Sunday 15 October 2023

Herman Chittison born 15 October 1908

Herman "Ivory" Chittison (October 15, 1908 – March 8, 1967  )was an American jazz pianist. 

Herman Chittison was born in Flemingsburg, KY, on October 15, 1908, to Charles and Sarrah Jame Chittison. Chittison began playing the piano at age 8 and would often play hymns at Strawberry Methodist Church. He and his family left Kentucky for him to attend school in Tennessee when he was 13-years-old. He attended the Waldron Boys School in Nashville, Tennessee. 

After completing high school, Chittison enrolled at Kentucky State College (now Kentucky State University) in 1925, which he left to play for the Kentucky Derbies at the Lexington State Fair. He then pursued a professional career in music. His music career began when he joined Zack Whyte’s band, Chocolate Beau Brummels, in Ohio in 1928.  

In 1931 he moved to New York and then toured as an accompanist for the comedian "Stepin'" Fetchit. Later he toured with singers Adelaide Hall and Ethel Waters and recorded as a freelancer with pianist and conductor Clarence Williams (1930 – 1933). In the spring of 1934 he joined Willie Lewis' orchestra with whom he travelled to Europe where he remained from 1934 to 1938, working with and outside Lewis' orchestra, also touring with Louis Armstrong. 

                             

                     

He also conducted his own orchestra in Egypt, accompanying the singer Arita Day in early 1935. He left Willie Lewis for good in 1938 and worked with several former members of this orchestra, such as trumpeter Bill Coleman and saxo-clarinetist Joe Hayman, under the name "Harlem Rhythmakers". 

Returning to the U.S.A. in the spring of 1940, he formed his own trio and toured with "Stepin'" Fetchit in the fall of 1940. Throughout the forties and fifties, he led his trio in many residencies in New York: "The Blue Angel", "The Blue Ribbon", the "Bobili Club", etc. He also had a weekly radio show for seven years on C.B.S. Radio. He recorded on both American and French labels as a soloist and accompanist for Ethel Waters and Mildred Bailey. He also toured with comedian Stepin Fetchit and trumpeter Louis Armstrong. He played “Ernie” in radio series Casey, Crime Photographer (1942-51). 

He recorded with a trio in New York City for nine years, appeared regularly on radio, series of music labels that included Columbia, and Musicraft. In October 1959, Chittison was employed as the resident pianist at the Red Garter bar in the Lenox Hotel in Boston. In an interview with John McLellan in March 1960, he noted that “Some clubs will spend $150,000 on decorations, and then they want to put in a $20 piano. They were going to put a spinet in here, but I asked them if they’d have their cook work on a two-burner stove. They got the point. And I got my piano.” He must have been persuasive, because that piano was a Mason & Hamlin concert grand. 

Chittison was still working Boston lounges in spring 1961, but later that year he returned to New York, and a few years after that he moved to Cleveland. 


He died at the Evangelical Deaconess Hospital of lung cancer, in March 1967 at age 58. His funeral service was held five days later at the J.W. Willis Funeral Home, in Cleveland, and he was interred in the Highland Park Cemetery.

(Edited from Wikipedia & Findagrave)

Here’s Herman Chittison with Cab Calloway in this short video clip

6 comments:

boppinbob said...

1933-1941 {The Chronological Classics, 690}

https://www.imagenetz.de/b7pby

01. Unlucky Blues (3:13)
02. My Four Reasons (3:17)
03. Honeysuckle Rose (2:53)
04. Harlem Rhythm Dance (2:21)
05. Nagasaki (3:11)
06. Swingin' (3:10)
07. Stormy Weather (2:58)
08. St. Louis Blues (3:20)
09. You're Be My Lover (3:05)
10. Red Jill Rag (3:08)
11. Bugle Call Rag (2:22)
12. Trees (3:08)
13. Heat Wave (2:40)
14. Miss Otis Regrets (2:57)
15. My Last Affair / No More Tears (3:09)
16. I'm Putting All My Eggs In One Basket (2:38)
17. My Own Blues (2:51)
18. My Melancholy Baby (2:31)
19. They Can't Take That Away From Me (3:10)
20. Flamingo (3:20)
21. The Man I Love (3:15)

1944-1945 {The Chronological Classics, 1024}

https://www.imagenetz.de/ccwk6

01. How High The Moon (1:56)
02. The Song Is Ended (3:19)
03. Just One Of Those Things (2:21)
04. Schubert's Serenade (2:05)
05. As Time Goes By (2:54)
06. Frasquita Serenade (2:27)
07. My Old Flame (3:29)
08. Lover (3:34)
09. Persian Rug (2:14)
10. The Song Is Ended (3:07)
11. Serenade (3:11)
12. How High The Moon (3:06)
13. There's Beauty Everywhere (2:45)
14. I'll Always Be In Love With You (3:00)
15. Poor Butterfly (2:50)
16. These Foolish Things (3:11)
17. I Should Care (3:11)
18. All Of My Life (2:53)
19. I'll Always Be In Love With You (3:05)
20. I Had The Craziest Dream (2:19)
21. Where Or When (3:08)
22. Triste (2:34)
23. To A Wild Rose (2:55)
24. You Gave Me Everything But Love (3:06)

1945-1950 {The Chronological Classics, 1334}

https://www.imagenetz.de/hsYMT

01. Minute Waltz (3:05)
02. June Barcarolle (2:46)
03. Tristesse (2:41)
04. Menuet (2:54)
05. Anitra's Dance (3:16)
06. C Sharp Minor Waltz (3:02)
07. Memories Of You (3:03)
08. Let's Fall In Love (3:14)
09. Dancing On The Ceiling (3:10)
10. Isn't It Romantic? (2:57)
11. September In The Rain (3:04)
12. They Can't Take That Away From Me (2:52)
13. Can't We Be Friends? (3:14)
14. On The Sunny Side Of The Street (3:11)
15. Serenade (3:23)
16. Just A Memory (4:18)
17. The Continental (2:30)
18. My Blue Heaven (3:48)
19. Ain't Misbehavin' (3:19)
20. On The Alamo (4:03)
21. I've Had My Moments (3:04)
22. Should I? (2:20)

Bob Mac said...

Thanks for these Bob.

mel said...

During the late 1950s/early 1960s I used to listen on Saturday afternoons to the US external radio service Voice Of America, particularly Willis Conover's regular jazz programmes in which he often played records by Herman Chittison - that was my introduction to him and I quickly became a fan.

The Chronological Classics Chittison series is an invaluable part of my jazz record collection.

Thanks for this bio, Bob.

Zesty said...

Is there a missing link?

boppinbob said...

Hi Zesty, Yes you are correct, this was the result of when my old PC went on the blink. I lost nearly most of my blog comments. It took ages to retrieve them via Blogger’s help. I expect there’s a few posts out there that have missing links too, so I await someone to contact me like your good self then I can rectify the fault.

Here’s Herman Chittison - Chronological Classics

1933 - 1941

https://www.imagenetz.de/b7pby

1944 - 1945

https://www.imagenetz.de/ccwk6

1946 - 1950

https://www.imagenetz.de/hsYMT

Zesty said...

Ah, thank you so much! This is great stuff, and so hard to find anywhere.