Bee Houston (19 April 1938 – 19 March 1991) was an exciting
performer whose style blended elements of Texas shuffle blues and Southern
gospel-tinged soul.
Born Edward Wilson Houston in San Antonio, Texas, Bee lived
a long time in the shadow of his taller and handsome twin brother Bo (Wilson
Edward Houston). Bee played bugle and Bo the drums in their School’s drum and
bugle corps. Later Bee bought a guitar and for a time his other brother
“Honey” (Wilson Vincent Houston) played drums and Bee and Bo did an act where
Bee played the treble strings and Bo the bass strings of the guitar.
Bee, like all good blues artists, developed a unique style
even to the point where he kept some strings slightly bent, even when tuning!
His earthly voice made a fine complement to his strong guitar work and his Texas
roots were noticeably evident. Music became Bee’s life and soon his group were
the back-up band for “name” artists like Brook Benton, Little Willie John,
Junior Parker, and Bobby Bland, when these singers were booked by Henderson
Glass to tour the Southwest in the late 50’s and 60’s.
After a two-year army stint, bee and his wife decided to try
their luck on the West Coast. He toured and recorded frequently with Big Mama
Thornton in the '60s and became known as her guitarist during the waning years
of her career. He also accompanied several visiting blues players during West
Coast visits including the Simms Twins, Mc Kinley Mitchell and Little Johnny
Taylor. Houston recorded for Arhoolie in the '60s and '70s, and also made
several festival appearances and club dates. Bee Toured again with Junior
Parker but preferred to stay in Los Angeles close to his family and continued
to play the local R&B circuit until he died there on 19 March 1991 a month
before his 53rd birthday.
(Scant information edited from liner notes by Chris
Strachwitz & AllMusic)
Little Brother Montgomery (April 18, 1906* – September 6,
1985) was an American jazz, boogie-woogie and blues pianist and singer. Largely
self-taught, Montgomery was an important blues pianist with an original style.
He was also versatile, working in jazz bands, including larger ensembles that
used written arrangements. He did not read music but learned band routines by
ear.
Eurreal Wilford "Little Brother" Montgomery was
born in Kentwood, Louisiana, United States, a sawmill town near the Mississippi
border, across Lake Pontchartrain from New Orleans, where he spent much of his
childhood. Both his parents were of African-American and Creek Indian ancestry.
As a child he looked like his father, Harper Montgomery, and was called Little
Brother Harper. The name evolved into Little Brother Montgomery, and the
nickname stuck. He started playing piano at the age of four, and by age 11 he
left home for four years and played at barrelhouses in Louisiana. His main
musical influence was Jelly Roll Morton, who used to visit the Montgomery
household.
Early in his career he performed at African-American lumber
and turpentine camps in Louisiana, Arkansas, and Mississippi. He then played
with the bands of Clarence Desdunes and Buddy Petit. He lived in Chicago from
1928 to 1931, regularly playing at rent parties and Chicago was where he made
his first recordings in 1930 for Paramount. From 1931 through 1938, he led a
jazz ensemble, the Southland Troubadours, in Jackson, Mississippi (also called
the Collegiate Ramblers), that played in ballrooms throughout the South. They never
recorded, but as a solo pianist or with only one accompanist, Montgomery cut
twenty-two blues sides, all released on singles on the Bluebird label, in
1935-36, including the original versions of his standards “Shreveport Farewell”
and “The First Time I Met the Blues.”
Montgomery, hailed in Down Beat magazine in 1940 as “the
greatest piano man that ever invaded Dixie,” spent time in Yazoo City,
Hattiesburg, and Beaumont, Texas, before permanently settling in Chicago in
1942. His graceful New Orleans-style swing and uncommonly wide repertoire that encompassed
blues, boogie-woogie, ragtime, popular songs, and jazz standards, made him a
popular pianist in traditional jazz groups. In 1948 he played in Kid Ory’s Dixieland
band at Carnegie Hall. He also accompanied classic blues singer Edith Wilson, but
he appeared most often as a solo performer or leader of his own groups.
Otis Rush benefited from his sensitive accompaniment on
several of his 1957-1958 Cobra dates, while Buddy Guy recruited him for similar
duties when he nailed Montgomery's "First Time I Met the Blues" in a
supercharged revival for Chess in 1960. That same year, Montgomery cut a fine
album for Bluesville with guitarist Lafayette "Thing" Thomas that
remains one of his most satisfying sets.
Montgomery toured Europe several times in the 1960s and
recorded some of his albums there. He appeared at many blues and folk festivals
during the following decade and was considered a living legend, a link to the
early days of blues in New Orleans. Among his original compositions are
"Shreveport Farewell", "Farrish Street Jive", and
"Vicksburg Blues". His instrumental "Crescent City Blues"
served as the basis for a song of the same name by Gordon Jenkins, which in
turn was adapted by Johnny Cash as "Folsom Prison Blues."
In 1968, Montgomery contributed to two albums by Spanky and
Our Gang, Like to Get to Know You and Anything You Choose b/w Without Rhyme or
Reason. His fame grew in the 1960s, and he continued to make many recordings,
some of them on his own record label, FM Records, which he formed in 1969 (FM
stood for Floberg Montgomery, Floberg being the maiden name of his wife).
In 1975, Folkways issued an album of Monrtgomery’s “Church
Songs”, which enhanced his reputation for turning his hand and voice to many
styles. This brought his output of albums to over 30. He gave many interviews
about his life in the Blues and his endless stream of stories made him a
one-man-repository of Blues history, as
his remarkable memory gave us insights into the story of the Blues from it’s
origins into the digital age.
Montgomery died on September 6, 1985, in Champaign,
Illinois, and was interred in the Oak Woods Cemetery. In 2013 he was
posthumously inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame.
(Edited from Wikipedia, All Music, Britannica, All About The
Blues Music.com & Mississippi Blues Trail) (*birth year possibly a year or
two later according to some documents)
Marta Eggerth (17 April 1912 – 26 December 2013) was a
Hungarian actress and singer from "The Silver Age of Operetta”.
Eggerth was born in Budapest, the daughter of Tilly (née
Herzog) a dramatic coloratura soprano, and Paul Eggerth, a bank director.
Eggerth began singing during her early childhood. Her mother dedicated herself
to her daughter, who was called a "Wunderkind" at the age of 11
making her theatrical debut in the operetta Mannequins. It was during this time
and the years that followed that Eggerth began singing the most demanding
coloratura repertoire by composers including Rossini, Meyerbeer, Offenbach and
Johann Strauss II.
While still a
teenager, Eggerth embarked on a tour of Denmark, Holland and Sweden before
arriving in Vienna at the invitation of Emmerich Kálmán. Kálmán invited her to
Vienna to understudy Adele Kern, the famous coloratura of the Vienna State
Opera, in his operetta Das Veilchen vom Montmartre (The Violet of Montmartre).
Eggerth eventually took over the title role to great critical acclaim after Kern
suddenly became indisposed. Subsequently, Eggerth performed the role of Adele
in Max Reinhardt's famous 1929 Hamburg production of Die Fledermaus at the age
of 17.
During the early 1930s, Eggerth was discovered by the film
industry, and her career took off resulting in international fame. She made
more than 40 films in five languages: Hungarian, English, German, French and
Italian. It was on the set of the 1934 film Mein Herz ruft immer nach dir (My
Heart is Calling You, music Robert Stolz) that she met and fell in love with
the young Polish tenor, Jan Kiepura. They were married in 1936 and together
became known as Europe's Liebespaar (Love Pair) causing a sensation wherever
they appeared.
While Kiepura toured the United States, Eggerth was signed
by the Shubert Theatre on Broadway to appear in Richard Rodgers' musical Higher
and Higher. She subsequently signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in
Hollywood and, during the early 1940s, made two movies with Judy Garland: For
Me and My Gal in 1942 and Presenting Lily Mars in 1943. In Chicago, Eggerth and
Kiepura performed together on the operatic stage in La bohème to rave reviews.
They
also starred together on Broadway at the Majestic Theater in a revised
production of Lehár's The Merry Widow, with Robert Stolz conducting and choreography
by George Balanchine. They would eventually perform The Merry Widow more than
2,000 times, in five languages throughout Europe and America. In 1945, they
were back on Broadway together in the musical Polonaise. After World War II,
they returned to France touring and making films, before bringing The Merry
Widow to London's Palace Theatre in 1954.
Throughout her career, Eggerth maintained active recital
tours throughout Europe, Canada and the United States, combining her extensive
repertoire of lieder, opera, film songs, and especially Viennese operetta. In
London, Eggerth and Kiepura gave two sold-out concerts in one week at the Royal
Albert Hall in 1956. The couple continued singing throughout the 1950s and
1960s with more productions of The Merry Widow in the United States, concerts
and other productions in Europe. In 1965 they brought The Merry Widow back to
Berlin for yet another successful run.
Kiepura died in 1966. Eggerth stopped singing at this time
for several years. Finally, persuaded by her mother, she decided to revive her
career. In the 1970s she began to make regular television appearances, and to
actively perform concerts in Europe. In 1982, she returned to the American
stage to co-star in the Tom Jones/Harvey Schmidt musical Colette opposite Diana
Rigg in Seattle and Denver, and later in Stephen Sondheim's Follies in
Pittsburgh.
In 1999, at the age of 87, she sang on the stage of the Vienna
State Opera in a special televised matinée concert hosted by opera impresario
and historian Marcel Prawy, to mark that opera house's first production of
Lehár's The Merry Widow. She sang a medley from the operetta in four languages
and received a spontaneous standing ovation. She repeated this medley in 2000,
at a gala to mark the 200th anniversary of Vienna's Theater an der Wien.
In 2001, Eggerth returned to London for "An
Interview-in-Concert" at an absolutely sold-out Wigmore Hall. She
continued to tour and give recitals up to her last performance at the age of 99
in 2011. Eggerth was awarded many major artistic decorations from Austria,
Germany, Poland, and Italy in recognition of her accomplishments in operetta,
theatre and film. Her final recognitions included the Knights Cross of the
Order of the Merit of the Republic of Poland, Knights Cross of the Order of the
Merit of the Republic of Hungary, her native land's highest honour, and the
Erwin Piscator Life Achievement Award for her legendary achievements.
She taught at the Manhattan School of Music until her death following a brief illness on 26 December 2013 in Rye, New York. She was 101 years old. (Edited from Wikipedia)
Bennie Green (April 16, 1923 – March 23, 1977) was one of
the most dexterous and velvet-toned modern American trombonists.
Bennie Green was born in Chicago and his family was a
musical one. With his brother Elbert who later played tenor saxophone with Roy
Eldridge he attended the famous DuSable High School whose musical director was
the celebrated Walter Dyett. In these
early formative years Bennie’s acknowledged influences were Trummy Young,
Lawrence Brown, J.C.Higginbotham, Tommy Dorsey and Bobby Byrne. Much later of
course J.J.Johnson was added to the mix.
Thanks to a recommendation from Budd Johnson, Bennie joined Earl
Hines’s band in the summer of 1942 just as James Petrillo’s AFM announced a
strike preventing union members from recording for major labels. This was a
great pity because that particular edition of the band boasted Dizzy Gillespie,
Benny Harris, Charlie Parker, Shadow Wilson and Sarah Vaughan among its
members.
Green became very friendly with Dizzy Gillespie often
visiting him at the trumpeter’s house where Dizzy would accompany him on the
piano. These sessions were invaluable insights into the new harmonic and
rhythmic discoveries and Bennie later described them as “Going to school”.
Drafted into the military he was discharged in 1946 and later that year he
recorded with Charlie Ventura for the first time on a big band date playing
Neal Hefti and Stanley Baum arrangements. Green returned to Hines again until
1948 when he joined the legendary Gene Ammons who had just had a big hit with
Red Top which was his wife Mildred’s nickname.
In the summer of 1948 Charlie Ventura invited Bennie to join
the new group he was forming to be called ‘Bop For The People’. With this high
profile group making regular radio broadcasts and concert appearances Bennie’s
reputation as a superior soloist was now established. Ventura’s group was
breaking attendance records at the Royal Roost and was voted the No.1 bebop
group by the readers of Down Beat and Metronome magazines. They ultimately
recorded no less than 61 titles (some on obscure labels) and their brilliant
but quite outrageous interpretation of I’m Forever Blowing Bubbles became
something of a commercial success. The leader disbanded a few months after
their famous Pasadena concert in May 1949.
Later that year on the 24th. December Green was part of a
‘Stars Of Modern Jazz’ concert at Carnegie Hall compered by Symphony Sid with
Sarah Vaughan and the Charlie Parker quintet as headliners. In 1950 he recorded
four titles with Gene Ammons and a seven piece group featuring Sonny Stitt on
baritone. In 1952 Bennie recorded four titles with strings demonstrating
elements of Jack Teagarden especially in his immaculate control of the upper
register on Embraceable You and Stardust.
In 1953 he recorded an extrovert, foot-tapping date for
Decca with Cecil Payne and Frank Wess where they pulled out all the stops on a
simple but very effective Blow Your Horn. It has elements of rhythm and blues
with one of his favourite call and response devices and became quite a juke-box
hit. In 1955 he recorded ‘Bennie Green Blows His Horn’ with Charlie Rouse
together with the redoubtable Cliff Smalls and Candido in the rhythm section.
In 1959 the trombonist recorded ‘Bennie Green Swings The
Blues’ with Jimmy ‘Night Train’ Forrest and Sonny Clark. As the title implies
the repertoire mostly consists of jazz music’s most basic harmony but with such
gifted performers there is no chance of monotony. It does include though one of
Bennie’s favourite standards – Pennies From heaven – which had been his feature
with Charlie Ventura back in the forties. He only made one further LP as a
leader in 1961 because the sixties was a difficult decade especially for his
generation of jazz musicians. Clubs like Birdland were closing and the
emergence of the Beatles and Rolling Stones reflected a definite change in
popular music taste. The revolutionary concepts of the jazz avant-garde
movement didn’t help matters either.
Bennie was always popular in his home-town of Chicago and he
continued to lead small bands there throughout the sixties as well as
travelling as a single, sitting-in with house rhythm sections. He settled in
Las Vegas in the late '60s, working in hotel bands. He worked for a time with
Duke Ellington’s orchestra in 1968, playing on his second sacred concert. Green
was also featured on recordings made at the Newport in New York festival in the
early '70s. He recorded as a leader for Jubilee, Prestige, Blue Note, Enrica,
Time, and Vee Jay.
After a long illness Bennie Green died of cancer on March
23rd. 1977, in San Diego.
Wally
Deane (May 15, 1936 - April 5, 1986) was an American Rock 'n' Roll singer
Wally
was born in Washington D.C (1) to John Wallace Deane and Grace Talmedge Van
Riper.John Wallace Deane was a reporter
for the New York Times, and Washington Post. Grace Deane was a church organ
player, medical stenographer, and pianist. Her father George Van Riper was well
to do in real estate and his inventions.
Little
is known regarding Wally’s early life, but his recording career started when
he was discovered in Miami,
Florida by Tex Dean, (no relation) a recording
artist for Trumpet Records. Tex Dean brought Wally to Lillian McMurray as a new
artist, and she really liked his style and musical ability.
She saw Wally as
her answer to Sun Records Elvis Presley! Wally recorded three sides which
included “Wabash Cannonball” & “I’m
Losing You” , but these unfortunately were unissued. He did however sign a contract
with Globe records in 1956 and recorded four sides which included “Cool Cool
Daddy”.
He then
issued a handful of recordings as Wally Dean (dropping the “e”) on the Arctic,
Artic and Acadia (2) Record labels until 1962. With his backing band the Flips,
Wally played in Halls, Lounge bars and Hotels in Miami Beach such as the
Shoremede, Belmar, Cadallac, and many more in the surrounding areas. He was
also known as the “Elvis of Miami Beach” .
He died on
April 5, 1986,shortly
before his 50th birthday. Wally was inducted into the Rockabilly Hall of Fame
in 2006.
(Edited
from the Wally Deane website, Rocky 52 & the Rocknroll schallplatten forum)
(1) Some
sources give Bivins, Texas as birthplace
(2) The Arcadia
label was based in Canada so this might be a different Wally Dean.
Monty
Waters (April 14, 1938 - December 23, 2008) was an American jazz saxophonist,
flautist and singer.
Born in Monville
Charles Waters in Modesto, California,
he received his first musical training from his aunt and first played in the
church. After his education in college, he was a member of a Rhythm & Blues
band. Monty studied music at Modesto High and cut his teeth in the vibrant
R&B scene in the late 50's touring with the bands of B.B King, Lightnin’
Hopkins, Little Richard, James Brown and others before switching coasts to play
in New York with the likes of Woody Shaw, Jaki Byard.
In San Francisco he played with King Pleasure
and initiated in the early 1960s, a "Late Night Session" at the club
Bop City. There he came into contact with musicians such as Miles Davis, John
Coltrane, Art Blakey, Red Garland and Dexter Gordon, who visited this club
after their concerts. In addition, he and Pharoah Sanders, Dewey Redman and
Donald Garrett formed a big band. In 1969 he moved to New York City and went
with Jon Hendricks on a concert tour.
During
the 1970s he participated in the "Loft Jazz" scene. Like many other
jazz musicians, he moved in the 1980s to Paris, where he worked with Chet
Baker, Pharoah Sanders and Johnny Griffin. Following Mal Waldron and Marty
Cook, he came to Munich, Germany and continued to work with musicians such as
Embryo, Götz Tangerding, Hannes Beckmann, Titus Waldenfels, Suchredin Chronov
or Joe Malinga.
Since 1995,
one of Waters' main projects has been a duo with the German guitarist Titus
Waldenfels, presenting a mixture of jazz and blues (with Monty not only playing
saxophone but also singing) to audiences of renowned jazz festivals and in
notable jazz clubs (such as the Unterfahrt in Munich). Monty's latest CD,
"Moonlight in Slovakia", issued on Ladybug in 1999, has him playing
with the L'ubo Šamo Quintet, a Sloviakian group - consisting of violinist L'ubo
Šamo, pianist Peter Adamkovic, bassist Martin Marincak and drummer Gejza
Szabados plus guitarist Titus Waldenfels - and features two of Waters' duo
recordings with Waldenfels.
He died
in Munich, Germany in December
22nd 2008.Another
of Jazz's unsung heroes, his death went virtually unnoticed by the
international jazz community, as indeed had most of his career.The saxophonist didn't even rate
a mention in the All Music Guide To Jazz and most of the standard reference
books. This is indeed regrettable as Monty was clearly an artist of consummate
talent in both his playing and writing ability.
Roy Dunn
(13 April 1922 - 2 March 1988) was an American blues guitarist and singer.He was also credited as a
major source of information and contacts by researchers into the blues of the
east coast states.
Roy
Sidney Dunn, born in Eatonton, Georgia, a town in Putnam County, was one of
twelve children of Willie and Estelle Dunn. He moved to Kelly in Jasper County
when near the age of nine and started messing around with the guitar, being
first taught by one Jim Smith. A later move to Covington put Roy in contact
with Curley Weaver and Jonas Brown – it was the former that taught him to tune
a guitar himself – who played at times then with fiddle-player Ollie Griffin
and guitarist Cliff Lee. This was about 1935.
He stayed
around Curley until 1938, when he left Newton Co. Music was definitely a part
of the rather large Dunn family, and among the relatives so inclined were
uncles as well as his father and a few of his aunts. There definitely was some
music around. Through the influence of his choir-leading father, a singing
group was formed from the family, logically called the Dunn Brothers and made
up of Roy, Fred, Oscar, and Edward. Quartet singing was to play an important
part in Roy’s musical life, and its influence can be heard in his excellent
singing. On top of all this, there was the influence of the ubiquitous
phonograph record – Blind Blake, Jimmie Rogers, Barbecue Bob, Blind Lemon
Jefferson, Buddy Buy Hawkins, Willie Walker, and Lonnie Johnson are all older
names well-remembered. More recently, the influences were the many Atlanta
artists he heard, as well as records from Blind Boy Fuller, and Lightnln’
Hopkins.
For some
ten years, Roy traveled through the southern states, going into Alabama and
Tennessee, and some further west – Atlanta was just a stopping-off place for
these years. Much of the time on the road was with quartets, either traveling
with a particular group or joining one in an area . . . among them were the All
National Independents, the Victory Bond Spiritual Singers, the Rainbow Gospel
Four, the Galilee Four, the Keystone Four, and the Golden Gospel Singers. When
in Atlanta, he played often with Blind Willie McTell, Curley Weaver, or Buddy
Moss (of the known artists) and he claims to have seen Blind Boy Fuller one
time in the Atlanta area, a possibility pointed to by others.
Among
the “unknowns” that Roy has known or played with over the years are Paul
McGuiness, Bunny Tiller, Glenn Gates (known as “Baltimore” and a cousin of the
Rev.), Eddie Lee Johnson, Connie Jackson, Link Paul, “Bo Weavil”, “Popcorn”,
William Jolly, Buddy Keith, R.W. Lawson, and Edward “Chicken” Knowles. One of
the major talents of the man is not only his recall of the names of musicians,
but also when and where he saw them last and often what kind of car they were
driving! Rather an Atlanta encyclopedia with two legs.
Roy
settled back into the Atlanta area again about the time of the Korean War,
staying with his parents who ran a cafe on the corner of Butler and Decatur
Sts. He was there when Buddy Moss got back into town, but it was not too long
afterwards that Roy got into trouble and spent four years in jail for
manslaughter, where he was made a trustee. In jail, he worked on his guitar
technique, and also learned how to drive heavy equipment – this latter being
useful after his release in 1960. Prior to this, he had been a peripatetic
jack-of-all-trades, but now he was able to get steady work on the machines
building highways through the central part of the state.
Running
the big stuff was the main thing, with music a weekend affair, until Christmas
of I968 when a lady plowed into the driver’s side of Roy’s car. He suffered a
broken back, arms, collarbones, right leg and foot, and a skull fracture; his
wife Myrtis had her jaw broken and her teeth knocked out, and their baby was
killed. It took him a good year to recover from the damages after which he and
his wife (and four new children) had been subsisting on state disability
payments and whatever else he could scrape from what light work that he could
handle. Weak-limbed from all this, Roy was never able to return to work.
He was
still able to play music, however, and in the early 70s, he recorded an album,
and appeared at a number of blues festivals also performing in clubs around
Georgia and North Carolina. He still performed occasionally up until his death in
Atlanta on March 2, 1988.(Edited
from article by Peter Blowry)