Monday, 7 September 2020

Graeme Bell born 7 September 1914


Graeme Emerson Bell, AO, MBE (7 September 1914 – 13 June 2012) was an Australian Dixieland and classical jazz pianist, composer and band leader.

Bell, who was born in the inner-Melbourne suburb of Richmond 
at the beginning of World War I, said his earliest memory was seeing his father hang out flags to mark the end of the war in 1918.. Jazz was born in New Orleans at the turn of the 20th century but was first recorded in 1917. It was a while, however, before jazz and Bell were introduced.

Bell was the first of two sons of John Bell, a comedian who worked in light theatre and musicals, and his wife, Elva Rogers, a contralto who had toured Australia as a support singer to Nellie Melba. His father was also a health fanatic and made sure the boys, Graeme and Roger, exercised in the backyard in their pyjamas every morning, which the elder Bell sibling claimed was the reason for his good health and long life. Bell, along with Roger, showed early promise in music; he had weekly piano lessons for many years, which he was grateful for in times to come. Thanks to this early classical training, he could work when jazz wasn't paying its way. Over the years, to make ends meet, he taught, played accompaniment for singers and wrote arrangements for other musicians. He made more than 1500 recordings.


                               

The Bell brothers were educated at Scotch College, where the older boy excelled in art and sport. Roger, however, fell in with a group of musically minded young men, including "Lazy" Ade Monsbourgh, and they were the ones who encouraged Bell to
play jazz because they wanted a pianist. When he left school, Bell spent nine long years working in an insurance company, but at least it gave him time to continue his art studies in the 
evenings, as well as play. He wanted to be an artist but soon realised music would be an easier life. In his touring days, he would get special early wake-up calls to visit art galleries and for a while after moving to Sydney in the late 1950s, had a private gallery business, which was supportive of women artists.

During his time with the insurance company, Bell met and married Margot Bias. He was declared unfit for army service during World War II, but was offered a job with an army entertainment unit in Mackay, Queensland. The marriage lasted only about a year and in 1946, he married Elizabeth Watson, but that marriage didn't last either. He married Dorothy Gough in early 1961 and this time it lasted. By 1947, Bell was playing regularly in Melbourne and had a permanent booking with the communist Eureka Youth League, which sponsored his Australian Jazz Band's participation in that year's World Youth Festival in Prague. The band was so popular that it stayed in Czechoslovakia for more than four months.


Bell then took the group on tour through Europe and Britain, where they were a huge success. The band is often credited with starting the European "trad jazz" revival of the time and over the years, returned to Europe, as well as making a study tour of the United States, where the music journal Downbeat said, "Bell's is unquestionably the greatest jazz band outside America”. On his 
return from Czechoslovakia to Australia, Bell founded the Swaggie record label - mostly for jazz - and toured for the ABC. He then went back to Europe in 1951 for a tour. He accompanied the American blues singer William "Big Bill" Broonzy and played in London's then-new Festival Hall.


Bell's original band broke up in 1953 and he formed a new group for troop tours to Korea and Japan. He moved to Sydney in 1957 and toured Australia with Johnny Ray. In 1962, he put together a new band, the Graeme Bell All Stars, who played at the Chevron Hotel in Kings Cross, Sydney's poshest night spot of the era. Bell also put on floor shows at other major clubs, made records and  
had a national television show, Trad Pad (later Just Jazz) on Channel Seven. He continued to tour in Australia and overseas. He was awarded an MBE in 1978.

When he turned 70 in 1984, he celebrated with a five-week tour of one-night stands around Victoria. He still looked so young, people asked him if he was the son of the famous Graeme Bell.

In 1990, Bell took the Graeme Bell All Stars, with the singer Little Pattie, to China and also went to south-east Asia and played at Expo '90 in Osaka, Japan. That year, he was also appointed as an Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) for his services to music. Bell continued to work when work was to be had. In 1995, he marked turning 85 by narrating a tribute concert in Melbourne. In 1997, he was inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame.


In 2003, members of the All Stars reformed as the Graeme Bell Reunion Band, played some concerts and made a record. In the week after he turned 90 in 2004, he played two concerts. The Australian jazz awards, which started in 2003, are named The Bell Awards in his honour. In 2006, Live Performance Australia gave him the James Cassius Williamson Award, which is to "recognise examples of outstanding contribution to and lifetime achievement in the Australian live performance industry".

Graeme Bell died on 13 June 2012 in the Prince of Wales Hospital, Sydney, after a stroke. He was 97.

 (Edited from article by Harriet Veitch @ Obituaries Australia)

2 comments:

  1. For “Graeme Bell and His Australian Jazz Band
    - Swaggie Sessions - 1949 – 1950” go here:

    https://www.upload.ee/files/12245321/Graeme_Bell_-_1949_-_1950.rar.html

    1 At A Georgia Camp Meeting
    2 Mississippi Mud
    3 I Wish I Could Shimmy Like My Sister Kate
    4 Fidgety Feet
    5 Play It Along Papa
    6 Black And White Rag
    7 Summertime
    8 Wolverine Blues
    9 Sobbin' Blues
    10 Maple Leaf Rag
    11 Irish Black Bottom
    12 My Baby Just Cares For Me
    13 Mobile Bay
    14 Jumbuck Jamboree
    15 Ole Miss
    16 Big Bear Stomp
    17 I'm Gonna Stomp Mr. Henry Lee
    18 Shake Your Feet
    19 Body And Soul
    20 Muskrat Ramble
    21 Big Chief Battle Axe
    22 Ostrich Walk
    23 Bienville Blues
    24 That's A Plenty
    25 See See Rider Blues
    26 Shake It Break It


    For "Big Bill Broonzy with Graeme Bell - In Concert, Germany 1951" go here:

    https://www.upload.ee/files/12245338/Big_Bill_Broonzy_-In_Concert.rar.html

    Graeme Bell & His Australian Jazz Band
    1. GET OUT OF HERE
    2. MUSKRAT RAMBLE
    3. BULL ANT BLUES
    4. BIG CHIEF BATTLE AXE
    5. Announcement by Olaf Hudtwalker
    6. KANSAS CITY STOMPS
    7. HIGH SOCIETY
    Big Bill Broonzy
    8. JOHN HENRY
    9. IN THE EVENING
    Big Bill Broonzy with the Graeme Bell Band
    10. I FEEL SO GOOD
    11. WHO'S SORRY NOW
    12. Introduction of Big Bill Broonzy by Olaf Hudtwalker
    Big Bill Broonzy
    13. TROUBLE IN MIND
    14. KEEP YOUR HANDS OFF HER
    Big Bill Broonzy with the Graeme Bell Band
    15. MAMA DON'T ALLOW
    16. Introduction of piano solo by Hudtwalker
    Graeme Bell's Ragtime Four
    17. BLACK AND WHITE RAG
    18. Introduction of Johnny Sangster by Olaf Hudtwalker
    Graeme Bell & His Australian Jazz Band
    19. IT DON'T MEAN A THING
    20. Introduction of Lazy Ade by Olaf Hudtwalker
    Lazy Ade's Late Hour Boys
    21. WHO STOLE THE LOCK
    22. HELLO JIM EADIE
    Graeme Bell & His Australian Jazz Band with Big Bill Broonzy
    23. WHEN THE SAINTS GO MARCHING IN


    "Get Out Of Here" was the Bell band’s opener. The rest of the first set includes two tunes from the classic jazz period in "Muskrat Ramble" and "High Society", together with "Big Chief Battle Axe" which is associated with Bunk Johnson. "Kansas City Stomps" is a Jelly Roll Morton tune and is given a fine rolling treatment. To complete the set we have Graeme Bell’s original composition, "Bull Ant Blues". "High Society" with which the set finished is, of course, a march and the mobile members of the band performed it while marching round the stage. Big Bill opens with "John Henry". Leroy Carr’s "In The Evening" is a song that demands and gets an evocative performance in contrast to the joyful tunes that finished the set, "I Feel So Good" and the popular song "Who’s Sorry Now”. On his second set, Big Bill returned to the classic blues with "Trouble In Mind" and then the folk/blues standard "Keep Your Hands Off Her" extolling the virtues of his lady and warning off any predatory males. His set is completed by the arrival of the Bell band for the novelty number "Mama Don’t Allow". Graeme Bell shows his ragtime skills on "Black And White Rag" in a nicely paced version before the band’s drummer is featured on cornet with the Ellington favourite "It Don’t Mean a Thing”. The concert closed with "When The Saints" on which the vocal is shared between Lazy Ade and Big Bill. (Jasmine notes)

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