, in New Orleans,Louisiana. He began on clarinet and switched to playing alto and tenor sax growing up. In 1940 he studied under Sidney Desvigne, and following this attended Candell Conservatory in Oakland, where he based himself.



From 1947 to 1950 he played with Billy Eckstine. In 1950 he played in a quartet with Vernon Alley, from 1951 to 1952 he was with Lionel Hampton and in 1952 he played with Stan Kenton. Neal Hefti wrote the tune "Little Pony", named after Poindexter, for the Count Basie Orchestra.


Through the end of the 1950s Poindexter played extensively both as a leader and as a sideman, recording with Charlie Parker, nat King Cole, T-Bone Walker and Jimmy Witherspoon. From 1961 to 1964, he played backup for Lambert,Hendricks and Ross, who together also recorded a vocal version of "Little Pony".



He was one of the first bebop saxophonists to begin playing soprano saxophone early in the 1960s, and recorded with Eric Dolphy and Dexter Gordon on a session for Eric Records around 1962. In 1963 he moved to Paris; while there he recorded with Ross, Phil Woods, Lee Konitz and Leo Wright. He later moved to Spain and then to Mannheim,Germany; in 1977 he returned to San Francisco and recorded again.



He published an autobiography, Pony Express, in 1985, but had been largely forgotten by the time of his death on April, 1988.


Reference - Wikipédia

Tradução de Humberto Amorim

EDDIE LOCKE


Jazz drummer Eddie Locke, was born on February 8, 1930 in Detroit,Michigan. Locke was associated with the Detroit jazz scene in the 1940s and 1950s, playing from 1948 to 1953 with drummer Oliver Jackson in a variety show called Bop & Locke.


Eddie Locke, the famed critic Nat Hentoff once wrote in Jazz Times, "embodies the resiliense of the jazz life." Never a major star as a soloist, he led his own band only at the very end of his career. But that career spanned well over 50 years and intersected with much of the music's history since the swing era. Locke could play in many styles; he could take a stage and entertain almost any audience. Eddie Locke, in short, was one of those musicians who serve as crucial cogs in a vital scene, and he was an astute observer of the many great jazz figures with whom he worked.







He moved to New York City in 1954, at first he played in low-profile afternoon slots, but other musicians began to notice him soon enough. The musician who most influenced the young Locke in New York was drummer Jo Jones, with whom Locke served as a kind of apprentice. He moved Jones's drums from studio to studio for recording sessions, and he soaked up Jones's style. "He was the most creative drummer I ever saw," Locke was quoted as saying by Hentoff. "He could create things I never saw anybody else do. And I'd never seen anybody play brushes the way he could.... The Basie rhythm section was just like the wind. It was so smooth."

Locke appears in the photograph A Great Day in Harlem- first row standing, third from the left. (not including the leg sticking into the frame)



Eddie passed away on September 7, 2009, in Ramsey,New Jersey.



Eddie at the Arbors Jazz Party
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P2HpKdYgJsU

Recommended CDs





As leader





1977: Jivin' With the Refugees from Hastings Street (Chiaroescuro Records) with Tommy Flanagan, Major Holley,Oliver Jackson



1978: Eddie Locke and Friends (Storyville Records)





As sideman



With Roy Eldridge
Happy Time (1975)



Reference - Jazzlives

BUDDY MORROW


O trombonista de jazz e bandleader Buddy Morrow, também conhecido como Moe Zudekoff, nasceu no 8 de fevereiro de 1919, em New Haven, Connecticut. Ficou famoso pelo seu poder de alcance nas notas altas, evidenciado nos discos como "The Golden Trombone" e na execução de baladas.


Buddy estudou na famosa Juilliard School of Music, e integrou a orquestra do Tonight Show de Johnny Carson. Seus discos no inicio da década de 50 como "Rose, Rose, I Love You" e "Night Train" constaram da lista da Billboard nacional.


Em 1959/60 a Orquestra de Morrow gravou os albuns "Impact e "Double Impact", respectivamente,com as canções das séries de televisão.



Em 2009, recebeu o prêmio 'International Trombone Association's Lifetime Achievement", concedido à pessoas que fizeram a diferença com a arte de tocar o trombone mundo afora.

Buddy Morrow "We'll Get It"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=86DRPs24Txw


Trombonist and bandleader Buddy Morrow, aka Moe Zudekoff, was born on February 8,1919 in New Haven, Connecticut. He is known for his mastery of the upper range which is evident in records such as "The Golden Trombone," as well as his ballad playing. He also is an alumnus of the Juilliard School of Music.
Morrow was once a member of the Tonight Show orchestra. His early 1950s records such as "Rose, Rose, I Love You" and "Night Train" rode the Billboard's national charts. In 1959 and 1960 Morrow's Orchestra released two albums of American television theme songs Impact and Double Impact respectively.
In 2009, Morrow was awarded the "International Trombone Association's Lifetime Achievement Award", an award that is given to a person who has significantly changed trombone playing around the world.


Reference - Wikipédia
Tradução de Humberto Amorim

Sunday, February 07, 2010

CLEMENTINA DE JESUS

A cantora Clementina de Jesus dizia ter nascido no 7 de fevereiro de 1902, em Valença no Estado do Rio. Mas Clementina não era boa com as datas e sua certidão de nascimento nunca foi encontrada. Em outras ocasiões, ela afirmou que nascera em 1900. Na certidão de casamento com Albino Correa da Silva, ou Albino Pé Grande, a data de nascimento é 7 de fevereiro de 1907. Lena Frias encontrou a certidão de batismo de Clementina, em Valença, datada de 25 de agosto de 1901 e registrando a data de nascimento como o dia 7 de fevereiro daquele ano.

Em documentos diferentes, ela aparece como Clementina Laura de Jesus ou Clementina de Jesus dos Santos. Com o casamento, adotando o nome do marido, tornou-se Clementina de Jesus da Silva. Filha de um pedreiro, também carpinteiro, e de uma parteira e rezadeira, de escravos, por parte de mãe, Clementina cresceu ouvindo canções em línguas das nações africanas constitutivas da comunidade negra de Valença, de origens bantas (é o mais provável, aponta Lena Frias. A mãe, dona Amélia, lavadeira, cantava hinos de igreja e cantigas aprendidas com os pais e com outros negros mais velhos - "gente de um universo de jongo e caxambu, jogos sagrados da espiritualidade da terra", de acordo com a jornalista.


Declarava-se católica, mas, mesmo que não fosse ligada aos cultos de origem africana, ao cantar, chamava a si o lugar de porta-voz dessa cultura. "A descoberta de Clementina de Jesus (...) teve para a música popular brasileira uma importância que presume corresponder, na antropologia, a do achado de um elo perdido", escreve o historiador Ary Vasconcelos. Pois ela resumia, em seu canto, os séculos de história da cultura afro-brasileira, não apenas aquela apreendida na primeira infância.

A família foi para o Rio quando ela tinha coisa de 8 anos. Em Jacarepaguá, Clementina participava dos pastoris e ganhou do festeiro o apelido de Quelé. No folguedo natalino de origem portuguesa, cada figurante tinha um papel. Clementina era a peixeira, mas decorou e guardou os cantos de todos os personagens. Na casa de Mané Psado, macumbeiro de Osvaldo Cruz, área de samba e curima, participou de festas em honra dos orixás. Não que fosse crente, contava, mas gostava da oportunidade de cantar, da festa.

Clementina testemunhou o nascimento da Portela, fez-se amiga de Pixinguinha, Donga, João da Baiana, Paulo da Portela, foi ensaiadora de pastoras de Heitor dos Prazeres, conheceu tia Ciata, em cujo terreiro nasceu o samba carioca, e cantou em seus candomblés. Foi amiga de Zica, mais tarde mulher de Carlos Cachaça, e desfilou em corso com Noel Rosa, em 1930. Foi diretora da escola de samba Unidos do Riachuelo, amiga de Aniceto, que fundou o Império Serrano - mas não era artista. Era cozinheira, empregada doméstica, banqueteira, quituteira.

Virou mangueirense quando conheceu Albino Pé Grande. Hermínio Bello de Carvalho ouviu-a numa festa da Igreja de Nossa Senhora da Glória, em 1963; foi encontrá-la novamente no ano seguinte. No dia 7 de dezembro de 1964, dirigida por Hermínio, Clementina fez seu primeiro show oficial, no Teatro Jovem, ao lado do violonista clássico Turíbio Santos.

Em 1965, Clementina protagonizou o show Rosa de Ouro, no Rio e em São Paulo. Andrade Muricy, da Academia Brasileira de Música, saudou: "Ela tem insondáveis raízes de terror feiticista, ancestralidade turva que reponta em cada gesto: poreja música de todo o seu ser vibrátil e em perene transe paroxístico; exprime dança e mímica em cada movimento, numa prestigiosa escala de inflexões."

A carreira durou até 1987, quando Clementina, explorada por produtores inescrupulosos, fazia shows baratos em lugares de pouco prestígio. Sua discografia básica consta de 11 títulos. A Petrobras patrocinou, como brinde para seus clientes especiais, uma caixa, com nove dos títulos, os pertencentes à gravadora EMI. A gravadora comprometeu-se em fazer lançamento comercial dos discos, mas não cumpriu. Não existem discos de Clementina no mercado.

A mais importante voz negra da história da música brasileira está calada. Correntes, na Internet, mandam e-mails para a EMI, cobrando o cumprimento da promessa. A gravadora não se pronuncia a respeito.


"Dona Clementina, para mim, era de água, rocha e ouro. Todas as bênçãos brotavam de sua voz única, toda doçura habitava seu colo de mãe", escreveu sobre ela Maria Bethânia. Ouvindo-a cantar, José Ramos Tinhorão escreveu: "A pequena sala é um barco que vaga ao sabor de um ritmo que parecia perdido - mas que, agora sabemos, só estará perdido quando morrer no último barraco a última Clementina de Jesus."

Clementina de Jesus, faleceu em Fevereiro de 1987.


Clementina canta "Ensaboa"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mTSXjgs0kYU


Fonte - Memorial da Fama

ROGÉRIO DUPRAT


O compositor e arranjador Rogério Duprat, nasceu no 7 de fevereiro de 1932, no Rio deJaneiro, e começou a estudar violoncelo no começo da década de 1950, período que integrou a Orquestra Sinfônica Estadual. Mas seus primeiros passos na música se deram ainda bem jovem, quando tocava "de ouvido" cavaco, violão e gaita de boca.



Mudou-se para a São Paulo em 1955, onde passou a ser um dos destaques da Orquestra Sinfônica Municipal. Foi um dos fundadores e diretores da Orquestra de Câmara de São Paulo e o idealizador do movimento Musica Nova em 1961, junto com Damiano Cozzella, Willy Correia de Oliveira, Gilberto Mendes e Régis Duprat.



Começou a compor trilhas para longa-metragens do diretor Walter Hugo Khouri, como “A Ilha”, “Noite Vazia” e “Corpo Ardente” e a se aproximar dos músicos populares, principalmente dos tropicalistas, liderados por Caetano Veloso e Gilberto Gil. Para Gil, compôs o ousado arranjo para Domingo no Parque, que mais tarde lhe daria o prêmio de melhor arranjador no Festival de Música da TV Record, em 1967. No ano seguinte, ao lado de Caetano, Gil, Tom Zé, Gal Costa, Os Mutantes, Nara Leão, Torquato Neto, gravou o histórico disco “Tropicália”, compondo arranjos para várias canções do álbum, como “Baby”, “Panis Et Circencis” e “Geléia Geral”. Fez arranjos para canções de Chico Buarque (“Construção/Deus Lhe Pague”), Jorge Ben Jor (“Descobri que Sou um Anjo”) e trabalhou em vários discos dos Mutantes, sendo decisivo para a mudança de sonoridade da banda paulistana.



Passou a dedicar-se a produção de jingles e aos poucos abandonou o mercado musical por problemas de surdez, causados pelas intermináveis horas de estúdio, e mudou-se para um sítio em Itapecerica da Serra, interior de São Paulo.



Só voltou a atividade musical na década de 90, compondo arranjos para os discos de Lulu Santos e Rita Lee. Mas, Duprat foi o grande responsável pelo rompimento da barreira entre erudito e popular, consolidando-se como figura ímpar da música brasileira.
Rogério Duprat - Os Mutantes "Lady Madonna"
Fonte - Clique Music

EUBIE BLAKE, RAGTIME TOP PIANIST.


Composer, lyricist, pianist of ragtime, jazz and poupular music James Hubert Blake, was born on February 7,1887, in Baltimore, Maryland to former slaves John Summer Blake and Emily "Emma" Johnson. He was the only surviving child of eight who all died in infancy.


In 1921, Blake and long-time collaborator Noble Sissle wrote the Broadway musical Shuffle Along, one of the first Broadway musicals to be written and directed by African Americans.


Blake's compositions included such hits as, "Bandana Days", "Charleston Rag", "Love Will Find A Way", "Memories of You", and "I'm Just Wild About Harry". The musical Eubie! featured the works of Blake and opened on Broadway in 1978.


Blake's musical training began when he was just four or five years old. While out shopping with his mother, he wandered into a music store, climbed on the bench of an organ, and started "foolin’" around. When his mother found him, the store manager said to her: "The child is a genius! It would be criminal to deprive him of the chance to make use of such a sublime, God-given talent."


The Blakes purchased a pump organ for US$75.00 making payments of 25 cents a week. When Blake was seven, he received music lessons from their neighbor, Margaret Marshall, an organist from the Methodist church. At age fifteen, without knowledge of his parents, he played piano at Aggie Shelton’s Baltimore bordello. Blake got his first big break in the music business when world champion boxer Joe Gans hired him to play the piano at Gans' Goldfield Hotel, the first "black and tan club" in Baltimore in 1907.



In 1923, Blake made three films in DeForest's Phonofilm sound-on-film process. They were Noble Sissle and Eubie Blake featuring their song "Affectionate Dan", Sissle and Blake Sing Snappy Songs featuring "Sons of Old Black Joe" and "My Swanee Home", and Eubie Blake Plays His Fantasy on Swanee River featuring Blake performing his "Fantasy on Swanee River". These films are preserved in the Maurice Zouary film collection in the Library of Congress collection.


In the 1950s, interest in ragtime revived and Blake, one of its last surviving artists, found himself launching yet another career as ragtime artist, music historian, and educator. Blake signed recording deals with 20th Century Records and Columbia Records, lectured and gave interviews at major colleges and universities all over the world, and appeared as guest performer and clinician at top jazz and rag festivals.


He was a frequent guest of The Johnny Carson Show and Merv Griffin. Blake was featured by leading conductors such as Leonard Bernstein and Arthur Fiedler. On October 9, 1981, Blake received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, awarded by President Ronald Reagan.



Blake claimed that he started smoking cigarettes when he was 10 years old, and continued to smoke all his life. The fact that he smoked for 85 years was used by some politicians in tobacco-growing states to build support against anti-tobacco legislation.

Eubie Blake died February 12, 1983, in Brooklyn, just five days after celebrating his 100th birthday.

Alberta Hunter sings "Memories of You" to Eubie Blake
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rbD-vNW8M9M

Reference - Wikipédia

SAXOFONISTA DE JAZZ SIR JOHN DANKWORTH, IN MEMORIAM


O saxofonista de jazz Sir John Phillip William Dankworth, (foto), conhecido no inicio da carreira como Johnny Dankworth, um dos principais músicos de jazz britânico por mais de seis décadas, morreu aos 82 anos, neste sábado, as 20h18 em Londres, de causa não revelada.


Ao longo de sua carreira, Dankworth trabalhou de perto com lendas do jazz como Nat King Cole, Ella Fitzgerald e Oscar Peterson. Ele também compôs o tema para as clássicas séries de televisão "The Avengers", e "Tomorrow's World", dos anos 60 e 70.


O músico, foi descrito pela revista Jazzwise como "uma das figuras totêmicas do jazz britânico", nasceu em Essex, sudeste da Inglaterra, em 1927, descobriu o jazz ouvindo o clarinetista e band leader Benny Goodman, seus pais, ainda que relutantes, o encorajaram a seguir carreira musical. Ganhou de sua mãe a primeira clarineta, antes dele entrar na prestigiosa Royal Academy of Music em Londres, aos 17 anos. Inspirado pelo saxofonista de jazz americano Charlie Parker, trocou de instrumento e logo passou a compor, a fazer arranjos e a gravar música nos dois lados do Atlântico.


Ele recebeu o título de "Sir" em 2006 pelos serviços prestados à música. Sir John Dankworth era casado com a maravilhosa cantora de jazz, Dame Cleo Laine.

O comunicado público sobre a morte de Sir Johnny, feito pela BBC.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6zs8f_SMczc

Sir John Dankworth, who died yesterday aged 82, was one of the totemic figures of British jazz, the first major jazz musician and the first British bebopper to be knighted, a leading musician, who with his wife Dame Cleo Laine, became known to the broader public beyond the jazz world and to an international audience, particularly in America.


Sir John had been in poor health for same time and back in November, before the London Jazz Festival where he was due to appear, was hospitalised with some fears that he would not make the concert. But made it he did even sitting on the stage in a wheelchair for the duration of the concert.


Born in Essex in 1927, Dankworth grew up in Walthamstow in a family of musicians and began to play clarinet after gaining a liking for the music of Benny Goodman. He later took up saxophone and studied at the Royal Academy of Music before national service. A high flier soon on the jazz scene in the UK he became a favourite with readers of Melody Maker in the late-1940s and was voted musician of the year, touring further afield with Sidney Bechet and even played with Charlie Parker in Paris.



His group the Dankworth Seven became a favourite on the local scene in the 1950s and later his big band extended the scope for his writing activities and ambitions and played at the Newport Jazz Festival in the States. Cleo Laine’s singing was a feature of his band’s performances and the pair married in 1958.


Dankworth began a parallel career as a film and TV composer and became known to a wider public for the music he wrote for The Avengers, Tomorrow’s World and Modesty Blaise. He made the charts with ‘African Waltz’ and became a frequent presence on radio and TV.
Aside from his musical career he developed a theatre, The Stables, in the garden of his home at Wavendon in Buckinghamshire which flourishes to this day and he became heavily involved in jazz education and as an ambassador for jazz. For his services to the music he was made a knight bachelor in the 2006 New Year’s Honours List.


Reference - Stephen Graham — a regular contributor to Jazzwise.com, the UK’s best-selling jazz publication — filed this early obituary on the internet while news of Johnny Dankworth’s death was breaking over the BBC.


Tradução de Humberto Amorim

Saturday, February 06, 2010

MANAUS,DOMINGO,MEIO DIA,JAZZ, DEANA MARTIN,STAN GETZ.


Neste domingo, a partir do meio dia, no programa "Momentos de Jazz" que nos últimos quinze anos, que se completam em abril, contribue para promoção da cultura jazz em Manaus, pelas ondas da Radio Amazonas FM 101.5 FM (www.amazonasfm.com.br), vamos destacar primeiramente a homenagem que Deana Martin, filha do cantor, ator e comediante Dean Martin, faz ao seu pai no CD "Memories Are Made of This". Deana interpreta, apoiada por uma big band, os grandes sucessos de Dino como "Aint That a Kick in The Head", "The Trolley Song", "Sway" e You're Nobody Until Somebody Loves You" entre outras.


O saxofonista coolester de jazz Stan Getz, teve na semana passada, a data de seu aniversário, lembrada em muitas partes do mundo, principalmente nos paises nórdicos onde Stan viveu durante algum tempo e fez muito sucesso. Vou destacar o disco "Bossas and Ballads: The Lost Sessions", gravado em 1989, quando Stan já enfrentava problemas de saúde e que foi publicado somente em 2003. O CD conta com a participação especial do pianista Kenny Baron, George Mraz no baixo e Victor Lewis na bateria.


O cantor de jazz Kurt Elling faturou nesta semana que ora finda, o Grammy de melhor disco de jazz vocal de 2009. O disco "Dedicated to You - Kurt Elling Sings the Music of John Coltrane" gravado ao vivo no Lincoln Center em Nova York, já era apontado pelos criticos como um dos favoritos para o prêmio, e a tendência se confirmou. Os solos de saxofone pelo virtuose Ernie Watts (What's New), sem dúvida alguma, contribuiram sobremaneira para o almejado acontecimento.



Fecharemos o programa com proprio Dean Martin cantando no CD "This Time I'm Swinging", a maioria das musicas que assinou e com as quais fez muito sucesso em toda década de 60. Dino está a vontade swingando, sem compromisso, naturalmente.



Conto com tua audiência. O melhor ainda está por vir.


Humberto Amorim

Locutor/Produtor



Nota do Blogger - Uma garrafa do soberbo vinho português Quinta da Garrida 2006 das tintas Jaen,Tinta Roriz e Touriga Nacional, será sorteado entre os ouvintes que participarem da promoção do programa, através do telefone 3216-5504.

NATALIE COLE


A cantora e compositora Stephanie Natalie Maria Cole ou simplesmente Natalie Cole, nasceu no 6 de fevereiro de 1950, e ao longo de uma bem sucedida carreira musical já faturou oito prêmios Grammy Awards.


É filha do também cantor e compositor Nat King Cole e Maria Cole, ex-cantora da big band de Duke Ellington. Em 1991, gravou o single "Unforgettable" onde a voz de seu pai, remasterizada, foi mixada a sua para simular que os dois, pai e filha, cantavam juntos.


Em junho de 2008, sua assessora de publicidade, Lellie Capwell, divulgou que Natalie foi diagnosticada com Hepatite C e provavelmente contraiu a doença hepática pelo uso de drogas por mais de trinta anos. Segundo foi divulgado também, ela reagiu bem ao tratamento, mas sofreu como consequência "efeitos colaterais significativos" que incluem fadiga, dores musculares e desidratação.



Em sua autobiografia "Angel on My Shoulder", publicada em 2000, ela declarou sua dependência de cocaína, heroína e álcool e que superou essa dependência após uma longa estadia em uma clínica de reabilitação no início dos anos 80.

Em 1971 escreveu o livro "Nat King Cole: An Intimate Biography" em parceria com Louis Robinson. Tem dois irmãos e o tio, pianista e cantor Freddy Cole, que continua na ativa e é muito admirado em todos os circuitos de jazz.


Natalie canta "It's Only a Paper Moon"





Singer, songwriter Natalie Maria Cole, was born on February 6, 1950, in Los Angeles, California the daughter of crooner Nat King Cole and former Duke Ellington Orchestra singer Maria Cole. Raised in the affluent Hancock Park district of Los Angeles, regarding her childhood, Cole has referred to her family as "the black Kennedys" and was exposed to many great singers of jazz, soul and blues. At the age of six Natalie sang on her father's Christmas album and later began performing at age 11. She achieved success in her early career as an R&B star, but smoothly changed her repertoire toward a more pop and jazz oriented musical style in the early 1990s. She has won nine Grammy Awards.


Her paternal uncle Freddy Cole is a singer and pianist with numerous CDs and awards. Cole was 15 years old and attending an east coast boarding school, the Northfield Mount Hermon School in Massachusetts, when her father died of lung cancer in February 1965. Soon afterwards she began having a difficult relationship with her mother.


Even before she graduated from college, Cole had already began singing on weekends at a small club called "The Pub". She was welcomed on the club circuit in hope of singing her father's music but tried to stay as far from his music as managers would allow. In fact, it was her own style of grit and soul that attracted R&B producers Chuck Jackson and Marvin Yancy at a nightclub called Mr. Kelley's. This partnership soon took the industry by storm with the release of her first album Inseparable with soul number one hits "This Will Be", and title track "Inseparable.



In 1975 Natalie was awarded a Grammy for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance for "This Will Be" and Best New Artist Grammy for the album Inseparable. Her high-power-style was often compared to Aretha Franklin and some critics even referred to her as the new queen of soul.


In 1976 Natalie was again awarded Best Female R&B Vocal Performance for "Sophisticated Lady" and a 1977 Best Female Vocalist American Music Award for gold certified "I've Got Love on My Mind".


Cole's career paused in the early 1980s as she dealt with her severe drug problems. By 1985, Cole was back in good health, and began a comeback with album Dangerous, released on the Modern label and included hits "A Little Bit Of Heaven" and title track which became a number one dance anthem.



Cole may be best remembered for her 1991 album, Unforgettable ...with Love, featuring her vocal arrangements of her father's greatest hits with piano accompaniment by her uncle Ike Cole. She sang 22 songs from Nat King Cole's collection including "The Very Thought of You", Mona Lisa,Route 66" and with a little help from technology, performed the title song Ünforgettable" as a duet with her father, using her father's original recording. As a single, it reached #14 on Billboard Magazine's Hot 100 chart and #10 on the R&B chart, and went gold and the video single six times platinum. The album was also a great success; selling over 7 million copies in the United States alone, and won Cole several Grammy Awards, including Album of the Year, Record of the Year, and Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance


CDs recomendados


1991: Unforgettable… with Love
1993: Take a Look

1995: A Celebration of Christmas (com José Carreras e Plácido Domingo)
1997: Stardust
2000: Greatest Hits: Vol. 1
2002: Ask a Woman Who Knows

2006: Leavin'



Fonte - Wikipédia

IGOR PROCHAZKA


Pianist and composer Igor Prochazka was born on February 6, 1975, in Zlin, Czech Republic, in a family of entertainment music professionals. After about ten years of basic classical piano education in Duesseldorf, Germany, he worked as bar pianist, presenting pop and jazz classics in exclusive restaurants and hotels.

Now he is based in Madrid, Spain, being member of various jazz and world music projects. Currently he is mainly working with his band Igor Prochazka Trio with Christian Perez (double-bass) and Federico Marini (drums), some of the most in-demand musicians in the capital's Jazz scene.

Awards in June 2007 Igor Prochazka Trio won the first prize for jazz group in the nation-wide contest "Audiciones" (Fundación Canal Isabel II - Madrid, Spain). Jazz Hihyo - Jazz Critique Magazine (Japan) listed his album "Easy Route" (Igor Prochazka Trio) as number 6 among Best Jazz CDs 2008.


"Blackbird" by the Igor Prochazka Trio.




Reference - Jazz Madrid

NATASHA MILLER

A vocalista de jazz, compositora, guitarrista e pianista Natasha Miller, nasceu no 6 de fevereiro de 1971, em Des Moines, Iowa, e começou a sua carreira musical como violinista de música clássica trabalhando como condutora para uma sinfonica no Meio Oeste americano e com o seu conjunto de cordas "The Sapphire String Quatet".

Foi para a região de Sãp Francisco em 1995 e começou compondo e acompanhando a si mesma ao violão e piano em pequenos contratos. Movida pela paixão de cantar os clássicos do jazz pelo seu pai pianista, começou a se apresentar em eventos particulares, festas, festivais e concertos, aumentou a sua banda, mesclou as canções jazzisticas com as c suas composições pop/rock. Para se dedicar totalmente a musica, abandonou uma atividade de bom rendimento numa agencia de publicidade, trocou a casa confortavel por um apartamento menor e com sua pequena filha, resolveu enfrentar os novos desafios da carreira musical e até hoje não se arrependeu.

Em 2002 produziu o seu primeiro CD "Her Life" com composições proprias e, no final do mesmo ano, descolou seu primeiro album de jazz "Talk To Me Nice" marcado pela leitura de standards como "Peel me A Grape" "Makin' Whoopee, "Stompin at the Savoy" e a dramática "Good Morning Heartache".

Em 2003, Natasha achou o pote de ouro, depois de um entrevista em uma radio de jazz, promovendo uma apresentação, quando teve como ouvinte o grande compositor Bobby Sharp de "Unchain My Heart", feita famosa pelo genial Ray Charles. Sharp, encantado pela sua bela voz, enviou para Natasha algumas composições inéditas. Seis meses depois, ao apresentar as canções em um concerto de lotação esgotada, trouxe lágrimas para os olhos do veterano compositor, e também, levou a platéia ao delírio.

Natasha, gerencia a sua carreira através da sua produtora Entire Productions e continua se apresentando regularmente em diversos clubes situados na área de entretenimento noturno da cidade de São Francisco e por toda Costa Oeste americana.


Natasha Miller sings "Unchain my Heart"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H1z1mUUDbtw
.

Jazz vocalist,guitarist and pianist Natasha Miller was born on February 6,1971 in Des Moines, Iowa, and began her musical career as a classical violinist, serving as a concertmaster for a symphony in the Midwest and founding her own string ensemble, "The Sapphire String Quartet."





She moved to the San Francisco Bay Area in 1995 and began composing and performing songs, accompanying herself on the guitar and piano. Charged with the passion for singing jazz standards with her pianist father, she began performing for private events, parties, and concerts and festivals, enlarging her band and mixing jazz tunes with her own pop/rock compositions.








She spent her days working in the advertising industry and her evenings cultivating her performing career.In 2001, Natasha was a single mother working as a media buyer in an ad agency, making a yearly salary in the high fives when she decided she should quit her job to pursue her musical dream. She left her comfortable 3-bedroom home and moved with her 8-year-old daughter to a small one-bedroom apartment—just in case she didn't make enough money that first year. Since then, she’s never looked back.





In the beginning, she often performed up to 5 times a week in the evenings and on weekends. In 2002, Natasha produced her first album—a collection of her own work called "Her Life", and later that year, her first jazz album, "Talk to Me Nice". In "Talk to Me Nice", she flirts with “Peel Me A Grape” and “Makin’ Whoopee,” swings through “Stompin’ at the Savoy,” and creates an intimate yet ironic dialogue with personal tragedy in “Good Morning Heartache.” “Call these standards if you must,” a fan writes, “but there’s nothing standard about the way Miller brings these jazz treasures to life.”





Then in 2003, Natasha discovered a gold mine. Actually, the gold mine discovered her. Miller was giving an interview on KCSM Jazz 91 in the Bay Area, promoting one of her many concerts. Little did she know that listening that day was songwriter Bobby Sharp. Known for his hit song "Unchain My Heart", made famous and a Top Ten Hit by Ray Charles in 1961 and performed more recently by Joe Cocker, Sharp was blown away by Natasha's voice. After hearing her on the radio, he figured Natasha would appreciate his songs, so he sent them to her. When she opened the package of his songs, including never-before-heard gems, she knew she had discovered a long-lost treasure of the most beautiful jazz ballads—lyrically masterful, melodically exquisite, and harmonically alluring. Five months later, she presented a concert in the great songwriter’s honor, bringing tears to his eyes and the sold-out crowd to their feet.








Now, 2 years and 2 albums later, Sharp’s 35-year leave of absence from his songwriting career is over, his catalogue of songs is out of the piano bench, and there’s no sign this musical tandem is anything but just getting started.





In addition to performing and managing her own career, Natasha owns her own production company, Entire Productions, and from a roster of over 400 top-call musicians of all instruments and genres, she books concerts and festivals in Bay Area venues and up and down the West Coast.


Recommended CDs

Her Life
Talk to me Nice (Jazz Standards)
I Had a Feelin'
Don't Move






Reference - Natasha's website
Tradução de Humberto Amorim

Friday, February 05, 2010

BILL MAYS




O pianista de jazz William Allen Mays, nasceu no 5 de fevereiro de 1944, em Sacramento, California, e ficou conhecido por Bill Mays. Nascido em uma familia musical, aos dezeseis anos tornou-se interessado em jazz durante um corcerto da Orquestra de Earl Hines.



De 1969 a 1980 trabalhou em Los Angeles e acompanhou grandes nomes da música como Sarah Vaughn, Al Jarreau, Frank Sinatra, Dionne Warwick, Anita O'Day e outros tantos. Também realizou trabalhos com Art Pepper, Shelly Manne, Bud Shank, Red Mitchell Bobby Shew, Benny Golson, Ernie Watts, Abe Laboriel, Tom Scott e Frank Zappa.




No final de 1984 foi para Nova York. Ficou conhecido como pianista acompanhante , porém, nos anos 90, iniciou carreira como bandleader,compositor e arranjador. Desde o inicio dos anos 70 gravou uma dúzia de discos com seu próprio nome, mas pode ser ouvido em muitos outros.


Bill, em duo com o baixista Red Mitchell em "I mean you"


Jazz pianist William Allen Mays, was born on February 5, 1944 in Sacramento, California and is normally referred to as "Bill Mays." He came from a musical family and at sixteen he became interested in jazz at an Earl Hines concert.




From 1969 to the early 1980s he worked in Los Angeles accompanying Sarah Vaughan, Al Jarreau, Frank Sinatra, Dionne Warwick, Anita O'Day and other singers, and also worked with artists such as Arty Pepper, Shelly Manne, Bud Shank, Red Mitchell,Bobby Shew, Ernie Watts, Abe Laboriel, Tom Scott, and Frank Zappa.




Later, in 1984, he moved to New York City. He had been best known as a sideman or accompanist, but starting in the 1990s he began to do more work as a bandleader, composer, and arranger. From the 1970s on, he recorded over a dozen albums under his own name, and has been heard on many more by others.
Fonte Wikipédia
Tradução de Humberto Amorim

JUTTA HIPP, THE FIRST EUROPEAN PIANIST TO BE SIGNED BY THE BLUE NOTE LABEL

A pianista de jazz alemã Jutta Hipp, nasceu no 4 de Fevereiro de 1925 em Leipzig, na Alemanha. Foi residente nos Estados Unidos por muitos anos e se expressou musicalmente nos idiomas do bebop e cool jazz. Na adolescencia Hipp frequentou a Academia de Artes de Leipzig, e se formou em design gráfico.

Depois da guerra, em 1946, escapou da Alemanha Oriental, onde se localizava a sua cidade natal, para a parte Ocidental do país, dividido pelos soviéticos. Começou a tocar jazz neste mesmo peiríodo, trabalhando com Hans Koller. Ainda na Alemanha liderou um quinteto, no qual, Emil, o irmão de Albert Mangelsdorff, era um dos integrantes.

Como pianista Hipp era notadamente ligada a tradiçãodo swing, chegando a admitir que seu estilo era influenciado pelos pianistas Count Basie, Teddy Wilson e Fats Waller. Na época em que a refugiada Hipp começou a tocar profissionalmentese na Bavária em 1946, o bebop chegou a Alemanha e se tornou a mais nova "moda" do jazz. Jutta adotou então um nova ídolo, o pianista Bud Powell. Ela negava as insinuações de que seu estilo sofria a grande influência de Lennie Tristano.


Foi integrante do quarteto de Hans Koller no inicio dos anos 50 e entre 54/55 liderou o seu próprio grupo. Jutta chegou em Nova York em novembro de 1955. É dela a honra de ter sido a primeira mulher branca e musicista européia, a assinar um contrato com a Gravadora Blue Note.

Em 1956 gravou um de seus melhores discos com o saxofonista Zoot Sims e obteve um contrato para tocar no famoso restaurante de Manhattan, Hickory House, onde permaneceu por seis meses. Foi reconhecida em seu país como talentosa pianista de jazz, entretanto, jamais retornou.

Devido a problemas financeiros, por falta de contratos com a musica, aos poucos foi abandonando a carreira artistica. Tornou-se, por questão de sobrevivência, costureira em uma pequena fábrica de roupas. Nas horas vagas passou a fotofgrafar os colegas de musica em vários clubes de Nova York e as enviava para Alemanha, onde eram publicadas. Dedicou-se também a outra paixão, a pintura e gravura, onde se destacou fazendo as caricaturas dos musicos de jazz de sua época e também para eles, escreveu vários poemas.


Hipp jamais se casou ou constituiu familia, mas permaneceu fiel a sua convicção de que o verdadeiro jazz acontece nos pequenos clubes, onde uma maioria de talentosos e completamente desconhecidos musicos de jazz, atuam com altíssimo índice de excelencia.

Jutta Hipp faleceu no bairro de Queens em Nova York, em Abril de 2003.

Jutta toca no Hickory House.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vVXhL1gkQvY


German jazz pianist Jutta Hipp, was born on February 4, 1925 in Leipzig, Germany. She was long resident in the United States who worked mostly in the bebop and cool jazz idioms.
As a teenager in Germany during World War II Hipp had attended the Leipzig Academy of Arts, majoring in graphic design. After the war, in 1946, she fled to the western half of Germany, leaving behind her now Soviet Army ruled home town of Leipzig. She began playing jazz during this period, working with Hans Koller for a time. In Germany she also led a quintet, Albert Mangelsdorff's brother Emil was one of the noteworthy members.


As a pianist Hipp was deeply rooted in the swing tradition and, self-admittedly, her performance style was influenced by Count Basie and Teddy Wilson as well as Fats Waller. By the time East German refugee Hipp begun playing professionally in Bavaria in 1946, bebop had arrived as the latest “fad” in "jazz". The pianist’s new idol became Bud Powell. And although critics, fellow musicians, and fans recognized Lennie Tristano's influence in her playing by the early ‘50s, she did not approve of such comparisons. Hipp was a member of the Hans Koller Quartet in the early 1950s and from 1954-55 led her own group. Hipp was able to claim the honor of having been the only widely known and highly respected female jazz pianist in Germany and beyond until the mid-1980s despite the fact that she never returned to her native country.


Jutta Hipp arrived in New York on November 18, 1955. Within months of her arrival in New York, Hipp earned the notable distinction of becoming the first white woman as well as the first European instrumentalist to be signed by the Blue Note label.


Hipp cut three albums as leader for Blue Note in 1956; an earlier album had been leased from Europe. The most successful of the 1956 recordings featured the tenor saxophonist Zoot Sims. (The record has been re-released in America, Japan and on grey market issues in Europe.) With Feather’s assistance Hipp landed a highly coveted six-month engagement at the renowned Hickory House Restaurant in Manhattan, subbing for the touring house pianist Marian McPartland, and was able to add a well-received debut at the 1956 Newport Jazz Festival to her credentials. The Hickory House engagement was recorded by Blue Note and issued over two LPs.


Hipp was not interested in making her living by being billed as a headliner or in playing and recording music that did not move her. Hipp did not record again but booked herself for smaller venues in New York City, on Long Island, and for a few national engagements, including at least one tour of the South with other leaders. However, with jazz gradually moving out of the arena of popular culture, the anxieties resulting from the financial instability of her musician’s life proved too stressful for Hipp.

She was a single, self-supporting woman—without any family in the United States—and by the late 50s Hipp had taken on a day job as a seamstress at a clothing manufacturer in Queens, New York. After continuing to perform part-time on weekends until 1960, Hipp shifted her focus completely and returned to her first love: drawing and painting.


In 2000 several of her paintings were featured in an exhibition at the Langston Hughes Community Library and Cultural Center in Corona, New York. The artist—who was known for her quick wit and hearty laughter—also drew caricatures of jazz musicians and dedicated poems to them. Over the years, several of her works were published by the German magazine Jazz Podium. Hipp was also a talented doll maker, creating a series of unique boudoir style dolls some of which she donated to the Museum of the City of New York.


Hipp never touched a piano again and many of her longtime post-jazz era friends were not aware of her history as a jazz pianist until they read the artist’s published obituaries. However, she always remained close to the music she loved. Equipped with a small camera, Hipp tirelessly chronicled concerts at small jazz clubs around Queens. Throughout the years, she took photos of many jazz musicians whose performances she had enjoyed and sent them to friends and jazz magazines in her native Germany.


Unshaken in her convictions stated decades earlier, and repeated in letters to friends throughout the years, Hipp never ceased to believe that the real jazz happened in small clubs, performed by superb musicians whose talents were not widely recognized because they did not push themselves into the limelight.


Hipp, who had never married, died of pancreatic cancer on April 7, 2003, in her apartment in Sunnyside, Queens. After her death , she became of some interest as a woman instrumentalist in the New York jazz scene.

Recommended CDs

Jutta Hipp at The Hickory House (1955)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vVXhL1gkQvY

Cool Europe (Has two tracks each by Johnny Dankworth, and Albert Hall) (MGM, 1955)
At the Hickory House, Vol. 2 (Blue Note, 1955)
Jutta Hipp With Zoot Sims (Blue Note) (1957)


Reference - Wikipédia
Tradução de Humberto Amorim

JULIE HARDY, THE WISH


Jazz vocalist and composer Julie Hardy was born on February 4, 1977, grew up in Fremont, New Hampshire, an area not known as a jazz center but one with more than enough resources to nurture her talents.


Hardy started singing at a very young age, improvising and writing her own songs. Fortunate to have parents who encouraged music, she began studying classical piano at age 9 and had her first solo singing debut at age 11 in the Ellis School variety show. She was introduced to jazz at Oyster River High School in Durham, NH by her music teacher, Marc Laforce, who is an accomplished jazz tenor saxophonist.



Here, she continued to compose music and in her senior year, she wrote, directed and conducted a full-length musical. After high school, she attended the University of New Hampshire, where she studied both classical and jazz composition as well as piano and voice.When, she began to figure out what it really meant to be a jazz musician, she was already writing wordless music and when she heard Wayne Shorter's album “Speak No Evil” it opened up a new world of knowledge and feeling which greatly influenced her composing and reinforced the direction she was heading in.
After graduation from UNH with a Bachelor's in Composition, she received a scholarship to attend New England Conservatory of Music in Boston. Graduate studies allowed Hardy to expand her musical horizons even further, and introduced her to a pool of emerging jazz talents. While at NEC, Hardy was introduced to many influences such as Kenny Wheeler, Pat Metheny, and Keith Jarrett. She also had the chance to work with inspirational teachers such as Dominique Eade, John McNeil, Jerry Bergonzi, George Garzone, and Fred Hersch.



Inspired by Dominique Eade, she continued to compose wordless melodies and treat the voice like an instrument. Graduate studies helped Hardy hone her skills and laid the groundwork for life as a professional musician in New York City.


In July of 2002, Julie was one of two vocalists in the nation selected to attend the prestigious Jazz Academy Snowmass in Aspen, Co. directed by Christian McBride. That following March of 2003, Julie attended the Betty Carter Jazz Ahead, a program designed to promote young jazz composers, held at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. She was one of four vocalists chosen internationally to attend and have her piece performed at the Kennedy Center and broadcasted live on-line across the world.


In June of 2003, four days after moving to New York City, Julie recorded her debut CD “A Moment's Glance”, featuring two fellow NEC colleagues Robert Stillman, tenor sax and Randy Ingram piano. Ben Street, bass and Adam Cruz, drums (of the Danilo Perez Trio) completed the ensemble. This record was released on the label Fresh Sound New Talent out of Barcelona, Spain.


In April 2005, Hardy released “A Moment's Glance” to a full house at the Jazz Standard in New York City. She was also selected to perform at the Diet Coke Women in Jazz Festival at Jazz at Lincoln Center. Last year Hardy was acknowledged for her talent as a composer by receiving the 2006 ASCAP Young Jazz Composers Award for her composition “No Turning Back” which is featured on her recent Fresh Sound release.


In 2007, Hardy released her second CD "The Wish" on World Culture Music which is an artist collective record label and multi-faceted music company that was created by drummer Kendrick Scott. WCM is an alliance of like-minded musicians who are making a significant impact on both today's jazz scene and on music in general. In addition to Scott and Hardy WCM also includes guitarist Mike Moreno and trombonist Nick Vayenas.



Hardy's group features some of New York City's best emerging jazz artists including Jaleel Shaw, alto saxophone; John Ellis, soprano and tenor saxophone; Ben Monder and Mike Moreno, guitars; Randy Ingram, piano; Matt Clohesy, bass; and Kendrick Scott, and Jared Schonig, drums. "The Wish" has received critical acclaim from Downbeat, JazzTimes, N.Y. Times, Time Out New York, and AllAboutJazz.
Julie does "I'm Looking Thru You"


Review from the New York Times


"On her new album, "The Wish" (World Culture Music), Ms. Hardy burnishes her growing reputation as a musically astute and thoughtfully modern jazz singer."
Nate Chinen, New York Times


Reference - Hardy's website

Wednesday, February 03, 2010

LIL ARMSTRONG, HOT MISS LIL

Pianist,composer, vocalist, recording artist, band leader Lilian Beatrice Hardin, best known as Lil Hardin Armstrong, was born on February 3,1898. Lil Hardin helped introduce America to jazz music. She was a dedicated jazz pianist, who established a reputation as “Hot Miss Lil,” one of the few female band ensemble members of the 1920’s. She played on many of the first jazz recordings ever made and she wrote many of the early songs of the jazz era. Though she might be identified in the jazz world as the wife of Louis Armstrong, she was much more than that.



Her grandmother, Priscilla Thompson, was born into slavery in 1850 in Lafayette County near Oxford, Mississippi. Her parents separated when Armstrong was very young. As a young child Lil lived with her mother in a boarding house in Memphis, a few blocks from Beale Street, a bustling nightlife area for blacks where much of blues and jazz music was beginning to take shape. Young Lil began playing the organ at early by taking music lessons at age six. By nine, she played the organ for sunday school, at 16, Lil won a music contest at her music school. It was this contest that made her realize she had a future in music. Her mother concerned that her daughter's passion for music would lead her to a sinful life, sent her to Fisk University in Nashville.

Lil began taking classes in the fall of 1915; enrolling in a college preparatory program and took high school courses in English, science, Latin, and home economics in preparation for college courses. She returned to Memphis in 1916 and continued to play the piano. However, when her mother discovered that she was playing the blues, what she considered to be “devil's music,” she decided that Lil would have to leave Memphis and all of its negative influences. In 1917 Lil's family moved to Chicago.


Although Lil was determined to build a career in music, it was difficult for her to find a band willing to include a female piano player. Her lucky break came when Lawrence Duhé and his New Orleans Creole Jazz Band came to Chicago looking for a piano player. They hired her at $22.50 a week. She tried to keep her job a secret from her mother, but mom eventually heard the news. She was not happy with her daughter's career choice, but decided that it was better than being a cook or a housekeeper.


Armstrong became known as “Hot Miss Lil” and was immediately popular on the nightclub scene. With her hard-pounding hands on the piano, youthful face, and slender body, she was an attraction all unto herself. She played like a man, but dressed like a Sunday school teacher. During her early years as a nightclub performer Armstrong played with some of the greatest performers of that time, including legendary cornet player Joe “King” Oliver and singer Alberta Hunter. Lil Hardin was a novelty among jazz bands. While it was common for women to front blues and jazz bands as a vocalist, it was unusual for them to play as part of the ensemble.



Louis Armstrong was smitten with Lil when he first saw her, but Lil was not as impressed and she was still married to her first husband. However, Lil and Jimmy Johnson soon separated and a romance began between Louis and Lil. Louis Armstrong was also becoming a musical sensation in Chicago, taking some of the spotlight away from Lil. Their personal relationship grew as their musical careers blossomed. Louis and Lil Armstrong married on February 5, 1924, after dating for about two years.


Lil and Louis Armstrong continued to play with King Oliver's jazz band. Soon they were recording one of the first jazz records ever, “King Oliver’s Creole Jazz Band.”(Gennett 1923) The band also toured the Midwest, traveling to Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, and Wisconsin. Lil was concerned that her husband's considerable talents were wasted playing second cornet to King Oliver, so she eventually persuaded him to leave the band. In 1924 Louis Armstrong landed a job as first trumpeter with Fletcher Henderson's Black Swan Troubadours in New York City. Lil followed her husband to the East coast, but she was not well received in the musical community. No one was eager to hire a female pianist, so she returned to Chicago by herself.


While her husband played in New York, Lil came up with a way to showcase Louis' talents and bring him the fame and recognition that she felt he deserved. She returned to the Dreamland nightclub and put together her own band which featured her husband on lead trumpet. The group was called Lil's Dreamland Syncopators and Louis was the main attraction. He earned $75 a week to perform at Dreamland, which was a huge sum of money for a black performer at that time.


In 1925 Lil and Louis Armstrong recorded “Louis Armstrong & his Hot Five,” for OKeh Records. The album included four songs written by Lil. A year later they produced a second album. However, while their careers were flourishing, their marriage was deteriorating. Louis had had several affairs while married to Armstrong, and in 1925 he moved in with his girlfriend, Alpha Smith. He also left Armstrong's band at Dreamland and led a new band called Louis Armstrong and His Stompers at the Sunset Café. Despite their strained personal relationship, Lil and Louis Armstrong continued to write songs and recorded “Louis Armstrong & his Hot Six” ( OKeh 1928) and she continued to work as his manager. Lil also decided to return to school to get a formal music education. She enrolled in the Chicago College of Music and earned a degree in 1928.


In 1929 Chicago's nightclubs suffered from a federal crackdown on organized crime, so Louis moved to New York, Lil followed and enrolled in the New York College of Music. After procuring her postgraduate degree Armstrong returned to Chicago, for she no was no longer Louis' manager. For the next two years Lil and Louis had an on and off relationship and she accompanied him to California and New Orleans.

However, in 1931 Lil grew tired of Louis' infidelities and connections to organized crime gangs, and she separated from him. While Louis toured Europe, Armstrong formed two all-female bands in Chicago in 1931 and 1932. From 1933 to 1935 she led an all-male band based in Buffalo, New York, but the group suffered because audiences were not very receptive to a female band leader.



In 1938 Lil Armstrong finally agreed to divorce Louis, but they remained close friends for life. In 1952 and 1953 she traveled to Europe to perform again. Her warm reception in Europe convinced her to return to Chicago to renew her performing career. However, by that time the music scene had changed dramatically, as had race relations in America, and Armstrong was unable to rebuild an audience. Armstrong recorded one more album in 1961 when she was invited to participate in a series of recordings called “Chicago--The Living Legends.”
Lil spent the last decade of her life giving occasional performances and following her ex-husband's career.

Throughout all her success and failures, she remained true to her own moral vision and, in doing so she became a role model for how to achieve goals in life while remaining true to one's self.
Lil Hardin was an accomplished musician who was present at a seminal point in the formation of jazz, and one of the members of the Hot Five, her reputation stands on that!

Lil Armstrong "Safely Locked Up in My Heart"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VdzPJSpzJOM

Reference - ATJ

Tuesday, February 02, 2010

STAN GETZ, O PAI AMERICANO DA BOSSA NOVA


O lendário saxofonista de jazz Stan Getz, nasceu com o nome de Stanley Gayetsky, no 2 de fevereiro de 1927, na Filadélfia . Os seus pais eram judeus, naturais da Ucrânia, que imigraram de Kiev, em 1903. Mais tarde, a sua família viajou para Nova York, à procura de melhores condições de vida e emprego. Getz foi um aluno empenhado, de notas máximas, terminando no topo dos melhores alunos da sua classe.


A sua paixão era pelos instrumentos musicais, e tinha que tocar todos os que encontrava no seu caminho. O primeiro saxofone recebeu de seu pai, aos 13 anos. Também ganhou uma clarineta, mas esta ficou em segundo plano. Getz dedicava grande parte dos seus dias, praticando saxofone.


Em 1941, é aceito na orquestra "All City High School Orchestra", de Nova Iorque. Isto proporcionou-lhe a oportunidade de ter como tutor particular, Simon Kovar, da Filarmónica de Nova Iorque. Paralelamente, também tocava em pequenos concertos eventuais. Aos 14 anos, compra o seu primeiro saxofone tenor, com o dinheiro que juntou com esses concertos. No entanto, a sua dedicação à música prejudicava a sua vida escolar, e acabou mesmo por deixar de estudar, para se dedicar totalmente à carreira musical. Mais tarde, foi obrigado a regressar à escola, pelos representantes do sistema escolar.


Em 1943, entra para a banda de Jack Teagarden, e toca, também, com Nat King Cole e Lionel Hampton. Após tocar nas orquestras de Stan Kenton, Jimmy Dorsey e Benny Goodman, Getz torna-se solista com Woody Herman, de 1947 a 1949, destacando-se como um dos principais saxofonistas da banda, conhecida como "os quatro irmãos"; os outros eram Serge Chaloff, Zoot Sims e Herbie Steward. Com Herman, Getz alcança um primeiro êxito com "Early Autumn". Após deixar a banda de Herman, inicia a sua carreira a solo. A partir de 1950, seria o líder na quase totalidade das gravações onde participará.



Nos anos 50, Stan Getz tornou-se famoso como intérprete do "cool jazz", tocando com Horace Silver, Johnny Smith, Oscar Peterson, entre outros. Os seus dois primeiros quintetos incluíam nomes famosos como o baterista de Charlie Parker, Roy Haynes, o pianista Al Haig e o contrabaixista Tommy Potter. Em 1958, Getz muda-se para Copenhagen, com o objetivo de deixar o consumo das drogas.


No regresso ao seu país em 1961, tornou-se uma das principais figuras da bossa nova. Junto com o violonista Charlie Byrd, que tinha regressado de uma turnê no Brasil, Getz grava "Jazz Samba", em 1962, que se torna um sucesso e o primeiro disco de bossa nova gravado por musicos americanos. A faixa principal era uma adaptação de "Samba De Uma Nota Só", de Antonio Carlos Jobim. Stan Getz ganha o Grammy para a Melhor Interpretação de Jazz, em 1963, com "Desafinado". Também gravou com Tom Jobim, João Gilberto, e sua esposa, Astrud Gilberto.


A sua interpretação de "Garota de Ipanema", deu-lhe mais um Grammy. "Garota de Ipanema" tornou-se uma das canções mais conhecidas do jazz latino, de todos os tempos. Getz e João Gilberto, ganharam dois Grammy (Melhor Álbum e Melhor Single), superando os The Beatleas, em "A Hard Day's Night". Em 1967, Getz grava com Chick Corea e Stanley Clarke.


No início dos anos 70, Stan Getz é influênciado pelo jazz de fusão e "jazz eléctrico", utilizando um Echoplex no seu saxofone. Os críticos não gostarm da nova experiência, o que levou Getz a desistir desta sonoridade, regressando ao jazz mais tradicional e acústico. A partir dos anos 80, gradualmente, Getz deixa a bossa nova, e opta por um estilo de jazz mais tradicional e acústico.


Desde a juventude Getz consumia drogas e álcool. Casado com Beverly Byrne, vocalista da banda de Gene Krupa, em 7 de novembro de 1946, teve três filhos, Steve, David e Beverly. Em 1954, foi detido por tentar roubar uma farmácia, em busca de morfina. Durante o processo de detenção, no sector prisional do centro médico USC Medical Center, de Los Angeles, Beverly deu à luz ao seu terceiro filho, nesse mesmo edifício.

Em 1956 no dia 3 de novembro, casa-se com Monica Silfverskiold, uma aristocrata sueca, com quem teve dois filhos. Em 1957, tem um filho de uma relação com a sua amiga Inga Torgner. Após vários anos tentando ajudar Getz a combater o seu vicio pelas drogas, Monica divorcia-se em 1987, e ganha a custódia de todos os filhos do seu ex-marido.


Nos últimos anos da sua vida, Stan Getz consegue, finalmente, terminar com a sua dependência do álcool e drogas. Morre de cancer no fígado, em 6 de junho de 1991.


Em 1998, em sua homenagem , uma ala na escola de música de Berklee, recebeu o nome de "Stan Getz Media Center and Library".


Stan Getz faleceu na California em 1991.


Stan toca "Wave"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WctZJcPwnOQ




Fonte - Wikipédia

SONNY STITT, O LOBO SOLITÁRIO


O saxofonista de jazz bebop e hard bop Edward "Sonny" Stitt, nasceu no 2 de fevereiro de 1924, em Boston, Massachusetts. Durante a sua profícua carreira, foi um dos saxofonistas de sua geração que gravou mais de 100 discos.



Foi apelidado como "Lobo Solitário" pelo critico musical Dan Morgenstern, devido as inúmeras apresentações e dedicação cega ao jazz. Foi considerado como um dos mais fiés discípulos do saxofonista Charlie Parker. Apesar de beber da fonte de Parker e Lester Young, Sonny desenvolveu seu proprio estilo que inclusive veio a influenciar o jazz master John Coltrane. Stitt expressava a sua musicalidade com excepcional musicalidade ao tocar o blues e baladas tipo "Skylark".

Em 1943, Stitt conheceu Charlie Parker, e com ele gravou várias vezes. Os dois descobriram e exploraram as similaridades em seus estilos. As primeiras gravações de Stitts foram com Stan Getz e Dizzy Gillespie em 1945. Apesar de ter tocado com algumas bandas de swing, preferia se manifestar musicalmente nas bandas que seguiam a linha bop.


Stitt também tocou o saxofone alto na banda de Billy Ekstine ao lado de dois outros saxofonistas que se tornariam pioneiros do bop: Dexter Gordon e Gene Ammons. Depois deste periodo, adotou definitivamente o sax tenor.


Posteriormente tocou com Gene Ammons e o excêntrico e genial pianista Bud Powell. Entre 1948 e 1949 a carreira de Stitt foi interrompida, por ter sido condenado a prisão, pelo envolvimento com o tráfico de drogas.


Quando Stitt tocava, conseguia anular a critica que o taxava como imitador do estilo de Charlie Parker. Na verdade, Stitt desenvolveu o seu próprio estilo aos se expressar quando tocava o seu sax tenor, com uma sonoridade marcada e indubitavelmente resistente, a comparações. Este fato está mais do que comprovado, nos discos que gravou para as gravadoras Prestige, Argo, Verve e Roost.


Stitt. também incursionou pelo Jazz Afro-Cubano com Thad Jones e Chick Corea, gravando versões latinas de clássicos como "Autumn Leaves".


Em 1960 se integrou a banda de Miles Davis com quem chegou a gravar. Os concertos ao vivo que gravou com Davis em Manchester e Paris ainda estão disponiveis comercialmente e também uma série de shows (que incluem a associação anterior com o quinteto de John Coltrane) ao vivo em Estocolmo, com Wynton Kelly, Jimmy Cobb e Paul Chambers.


Nos anos 60, Stitt gravou com Paul Gonsalves, pupilo do bandleader e pianista Duke Ellington, e nesta mesma década se apresentou sistematicamente no famoso clube de jazz londrino Ronnie's Scott. Com Ronnie gravou em 1964 o CD "The Night Has A Thousand Eyes" e um outro, em 1966, com o guitarrista Ernest Ranglin e com o tenorista britanico Dick Morrissey.



Sonny, faleceu em 1982, em Washington D.C.
Sonny Stitt "Everything Happens to Me"
Fonte - Wikipédia

HENRIQUE CAZES, O CAVAQUINISTA BRASILEIRO


O cavaquinista, compositor e arranjador brasileiro Henrique Leal Cazes, nasceu no 2 de fevereiro de 1959, no Rio de Janeiro. Henrique é filho do violonista e compositor Marcel Cazes. Seu irmão é o percussionista Beto Cazes.



Henrique Cazes é autodidata, tendo iniciado aos sete anos seus estudos de violão. Com o tempo expandiu seus interesses a outros instrumentos de cordas como o cavaquinho, o banjo, a viola caipira, o bandolim e o violão tenor. Sua Carreira musical iniciou em 1976 com o grupo Coisas Nossas, dedicado à divulgação da obra de Noel Rosa.



A partir de 1980, participou com seu irmão Beto Cazes do renomado conjunto Camerata Carioca, a que também pertenciam o bandolinista Joel Nascimento e o pianista e compositor Radamés Gnattali. Em 1988, tornou-se também produtor musical, lançando o Selo Musicazes.



Neste mesmo ano publicou a sua Escola moderna do cavaquinho. Em 2004 tornou-se apresentador de rádio, lançando o programa "Nacional Choro Clube" na Rádio Nacional AM, tendo entrevistado e apresentado alguns dos mais importantes músicos do choro e do samba.
Henrique toca "Minhas Mãos Meu Cavaquinho"
Fonte - Wikipédia

Monday, February 01, 2010

SADAO WATANABE, O EXCEPCIONAL SAXOFONISTA JAPONÊS


O saxofonista e clarinetista de jazz japonês Sadao Watanabe, nasceu no 1 de janeiro de 1933, em Utsunomiya, Japão, e sempre teve uma personalidade musical que oscila entre várias influências. Ele alterna um excelente bebop com fracos álbuns populares próximo aos estilos de Grover Washington Jr. e David Sanborn.
Watanabe aprendeu clarinete e contralto na escola secundária e nos anos cinqüenta se mudou para Tóquio. Em 1953 passou a fazer parte do grupo bop de Toshiko Akiyoshi. Quando a pianista foi para os EUA em 1956, Watanabe passou a liderar a banda. Ele freqüentou a Berklee School durante 1962-1965, onde teve a oportunidade de trabalhar com Gary McFarland, Chico Hamilton e Gabor Szabo.
Porém, Watanabe acabou permanecendo no Japão a maior parte da sua carreira, onde ele é uma das maores influências para os músicos mais jovens. Ele gravou continuamente pelos anos, destacando-se os trabalhos que fez com Chick Corea em New York (1970) e com o Galaxy All-Stars (1978).
Suas gravações estilo bop foram inspiradas em Charlie Parker, mas não se pode esquecer a profunda relação de watanabe com a música brasileira, que se iniciou nos anos setenta.
Sadao desenvolve "Samba de Orfeu"
Discografia recomendada
Remembrance
Viajando
Basie's at Night
A Night with String (1 & 2)
In Tempo - Sadao Watanabe (as,sn) , Cesar Camargo Mariano (key) , Marcelo Mariano (el-b) , Pantico Rocha (ds) , Paulinho Da Costa (per) , Leila Pinheiro (vo) , Wilson De Castro (vo) and others
Sweet Deal - Sadao Watanabe (as) , Peter Erskine (ds) , Russell Ferrante (key) , Abraham Laboriel (el-b) , Paul Jackson Jr.(g) , Alex Acuna (per) , Paulinho Da Costa (per) , Dori Caymmi (g) , Robbie Buchanan (key) , Neil Stubenhaus (el-b) , Michael Landau (g) , Carlos Vega (ds) , John Patitucci (b) , William Kennedy (ds) , Warren Wiebe (vo)
Minha Saudade - Sadao Watanabe (as,sn) , Cesar Camargo Mariano (p) , Romero Lubambo (ac-g) , David Finck (b) , Paulo Braga (ds) , Mauro Refosco (per) / with Tokyo Symphony Chamber Orchestra / conducted by Marcelo Zarvous
Fonte - CDJ

NORA MCCARTHY


Singer, Vocal Improviser, Artist, Composer, Lyricist, Poet, Actor, Nora McCarthy, was born on February 1,1958, in New York City. She is a prominent member of the New York Jazz Community. She and her various groups work at the top jazz venues in New York and elsewhere in the world.



McCarthy's musical roots are vast and varied, crossing cultures and genres - from the Great American song book to contemporary modern jazz and bebop, early rhythm and blues, funk music, Hawaiian and Brazilian music and in recent years she's embraced and been embraced by “the avant garde.



Currently, Nora leads and co-leads several groups: The Nora McCarthy Qu 'ART' et; The Conceptual Motion 20-piece Orchestra; A Small Dream In Red - Voice and Saxophone Duo; and, The Ace (Afro-Caribbean-Experimental) Collective with alto saxophonist, Jorge Sylvester.

Nora sings "Too Young to Go Steady"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N-4sy3Ubq4c

Reference - AAJ

JOSHUA REDMAN


Jazz saxophonist and composer Joshua Redman was born on February 1, 1969, in Berkley,California to jazz saxophonist Dewey Redman and Renee Shedroff, he is both African American and Jewish American.


He was exposed to many kinds of music at the Center for World Music in Berkeley, where his mother studied South Indian dance. Some of his earliest lessons in music and improvisation were on recorder with gamelan player Jody Diamond.



Redman won the Thelonious Monk International Jazz Saxophone Competition, also in 1991, and began focusing on his musical career. He continued to develop his style throughout the 1990s, beginning with a sideman appearance on Elvin Jones' Youngblood alongside Javon Jackson (recorded at Van Gelder studios in April 1991), and following up with an appearance on his father Dewey's 1992 record Choices.



On his second album as a leader, Wish, he was joined by a notable lineup consisting of guitarist Pat Metheny, bassist Charlie Haden, and drummer Billy Higgins; he would later tour this album as The Joshua Redman Quartet, featuring Christian McBride in place of Charlie Haden. He continued to work with various quartets, including one with pianist Brad Mehldau until forming a new trio, Elastic, with keyboardist Sam Yahel and drummer Brian Blade.



He also appeared on Reading Rainbow episode 127 "Hip-Cat," in which Redman discussed with host Levar Burton the importance of music and how jazz had affected his life, which he followed with a live performance. Redman also performed on the soundtrack of the made for TV film "Love and Betrayal: The Mia Farrow Story" (1995).


Redman was also an inaugural member of the Independente Music Awards' judging panel to support independent artists.


Joshua plays "Night in Tunisia"



Reference - Wikipédia

GRAMMIES PARA OS ARTISTAS DO JAZZ.



Big names dominate jazz categories, as awards to Chick Corea & John McLaughlin, Joe Zawinul, Kurt Elling, Bela Fleck and other notables


Here is a complete list of Grammy awards in jazz-related categories:


Best Jazz Instrumental Album, Individual Or Group For albums containing 51% or more playing time of instrumental tracks.


Five Peace Band - Live Chick Corea & John McLaughlin Five Peace Band [Concord Records]


Best Contemporary Jazz Album For albums containing 51% or more playing time of instrumental tracks.
75 Joe Zawinul & The Zawinul Syndicate [Heads Up International]



Best Jazz Vocal Album For albums containing 51% or more playing time of Vocal tracks.
Dedicated To You: Kurt Elling Sings The Music Of Coltrane And Hartman Kurt Elling [Concord Jazz]



Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album For large jazz ensembles, including big band sounds. Albums must contain 51% or more instrumental tracks.
Book One New Orleans Jazz Orchestra [World Village]


Best Latin Jazz Album Vocal or Instrumental.
Juntos Para Siempre Bebo Valdés And Chucho Valdés [Sony Music/Calle 54]


Best Improvised Jazz Solo For an instrumental jazz solo performance. Two equal performers on one recording may be eligible as one entry. If the soloist listed appears on a recording billed to another artist, the latter's name is in parenthesis for identification. Singles or Tracks only.
Dancin' 4 Chicken Terence Blanchard, soloist Track from: Watts (Jeff "Tain" Watts) [Dark Key Music]


Best Instrumental Arrangement An Arranger's Award. (Artist names appear in parentheses.) Singles or Tracks only.
West Side Story Medley Bill Cunliffe, arranger (Resonance Big Band) Track from: Resonance Big Band Plays Tribute To Oscar Peterson [Resonance Records]



Best Instrumental Arrangement Accompanying Vocalist(s) An Arranger's Award. (Artist names appear in parentheses.) Singles or Tracks only.
Quiet Nights Claus Ogerman, arranger (Diana Krall) Track from: Quiet Nights [Verve]



Best Pop Instrumental Album For albums containing 51% or more playing time of instrumental tracks.
Potato Hole Booker T. Jones [Anti]


Best Pop Instrumental Performance For solo, duo, group or collaborative performances, without vocals. Singles or Tracks only.
Throw Down Your Heart Béla Fleck Track from: Throw Down Your Heart: Tales From The Acoustic Planet, Vol. 3 - Africa Sessions [Rounder


Best Contemporary World Music Album Vocal or Instrumental.
Throw Down Your Heart: Tales From The Acoustic Planet, Vol. 3 - Africa Sessions Béla Fleck [Rounder]


Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album For albums containing 51% or more playing time of vocal tracks.
Michael Bublé Meets Madison Square Garden Michael Bublé [143/Reprise


Best Rock Instrumental Performance For solo, duo, group or collaborative performances, without vocals. Includes Rock, Hard Rock and Metal. Singles or Tracks only.
A Day In The Life Jeff Beck Track from: Performing This Week...Live At Ronnie Scott's [Eagle Records]


Best Album Notes
The Complete Louis Armstrong Decca Sessions (1935-1946) Dan Morgenstern, album notes writer (Louis Armstrong) [Mosaic Records]


Best Historical Album
The Complete Chess Masters (1950-1967) Andy McKaie, compilation producer; Erick Labson, mastering engineer (Little Walter) [Hip-O Select/Geffen Records]


Best Classical Crossover Album Award to the Artist(s) and/or to the Conductor.
Yo-Yo Ma & Friends: Songs Of Joy And Peace Yo-Yo Ma (Odair Assad, Sergio Assad, Chris Botti, Dave Brubeck, Matt Brubeck, John Clayton, Paquito d'Rivera, Renée Fleming, Diana Krall, Alison Krauss, Natalie McMaster, Edgar Meyer, Cristina Pato, Joshua Redman, Jake Shimabukuro, Silk Road Ensemble, James Taylor, Chris Thile, Wu Tong, Alon Yavnai & Amelia Zirin-Brown) [Sony Classical]


Reference - Lee Mergner/Jazztimes

JAMES P. JOHNSON, FROM RAGTIME TO JAZZ


Jazz pianist James P. Johnson was born on February 1st,1894 and was an important transitional figure between ragtime and jazz piano styles. His style became known as Stride. As a boy, Johnson studied Classical music and Ragtime. He started playing professionally in a sporting house, and then progressed to rent parties, bars and vaudeville.



He eventually became known as the best piano player on the East Coast and was widely utilized as an accompanist on over 400 recordings and from 1916 on, produced hundreds of piano rolls under his own name. He backed up many of the Classic Blues singers of the 1920s, such as Ida Cox,Ethel Waters and Bessie Smith.



Johnson's 1921 recording of Carolina Shout is considered to be the first recorded Jazz piano solo by some critics, although it sounds a lot like Ragtime to this listener's ears. He wrote several musical revues, including "Running Wild" and "Plantation Days" and his 1928 collaboration with his former piano student Fats Waller, "Keep Shufflin'". His song Charleston from "Running Wild" was one of the best known and most widely recorded songs of 1920s. Other hits included "Old Fashioned Love" and "If I Could Be With You (One Hour Tonight)".



Johnson composed several symphonic works, which include "Yamecraw: A Negro Rhapsody" (1928), "Tone Poem" (1930), "Symphony Harlem " (1932), a symphonic version of W.C. Handy's "St. Louis Blues" (1937), and the one-act opera "De Organizer" (1940), with lyrics by Langston Hughes.



None of his symphonic works were very popular and have seldom been performed. Johnson is generally considered the "Father of the Stride" piano, and was a major influence on some of Jazz's great pianists such as Duke Ellington,Fats Waller and Thelonious Monk.
Johnson plays "Bleeding Hearted Blues"

Suggested Reading

James P. Johnson : a case of mistaken identity / Scott E. Brown ; A James P. Johnson discography, 1917-1950 by Robert Hilbert Scarecrow Press and the Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University, 1986
Reference - Ragtime Music.