Media Billie Holiday + Strange Fruit
Billie Holiday had a hit record with the song 鈥淪trange Fruit鈥 in the 1930s, bringing light to the horror of lynching in the American South.
Born
February 1, 1894
Died
November 17, 1955
Country
United States of America
Among the many new types of music that burst forth from Harlem in the late 1920s was stride style. The piano was instrumental to the development of stride. Harlem-stride pianists appealed to wider audiences—both highbrow and lowbrow—by dazzling them with showmanship and innovative, virtuoso compositions.
One of the best stride pianists of the day was James P. Johnson. He fused the rhythms and syncopations of stride’s predecessor, ragtime, with the jazz of Jelly Roll Morton and the classical pieces of concert pianists.
Duke Ellington would later use Johnson’s intricate piano rolls as study guides. Many of Johnson’s most successful works—among them “The Charleston” (below)—became a test for musicians aspiring to the label of “Harlem Tickler.”
The Music of
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From orchestra halls to rent parties and bars such as Barron’s Little Savoy (a popular integrated joint in Harlem’s Tenderloin district), Johnson’s sound was heard all over Harlem. In 1927, he composed his famous piano rhapsody “Yamekraw,” which made its public debut at Carnegie Hall with Fats Waller as the soloist. Johnson’s creative outpouring continued into the 1930s, when he composed Harlem Symphony and the opera De Organizer. The latter boasted a libretto, or text, by Langston Hughes.
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He accompanied singer Bessie Smith. |
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Duke Ellington cites Johnson as a major influence. |
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Musician Fats Waller was his student. |
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Langston Hughes wrote the libretto for Johnson’s opera, De Organizer. |
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He accompanied singer Ethel Waters. |
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Billie Holiday had a hit record with the song 鈥淪trange Fruit鈥 in the 1930s, bringing light to the horror of lynching in the American South.
Learn the basics of jazz music and how the art form works. Along with his band, Jason Moran shows you how jazz is more like skateboarding and football than you would think, as well as plays original and classic jazz standards.
From Fairmont Street to U Street, from the Howard Theater to the Bohemian Caverns, take a tour through jazz history with Billy Taylor and Frank Wess, who lead listeners through their hometown鈥檚 music scene in this seven-part audio series.
This series, hosted by Connaitre Miller of Howard University, explores why Swing was the most popular dance music in America and how it is still alive today in dance halls, clubs and movies
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