Thursday, 8 May 2014

Mary Lou Williams born 8 May 1910

   
Mary Lou Williams (May 8, 1910 – May 28, 1981) was an American jazz pianist, composer, and arranger. Williams wrote hundreds of compositions and arrangements, and recorded more than one hundred records (in 78, 45, and LP versions). Williams wrote and arranged for such bandleaders as Duke Ellington and Benny Goodman, and she was friend, mentor, and teacher to Thelonious Monk, Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Tadd Dameron, Dizzy Gillespie, and many others.
 
Mary Elfrieda Scruggs was born on May 8, 1910, in Atlanta, Georgia. She grew up in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. When Scruggs was a small child, she surprised her mother by playing a song she had just heard on the family's pump organ. Trained by her mother, and aided by her gift of perfect pitch, she was playing professionally by the age of seven.
 
Appearing as Mary Lou Burley (her stepfather's last name), she worked in locations that ranged from gambling dens to the vaudeville stage. As a teenager, she started performing with saxophonist John Williams. The two married in 1927, thus making her Mary Lou Williams. A few years later, Williams followed her husband to Kansas City, where she would become an integral part of the swing scene.
 
Though relegated to menial tasks at first, Mary Lou Williams began performing with the Clouds of Joy, a Kansas City band led by Andy Kirk. In addition to being the group's pianist throughout the 1930s, she also composed and arranged much of its music. Her success with the Clouds of Joy meant Williams was soon sending compositions and arrangements to bandleaders such as Tommy Dorsey, Earl Hines, Benny Goodman and Duke Ellington.
 
 
                               

In 1942, Williams left Kirk's band. When her second marriage to trumpeter Shorty Baker ended, she settled in New York City. There, she performed at a Greenwich Village nightclub and on a weekly radio show. Her Harlem apartment became a gathering place for musicians, and was where Williams mentored talents like Thelonious Monk and Dizzy Gillespie.
 
During her time in New York, Williams demonstrated her musical adaptability. Not only did she incorporate bebop into her playing, she created longer pieces such as the Zodiac Suite. Three movements of this 12-part composition were performed at Carnegie Hall in 1946. In 1952, Williams relocated to Europe, where she remained until she walked out of a performance in Paris in 1954.
 
Even after Williams returned to the United States, she refrained from performing, as she felt that her spiritual needs were incompatible with the world of jazz. However, she eventually found solace in Catholicism. In 1957, she resumed her musical career by appearing with Gillespie at the Newport Jazz Festival.
 
Williams founded her own label, Mary Records, which was the first to be started by a woman. She also established the Cecilia Music Publishing Company. Given her newfound Catholic faith, Williams began to work on sacred pieces, composing several masses. One of these was Mary Lou's Mass (originally called Music for Peace).
 
In 1971, Mary Lou's Mass was interpreted by choreographer Alvin Ailey. Four years later, it became the first jazz piece to be performed at New York's St. Patrick's Cathedral. Williams still continued to perform, including at President Jimmy Carter's White House Jazz Party. She also taught at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst and at Duke University.
 
In the final three months of her life, she was bedridden, but continued to compose. Her last work remains incomplete—a composition of 55 winds, piano trio and chamber orchestra called The History of Jazz, a history she largely lived and helped create. Williams was 71 when she succumbed to bladder cancer in Durham, North Carolina, on May 28, 1981.
 
 
She left behind more than 350 compositions. Though she is known for being one of the first women to succeed in jazz, she had a career whose accomplishments place her in the top echelon of musicians.  (Info mainly edited from The Biography.com website)

5 comments:

boppinbob said...

Mary Lou Williams seems to be very popular. Below are just a few albums found on the web.

For Mary Lou Williams - 1927-1940 (The Chronogical Classics, 630) (1992) go here:

http://www15.zippyshare.com/v/47283002/file.html

For Mary Lou Williams - 1944 (The Chronogical Classics) go here:

http://www.uploadable.ch/file/NBrczhUB9qX2/Mary_Lou_Williams_-_1944_{CC__814}.rar

For Mary Lou Williams – Zodiac Suite (1945) go here:

http://uploaded.net/file/khge31r2

For Mary Lou Williams - 1944-1945 (The Chronogical Classics) go here:

http://www.uploadable.ch/file/mUuGtuJmy6vv/Mary_Lou_Williams_-_1944-1945_%7BCC__1021%7D.rar

For Mary Lou Williams - 1945-1947 (The Chronogical Classics) go here:

http://www.uploadable.ch/file/2z7mGSqcWwGR/Mary_Lou_Williams_-_1945-1947_%7BCC__1050%7D.rar

For Mary Lou Williams - 1949-1951 (The Chronogical Classics) go here:

http://www.uploadable.ch/file/5SxWmavrY4rM/Mary_Lou_Williams_-_1949-1951_%7BCC__1260%7D.rar

For Mary Lou Williams - 1951-1953 (The Chronogical Classics) go here:

http://www.uploadable.ch/file/dF4HGgT4VN9H/Mary_Lou_Williams_-_1951-1953_%7BCC__1346%7D.rar

For Mary Lou Williams – The London Sessions (1953-1954) go here:

http://www55.zippyshare.com/v/84113262/file.html

For Mary Lou Williams - 1953-1954 (The Chronogical Classics) go here:

http://www.uploadable.ch/file/3tEKbFCRfMVu/Mary_Lou_Williams_-_1953-1954_%7BCC__1417%7D.rar

For Mary Lou Williams ‎– I Made You Love Paris (1955 recordings)

http://www.adrive.com/public/MDfu9z/Mary%20Lou%20I%20Love%20You.rar

For Mary Lou Williams - A Keyboard Story (1955) go here:

http://www69.zippyshare.com/v/96932711/file.html

For Mary Lou Williams "Mary Lou's Mass" (1975)go here:

http://www.4shared.com/file/yxggXSii/mass.html

Guitarradeplastico,scraping oddities said...

Mary Lou Williams "Mary Lou's Mass" (1975) is one favorite,warning: a reissue with 6 extra songs is essential

RiCK SAUNDERS said...

Hi Bob-
I hate to ask but could you re-up the Mary Lou Williams stuff, please?
Thanks as always!
-Rick

boppinbob said...

Hello Rick, All those albums as stated were "found on the web". Unfortunately I never downloaded any of them although at the time the links were working.
But all is not lost, I think I can salvage some of them. In fact here's two I found for starters.

For Mary Lou Williams - 1945-1947 (The Chronogical Classics) go here:

https://filecat.net/f/5ZHzykE1zXjD4ri

For Mary Lou Williams - 1949-1951 (The Chronogical Classics) go here:

https://filecat.net/f/jmMwcy

Both are FLAC files so there's a bonus.

Finding the others will take some time but be patient and I'll post them when available.
Regards, Bob

boppinbob said...

Hello Rick, I think I've hit the motherload. Found all the chronological Classsics on a blog called Jazz Cafee.

The file is over 1 GB so will take a few hours to download.

For “Mary Lou Williams Chronological Classics 1927 – 1954 Complete 7 CDs” go here:

https://www.filefactory.com/file/6tsl1ig92hp0/Mary%20Lou%20Williams-%20CC%201927-1954%20%287%20CD%29.rar

The download contains:
1927 – 1940
1944
1944 – 1945
1945 – 1947
1949 – 1951
1951 – 1953
1953 - 1954

Also found ...

Mary Lou Williams - A Grand Night For Swinging (1976)

https://rapidgator.net/file/4e745e45d04a74ff56d08f4935ad8def/Mary_Lou_Williams_-_A_Grand_Night_For_Swinging_Live_At_The_Statler_Hotel_(1976).rar.html

Will keep a look out for the others. Watch this space.
Regards, Bob.