Media Billie Holiday + Strange Fruit
Billie Holiday had a hit record with the song “Strange Fruit” in the 1930s, bringing light to the horror of lynching in the American South.
Born
May 21, 1904
Died
December 15, 1943
Country
United States of America
Born and raised in Harlem, Thomas Wright “Fats” Waller worked as a delivery boy for a delicatessen run by brothers Connie and George Immerman. The pair later opened Connie’s Inn, a Harlem nightclub that brought the all-Black musical revue “Hot Chocolates”—and its talented composer, Fats Waller—to audiences before it moved on to Broadway.
Waller learned to play the piano at age six. With his minister father preaching at the Abyssinian Baptist Church, Waller’s first audience was the local congregation.
His first paid gig was to accompany silent movies on the pipe organ at the Lincoln Theatre. From there, he moved on to playing at rent parties and in cabarets.
Waller’s true genius lay in composing. The Fletcher Henderson Orchestra performed several works of his creation, notably “Whiteman Stomp.” His partnership with lyricist Andy Razaf resulted in such famous songs as “Honeysuckle Rose,” as well as hit musicals that included “Keep Shufflin’.” Razaf and Waller also collaborated to produce “Hot Chocolates” in 1929. With trumpeter Louis Armstrong headlining its Broadway cast, the musical brought fame to the Waller-Razaf tune “Ain’t Misbehavin’.”
The Music of
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If an exuberant stage presence was Waller’s trademark, musical innovation was his legacy. He raised the Harlem stride style of piano playing—characterized by an oompah beat in the left hand and syncopation in the right—to a fine art. Fusing elements of blues, classical music, boogie-woogie, and ragtime with stride, Waller fashioned a new sound that was uniquely his own.
I n t e r s e c t i o n s |
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Cab Calloway sang in Waller and Razaf’s “Hot Chocolates.” |
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Waller accompanied blues singer Bessie Smith. |
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Pianist James P. Johnson was his teacher. |
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He accompanied singer Adelaide Hall. |
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Waller wrote tunes for the Fletcher Henderson Orchestra. |
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Billie Holiday had a hit record with the song “Strange Fruit” in the 1930s, bringing light to the horror of lynching in the American South.
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