Winifred Atwell (27 February 1910 *– 28 February 1983) was a Trinidadian pianist who enjoyed great popularity in Britain and Australia from the 1950s with a series of boogie-woogie and ragtime hits, selling over 20 million records. She was the first black artist to have a number-one hit in the UK Singles Chart and as of 2023, remains the only female instrumentalist to do so.
Una Winifred Atwell was born in Tunapuna in Trinidad and Tobago. She and her parents lived in Jubilee Street. Her family owned a pharmacy, and she trained as a druggist, and was expected to join the family business, Winifred, however, had played the piano since a young age, and achieved considerable popularity locally.
She left Trinidad in the early 1940s and travelled to the United States to study with Alexander Borovsky and in 1946 moved to London, where she had gained a place at the Royal Academy of Music. She became the first female pianist to be awarded the Academy's highest grading for musicianship. To support her studies, she played rags at London clubs and theatres. These modest beginnings in variety would one day see her topping the bill at the London Palladium.
She attracted attention with an unscheduled appearance at the Casino Theatre, where she substituted for an ill star. She caught the eye of entrepreneur Bernard Delfont, who put her on a long-term contract. She released three discs which were well received. The third, "Jezebel," scurried to the top of the best seller lists. It was her fourth disc that catapulted her to huge popularity in the UK. A fiendishly complex arrangement called "Cross Hands Boogie" was released to show her virtuoso rhythmic technique, but it was the "B" side, a 1900s tune written by George Botsford called "Black and White Rag," that was to become a radio standard.
Winifred Atwell's husband, former stage comedian Lew Levisohn, was vital in shaping her career as a variety star. The two had met in 1946, and married soon after. They were inseparable up to Levisohn's death in Hong Kong in December 1977; they had no children. He had cannily made the choice, for stage purposes, of her playing first a concert grand, then a beaten up old upright piano. This became famous as Winifred Atwell's "other piano".
When Winifred Atwell first came to Britain, she initially earned only a few pounds a week. By the mid-fifties, this had shot up to over $10,000. By 1952, her popularity had spread internationally. Her hands were insured with Lloyds of London for a quarter of a million dollars (the policy stipulating that she was never to wash dishes). She signed a record contract with Decca Records, and her sales were soon 30,000 discs a week. She was by far the biggest selling pianist of her time. She is the only holder of two gold and two silver discs for piano music in Britain, and was the first black artist in the UK to sell a million records.
Atwell with Louis Armstrong |
She had her own series in Britain (1956-57) and on Australian television in 1960-1961. Her brilliant career earned her a fortune, and would have extended further to the U.S. but for issues of race. Her breakthrough appearance was to have been on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1956, but on arrival in America she was confronted with problems of selling the show in the south with a British-sounding black woman. The appearance was never recorded.
In 1955 Winifred Atwell arrived in Australia and was greeted as an international celebrity. She was paid $5,000 a week (the equivalent of around $50,000 today), making her the highest paid star from a Commonwealth country to visit Australia up to that time. Her enormous popularity in Australia led to her settling in Sydney in the 1970s. She became an Australian citizen two years before her death.
Winifred Atwell suffered a stroke in 1980. She officially retired on The Mike Walsh Show, then Australia's then highest rating television variety program, in 1981. The only public performances from this point were as organist in her parish church at Narrabean. She categorically stated on the Mike Walsh show that she would retire and not return as a public performer, but that she had an excellent career. Her last TV performance was a medley of Black and White Rag and Twelfth Street rag, before being given a standing ovation and awarded a bouquet.
In 1983 following a fire that destroyed her Narrabeen home, she suffered a heart attack and died while staying with friends in Seaforth. She is buried beside husband Lew Levisohn in South Gundarimba Private Cemetery in Northern New South Wales, just outside Lismore.
(Edited from Wikipedia) *There is some uncertainty over her date and year of birth. Many sources suggest 27 February 1914, but there is a strong suggestion that her birthday was 27 April. Most sources give her year of birth as 1914, but her gravestone states that she died at the age of 73, suggesting that she was born in 1910.
FOR ”WINIFRED ATWELL - BLACK & WHITE RAG (2014 Jasmine)” GO HERE:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.imagenetz.de/jxS8M
Disc 1
THE HITS & MORE
1. BLACK AND WHITE RAG
2. DINAH BOOGIE
3. JUBILEE RAG
4. BRITANNIA RAG
5. CORONATION RAG
6. FLIRTATION WALTZ
7. GOLDEN TANGO
8. LET'S HAVE A PARTY (parts 1 & 2)
9. THE STORY OF THREE LOVES
10. LET'S HAVE ANOTHER PARTY (parts 1 & 2)
11. LET'S HAVE A DING DONG (parts 1 & 2)
12. THE POOR PEOPLE OF PARIS
13. PORT-AU-PRINCE
14. THE LEFT BANK
15. MAKE IT A PARTY (parts 1 & 2)
16. MOONLIGHT GAMBLER
17. TWELFTH STREET RAG
18. LET'S ROCK & ROLL (parts 1 & 2)
19. SPACESHIP BOOGIE
20. LET'S HAVE A BALL (parts 1 & 2)
21. SYNCOPATED SADIE
22. LET'S GO (parts 1 & 2)
23. SUMMER OF THE SEVENTEENTH DOLL
24 PIANO PARTY (parts 1 & 2)
Disc 2
SAMBAS, RAGS, BOOGIES & MORE
1. THE GYPSY SAMBA
2. MANZANILLA
3. CHOO CHOO SAMBA
4. SWANEE RIVER BOOGIE
5. CROSS HANDS BOOGIE
6. GOLD AND SILVER WALTZ
7. CRAZY WORDS, CRAZY TUNE
8. EL CUMBANCHERO
9. TAMBOO
10. SERENATA
11. TABOO
12. LADY OF SPAIN
13. DIXIE BOOGIE
14. BOUNCE THE BOOGIE
15. CARAVAN
16. RHAPSODY RAG
17. THE CHARLESTON
18. DILL PICKLES RAG
19. WINNIE'S WALTZING RAG
20. BIG BEN BOOGIE
21. SEVENTEENTH CENTURY BOOGIE
22. STRANGER IN PARADISE
23. PIANO TUNER'S BOOGIE
24. RAMPART STREET ROCK
25. ST LOUIS BLUES
26. BUMBLE BOOGIE
27. YANCEY SPECIAL
28. DOB'S BOOGIE
29. RAUNCHY
30. SILVER SHOES
31. NICOLETTE
32. WINNIE'S PIANO PARTY (parts 1 & 2)
Winifred Atwell - known as 'The Queen of the Ivories' - was the most popular UK-based female entertainer of the 1950s. In total Winnie had fifteen major hits records during the 50s, all of which are included herein. This unique compilation features for the first time all Winifred's celebrated double-sided medleys as single extended tracks. (Jasmine notes)
(Above playlist has been reconstructed using same mp3’s but from various digital albums)
Jasmine omitted "Portrait Painter Of Paree" which Winifred recorded for UK Decca's first stereo LP, A Journey Into Stereo Sound SKL 4001 (1958) - a tune reminiscent of The Poor People Of Paris - various artists.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Bob
- mel
Hello Mel, Found the "Portrait Painter of Paree" and decided to make up a compilation of other titles not on the Jasmine CD. Hope you like it!
ReplyDeleteFor “Winifred Atwell - Black And White Magic (2024 From The Vaults)” go here:
https://www.imagenetz.de/hB2up
01) Winifred Atwell – Five Finger Boogie
02) Winifred Atwell - Rumpus
03) Winifred Atwell - Boogie In The Groove
04) Winifred Atwell - Vine Street Boogie
05) Winifred Atwell - Swedish Polka
06) Winifred Atwell - Mexican Twist
07) Winifred Atwell - Jimmy Dorsey Boogie
08) Winifred Atwell - Jump the Boogie
09) Winifred Atwell - Kitten on the Keys.
10) Winifred Atwell - Plink Plank Plunk
11) Winifred Atwell - Bob's Boogie
12) Winifred Atwell - Tickle the Ivories Rag
13) Winifred Atwell – Bossa Nova Boogie
14) Winifred Atwell - Hawaiian Cha Cha
15) Winifred Atwell - The Portrait Painter of Paree
16) Winifred Atwell – Hometown Shout
17) Winifred Atwell - Down Yonder
18) Winifred Atwell – The Black Mask Waltz
19) Winifred Atwell – The Entertainer
20) Winifred Atwell - Dizzy Fingers
21) Winifred Atwell - Hamp's boogie woogie
22) Winifred Atwell - Star Time
23) Winifred Atwell - Charleston
24) Winifred Atwell - Jezebel
25) Winifred Atwell - March of The Cards
26) Winifred Atwell – Hesitation
27) Winifred Atwell - Alley Cat Song
28) Winifred Atwell - Raggin' the Scale
29) Winifred Atwell - Misirlou
30) Winifred Atwell - Exodus
Thank you, Bob.
ReplyDeleteVery nice, thanks.
ReplyDeleteGreat!
ReplyDelete