Wednesday 10 July 2024

Cootie Williams born 10 July 1911


Charles Melvin "Cootie" Williams (July 10, 1911 – September 15, 1985) was an American jazz, jump blues, and rhythm and blues trumpeter, whose mastery of mutes and expressive effects made him one of the most distinctive jazz musicians. 

Born in Mobile, Alabama, Williams was raised by an aunt after his pianist mother died when he was eight. A self-taught trumpet player, he began his professional career at the age of 14 with the Young Family band, which included saxophonist Lester Young. According to Williams he acquired his nickname as a boy when his father took him to a band concert. When it was over his father asked him what he'd heard and he replied, "Cootie, cootie, cootie." 

He worked with Alonzo Ross De Luxe Syncopators from 1926 to 1928, then made his first recordings with pianist James P. Johnson in New York, where he also worked briefly in the bands of Chick Webb and Fletcher Henderson. Williams rose to prominence as a member of Duke Ellington's orchestra when the band was playing at the Cotton Club, with which he first performed from 1929 to 1940. He also recorded his own sessions during this time, both freelance and with other Ellington sidemen. Williams was renowned for his "jungle"-style trumpet playing (in the manner of Ellington's earlier trumpeter Bubber Miley and trombonist Joe "Tricky Sam" Nanton) and for his use of the plunger mute. 

He also sang occasionally, a notable instrumental feature being in the Ellington piece "Echoes of the Jungle". For him, Duke Ellington wrote ''Concerto for Cootie,'' which when lyrics were added became "Do Nothing till You Hear from Me". He was also the soloist in other Ellington compositions, such as "Echoes of Harlem", "Harlem Air Shaft", and the religious piece ''The Shepherd Who Watches Over the Night Flock'', which was dedicated to the Rev. John Gensel.

As well as recording these classics with Ellington, he was lead on  some of his own sessions with a small ensemble of fellow Ellington band members, Cootie Williams and His Rug Cutters, with outstanding recordings. He also recorded with Lionel Hampton, Teddy Wilson, and Billie Holiday, in addition to being a guest at Benny Goodman's Carnegie Hall Concert in 1938. 


                                   

In 1940, Williams joined Benny Goodman's orchestra, a highly publicized move that caused quite a stir at the time (commemorated by Raymond Scott with the song "When Cootie Left the Duke"), then in 1941 formed his own orchestra, in which over the years he employed Charlie Parker, Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, Bud Powell, Eddie Vinson, and other young players. 

In 1947, Williams wrote the song "Cowpox Boogie" while recuperating from a bout with smallpox. He contracted the disease from a vaccination he insisted all band members receive. By the late 1940s, Williams had fallen into obscurity, having had to reduce his band numbers and finally to disband. In the 1950s, he began to play more rhythm and blues, toured with small groups, and played in the Savoy Ballroom. 

In the late 1950s, he formed a small jazz group and recorded a number of albums with Rex Stewart, as well as his own album, Cootie Williams in Hi-Fi (1958). In 1962, he rejoined Ellington and stayed with the orchestra until 1974, after Ellington's death. He then played in the Mercer Ellington band into the 1970s. In 1975, he performed during the Super Bowl IX halftime show. By then his solos were much simpler and more primitive than earlier (gone was the Louis Armstrong-inspired bravado), but Cootie remained the master with the plunger mute. He was semi-retired during his final decade, taking a final solo in 1978 on a Teresa Brewer record, and posthumously serving as an inspiration for Wynton Marsalis' own plunger playing. 

Williams died in New York City on September 15, 1985, at the age of 74 from a kidney ailment. He is interred at Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx, New York City. He was a 1991 inductee of the Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame. 

(Edited from Wikipedia, All Music, IMDb & Britannica) 

4 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “Cootie Williams – Concerto For Cootie: Selected Recordings 1928-62 (2024 Acrobat) (@192)” go here:

https://www.imagenetz.de/iTY8q

1-1 Jimmy Johnson And His Orchestra– Mournful Tho'ts
1-2 Jimmy Johnson And His Orchestra– Chicago Blues
1-3 The Jungle Band–Paducah
1-4 Duke Ellington And His Orchestra– Hot Feet
1-5 The Jungle Band –Jazz Convulsions
1-6 The Six Jolly Jesters– Oklahoma Stomp
1-7 Duke Ellington And His Orchestra– Ring Dem Bells
1-8 The Jungle Band –Rockin' In Rhythm
1-9 Duke Ellington And His Cotton Club Orchestra– Echoes Of The Jungle
1-10 Duke Ellington And His Orchestra– It’s Glory
1-11 Duke Ellington And His Orchestra– Bugle Call Rag
1-12 Duke Ellington And His Orchestra– Solitude
1-13 Barney Bigard And His Jazzopaters– Frolic Sam
1-14 Barney Bigard And His Jazzopaters– Caravan
1-15 Duke Ellington And His Orchestra– The New East St. Louis Toodle-O
1-16 Cootie Williams & His Rug Cutters– Digga Digga Do
1-17 Cootie Williams & His Rug Cutters– Blue Reverie
1-18 Cootie Williams & His Rug Cutters– Tiger Rag
1-19 The Gotham Stompers–Alabamy Home
1-20 Teddy Wilson And His Orchestra–Carelessly
1-21 Lionel Hampton And His Orchestra– Stompology
1-22 Johnny Hodges And His Orchestra– Peckin'
1-23 Duke Ellington And His Orchestra– Harmony In Harlem
1-24 Cootie Williams & His Rug Cutters– Echoes Of Harlem
2-1 Cootie Williams & His Rug Cutters– Chasin' Chippies
2-2 Cootie Williams & His Rug Cutters– Delta Mood
2-3 Cootie Williams & His Rug Cutters– The Boys From Harlem
2-4 Cootie Williams & His Rug Cutters– Mobile Blues
2-5 Cootie Williams & His Rug Cutters– Boudoir Benny
2-6 Cootie Williams & His Rug Cutters– Ain't The Gravy Good
2-7 Johnny Hodges And His Orchestra– Savoy Strut
2-8 Cootie Williams & His Rug Cutters– Night Song
2-9 Cootie Williams & His Rug Cutters– Black Beauty
2-10 Cootie Williams & His Rug Cutters– Black Butterfly
2-11 Duke Ellington And His Orchestra–Tootin' Through The Roof
2-12 Duke Ellington And His Orchestra–Concerto For Cootie
2-13 Duke Ellington And His Orchestra–Harlem Air-Shaft
2-14 Duke Ellington And His Orchestra–Rumpus In Richmond
2-15 Duke Ellington And His Orchestra–In A Mellotone
2-16 Benny Goodman Sextet–Wholly Cats
2-17 Benny Goodman And His Orchestra–Benny Rides Again
2-18 Benny Goodman And His Orchestra–Superman
2-19 Benny Goodman And His Orchestra–Let The Door Knob Hitcha
2-20 Benny Goodman And His Orchestra–Good Enough To Keep (Air Mail Special)
2-21 Benny Goodman Sextet– Fiesta In Blue
2-22 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– West End Blues
2-23 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– Ain't Misbehavin'
2-24 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– G-Men

boppinbob said...

3-1 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– Fly Right (Epistrophy)
3-2 Leonard Feather All Stars– Mop Mop
3-3 Cootie Williams Sextet– Honeysuckle Rose
3-4 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– Now I Know
3-5 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– Tess's Torch Song (I Had A Man)
3-6 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– Red Blues
3-7 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– Roll 'Em
3-8 Cootie Williams Sextet– You Talk A Little Trash
3-9 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– Air Mail Special
3-10 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– Round Midnight
3-11 Cootie Williams Sextet– Floogie Boo
3-12 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– Juice Head Baby
3-13 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– House Of Joy
3-14 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– Mood For Coot
3-15 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– Echoes Of Harlem
3-16 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– He Should'a Flip'd When He Flop'd
3-17 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– Wrong Neighborhood
3-18 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– Ain't Got No Blues Today
3-19 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– I Can't Get Started
3-20 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– Save The Bones For Henry Jones
3-21 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– Typhoon
3-22 Dinah Washington And Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– Resolution Blues
3-23 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– Let 'Em Roll
3-24 Eddie Mack With Cootie Williams And His Orchestra– Divorce Me C.O.D. Blues

4:1 Cootie Williams– Lean, Baby
4:2 Cootie Williams– Rinky Dink
4-3 Cootie Williams & Rex Stewart– Alphonse And Gaston
4-4 Cootie Williams & Rex Stewart– I Got A Right To Sing The Blues
4-5 Ronnie Gilbert– You've Been A Good Old Wagon
4-6 Cootie Williams– Caravan
4-7 Cootie Williams– Nevertheless I'm In Love With You
4-8 Cootie Williams– New Concerto For Cootie
4-9 Charlie Shavers & Coleman Hawkins– Cootie's Blues (Cootie's Big Time Blues)
4-10 Stewart - Williams & Co.– Bess, You Is My Woman Now
4-11 Cootie Williams– Night Train
4-12 Cootie Williams, Wini Brown– Lover
4-13 Cootie Williams, Wini Brown– Around Midnight
4-14 Cootie Williams– It Don't Mean A Thing If It Ain't Got That Swing
4-15 Cootie Williams– Some Of These Days
4-16 Duke Ellington– September 12th Blues


This collection, which comprises recordings made by Cootie across the first three decades and more of his career, represents his most important and most highly-regarded performances and collaborations. While well known for his solos with plunger muted trumpet, this collection also highlights Williams' range and versatility and virtuosity in his open trumpet and lead work. Inevitably, it features recordings made with many of the greatest names in jazz, swing and R&B, including not only Ellington and Goodman, but Charlie Christian, Charlie Parker, Pearl Bailey, Bud Powell, Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson, Billie Holiday, Dinah Washington, Rex Stewart, Johnny Hodges and many more. There have been very few products of this substance devoted specifically to Cootie Williams, so this will be a welcome addition offering an insight into his music and a varied and fascinating showcase for his huge contribution to the genre.

jazzing said...

Discografía CD 1:

01-02: Jimmy Johnson and His Orchestra
Cootie Williams and another, tp / trb? / Charlie Holmes, cl,
ss, as / cl, as? / James P. Johnson & Fats Waller, p / Joe
Watts, b / Perry Bradford, speech.
New York, 18/06/1928 [Col 14334-D mx 146539-3]

03: The Jungle Band
Duke Ellington, p, arr, dir / Arthur Whetsel & Freddy
Jenkins, tp / Cootie Williams, tp, voc / Joe Nanton, trb /
Johnny Hodges, cl, ss, as / Harry Carney, cl, as, bar /
Barney Bigard, cl, ts / Fred Guy, bjo / Wellman Braud,
b / Sonny Greer, d, voc.
New York, 01/03/1929 [Br]

04: Duke Ellington and His Cotton Club Orchestra
Same; Cootie Williams, voc.
New York, 07/03/1929 [Vic]

05: Duke Ellington and His Cotton Club Orchestra
Same; Juan Tizol, valve trb added.
New York, 13/09/1929 [Br]

06: Six Jolly Jesters
Duke Ellington, p, arr, dir / FreddyJenkins, tp, voc / Cootie
Williams, tp / Joe Nanton, trb / Johnny Hodges, as / Harold
Randolph, k, voc / Teddy Bunn, g / Fred Guy, bjo /
Wellman Braud, b / Sonny Greer, d, voc /Bruce
Johnson, washb.
New York, 29/10/1929 [Voc]

07: Duke Ellington and His Cotton Club Orchestra
Duke Ellington, p, arr, dir / Arthur Whetsel, Freddy
Jenkins, Cootie Williams, tp / Joe Nanton, trb /
Juan Tizol, valve trb / Johnny Hodges, cl, ss, as / Harry
Carney, cl, as, bar / Barney Bigard, cl, ts / Fred Guy, bjo /
Wellman Braud, b / Sonny Greer, d / Charlie Barnet,
chimes / [Cootie Williams, voc].
Hollywood, 20/08/1930 [Vic]

08: Duke Ellington and His Cotton Club Orchestra
Same, Fred Guy, bjo, g & Charlie Barnet, out.
New York, 16/01/1931 [Vic]

09: Duke Ellington and His Orchestra
Same, Fred Guy, bjo added.
Camden, New Jersey, 16/06/1931 [Vic]

10: Duke Ellington and His Orchestra
Same.
Camden, New Jersey, 17/06/1931 [Vic]

11: Duke Ellington and His Famous Orchestra
Same; Lawrence Brown, trb added.
New York, 09/02/1932 [Vic]

12: Duke Ellington and His Famous Orchestra
Duke Ellington, p, arr, dir / Arthur Whetsel, Freddy
Jenkins, Cootie Williams, tp / Joe Nanton,
Lawrence Brown, trb /Johnny Hodges, cl, ss, as /
Harry Carney, cl, as, bar / Otto Hardwick, cl, as, bsx /
Barney Bigard, cl, ts / Fred Guy, bjo, g / Wellman
Braud, b / Sonny Greer, d.
Chicago, 09/01/1934 [Vic]


jazzing said...

Discografía CD 1:

13-14: Barney Bigard and His Jazzopaters
Cootie Williams, tp; Juan Tizol, valve trb; Barney Bigard, cl;
Harry Carney, bar; Duke Ellington, p; Billy Taylor, b;
Sonny Greer, d.
Hollywood, LA, 19/12/1936 [Variety]

15: Duke Ellington and His Famous Orchestra
Duke Ellington, p, arr, dir / Rex Stewart, c / Wallace
Jones, Cootie Williams, tp / Joe Nanton,
Lawrence Brown, trb /Juan Tizol, valve trb / Johnny
Hodges, cl, as, ts / Otto Hardwick, as / Harry Carney,
cl. bar / Barney Bigard, cl, ts / Fred Guy, g / Billy Taylor,
Hayes Alvis, b / Freddy Jenkins, chimes / Sonny Greer, d.
New York, 05/03/1937 [Br m7989 mx 180]

16-18: Cootie Williams and His Rug Cutters
Cootie Williams, tp / Joe Nanton, trb / Johnny Hodges,
as, ss / Harry Carney, bar / Barney Bigard, cl, ts (except 18) /
/ Duke Ellington, p / Hayes Alvis, b / Sonny Greer, d.
New York, 08/03/1937.

19: The Gotham Stompers
Cootie Williams, tp / Sandy Williams, trb / Johnny Hodges,
as / Barney Bigard, cl / Harry Carney, bar / Tommy
Fulford, p / Bernard Addison, g / Billy Taylor, b / Chick Webb, d.
New York, 25/03/1937 [Variety VA 629, mx 303-1]

20: Teddy Wilson and His Orchestra
Cootie Williams, tp / Johnny Hodges,
as / Harry Carney, cl, bar / Teddy Wilson, p /
Allan Reuss, g / John Kirby, b / Cozy Cole, d / Billie
Holiday, voc.
New York, 31/03/1937 [Br 7867 mx 20911-3]

21: Lionel Hampton and His Orchestra
Cootie Williams, tp / Mezz Mezzrow, cl / Johnny
Hodges, as / Lawrence Brown, trb / Jess Stacy, p / Lionel
Hampton, vibr / Allan Reuss, g / John Kirby, b / Cozy Cole, d /
Lionel Hampton, voc.
14/04/1937 [RCA Victor, vinyl LP, “Lionel Hampton. Vol.
1, Stompology”, Vintage Series, LPV-575, US, 1971]

22: Johnny Hodges and His Orchestra
Cootie Williams, tp, voc /Johnny Hodges & Otto
Hardwic, as / Barney Bigard, cl /Harry Carney, bar /Duke
Ellington, p / Fred Guy, g / Hayes Alvis, b / Sonny Greer, d /
Buddy Clark, voc.
New York, 20/05/1937 [Le Jazz, CD 8103, “The Complete
Johnny Hodges and His Orchestra”, Denmark, 1990]

23: Duke Ellington and His Famous Orchestra
Duke Ellington, p, arr, dir / Rex Stewart, c / Cootie Williams,
probably Arthur Whetsel, tp / Joe Nanton,
Lawrence Brown, trb /Juan Tizol, valve trb / Johnny
Hodges, cl, as, / Otto Hardwick, as / Harry Carney,
cl. bar / Barney Bigard, cl / Fred Guy, g / Billy Taylor,
b / Sonny Greer, d.
New York, 20/09/1937 [Col, vinyl LP, CBS 88210, “The
Complete Duke Ellington”, vol. 9, 1937, Holland, 1976].

24: Cootie Williams and His Rug Cutters
Cootie Williams, tp / Joe Nanton, trb / Johnny Hodges,
as, ss / Harry Carney, bar / Duke Ellington, p / Fred
Guy, g / Billy Taylor, b / Sonny Greer, d.
New York, 19/01/1938 [Voc v3960 mx M729]