Home / Tag Archives: 1920s – 1970s (page 3)

Tag Archives: 1920s – 1970s

Mac and Bob

The first country singing team of Mac and Bob, full titles Lester McFarland and Robert Gardner, were blind music artists who met in the Kentucky School for the Blind in 1915. While with the capacity of playing several devices — Gardner performed piano professionally actually before Mac pc and Bob …

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Rudolf Serkin

Rudolf Serkin emerged from the surroundings of post-World Battle I Austria to be perhaps one of the most profound and challenging pianists from the hundred years. Childhood research in Vienna with Richard Robert (piano), and Joseph Marx and Arnold Schoenberg for structure, resulted in a 1915 debut functionality using the …

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Harry Carney

Harry Carney’s baritone saxophone was the anchor, the lodestone, the building blocks of a unique tonal blend that virtually defined the Duke Ellington Orchestra for a lot more than 45 years. A mainstay from the Ellington encounter, he continued to be with Duke much longer than other people and outlived …

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Buell Kazee

Buell Kazee was a minister who played banjo and sang the ancient tunes of his beloved Kentucky mountains through the 1920s. Regarded as among the absolute best folk performers in U.S. background, he was a grasp from the high, “lonesome” performing design of the Appalachian balladeer. Kazee was created in …

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Carl Orff

Although his fame rests for the success of an individual work, the famous and sometimes commercially mutilated Carmina Burana, Carl Orff was actually a multi-faceted musician and prolific composer who wrote in lots of styles before developing the primal, driving language which informs his most well-known work. Furthermore to his …

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Billy Taylor, Sr.

Not to end up being confused using the famous pianist, this Billy Taylor (whose boy Billy Taylor, Jr. was also an excellent bassist) was best-known for his period with Duke Ellington’s Orchestra, straight preceding Jimmy Blanton. Taylor began playing tuba in 1919 and turned to bass by the first ’30s. …

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Charlie Agnew

Swing-era bandleader Charlie Agnew was created June 22, 1901, in Chicago. After increasing through the rates from the Windy Town sweet rings of the first ’20s, he shaped his very own orchestra in 1924, quickly rising being a fixture of resort ballrooms over the Midwest. Furthermore to expanded residencies on …

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Max Kaminsky

Potential Kaminsky was a trusted Dixieland player who was simply featured on many periods with Eddie Condon’s gang in the 1940s and ’50s. He performed in early stages in Boston and was a experienced of 1920s Chicago, where he gigged with Bud Freeman, Frank Teschemacher, and Condon. Shifting to NY …

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Mary Lou Williams

To state that Mary Lou Williams had an extended and productive profession can be an understatement. Although for many years she was categorised as jazz’s greatest feminine musician (and you have to admire what will need to have been a non-stop fight against sexism), she’d have been regarded as a …

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Róza Eskenázi

Arguably the most well-known of most Greek singers, Róza Eskenázi was created in Istanbul on the turn from the 20th century. A Sephardic Jew whose music drew great motivation in the era’s Turkish vocalists, she transferred with her family members to Thrace as a kid, and in 1922 relocated to …

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