Fats Waller at the piano in an iconic image--bowler hat and eubulent personality.. |
Fats
Waller was big in every way—big in girth,
big in talent, big in personality, big in Jazz.
Unlike other pioneers of the
new American music on piano like classically trained Scott Joplin of Memphis or the master of
the New Orleans whore house blues
Jellyroll Morton, Thomas Waller who was born in Harlem on this date in 1904 cut his musical teeth playing organ for street crusades and revivals
led by his father, a lay Baptist preacher with a following
in the growing Black community.
He first played a foot pumped portable reed organ but learned piano, mostly on
his own, while attending local public
high school. By the age of 15 he was
playing organ at the Lincoln Theater,
a vaudeville and silent movie house on 135th Street. He was so successful that he abandoned his
father’s hope that he would become an evangelist
to dedicate himself to music. Not
just any music, but to jazz which was sweeping New York and the nation as World
War I raged in far off Europe.
Quickly picking up the nickname Fats, for obvious reasons,
young Waller continued to earn money playing in movie houses through the mid-1920’s
well after he was established as a piano recording
artist. But he did things on those
big old movie palace and church pipe organs that no one had ever
heard before. In 1927 and ’28 he
recorded several sides of jazz on the pipe
organ, a sound never before heard.
He also continued to play organ on one of his two regular New York radio programs late in that decade, Moon
River. He also performed organ
pieces by Bach for select audiences in which he showed
mastery of classical technique.
Waller recorded several sides on the Hammond electric organ helping to popularize the instrument in American homes. Earlier he had also recorded on pipe organs. |
But I am getting ahead of
myself. Despite his talent as an
organist it was as a piano player and singer
that Waller made his mark. About the
time he began his work at the Lincoln Theater, Waller won an amateur contest playing and singing stride pianist James P. Johnson’s Carolina Shout. Incredibly, he had learned
to play the number by watching the keys moved from a player piano roll. By 1919
he had written his first piano rags,
Muscle
Shoals Blues and Birmingham Blues which he would record in his first sessions three years later.
After Waller’s mother died in 1920 and somewhat estranged from his father for his refusal to go into the ministry,
he went to live with the family of well-known Harlem piano player, Russell B. T. Brooks, and soon became a
student of his hero, James P.
Johnson.
Still a teenager Waller was making a
decent living from his theater work and from playing piano in Harlem dives and nightclubs. He picked up
more money cutting piano rolls,
which still rivaled gramophone records
in popularity. During these years in
addition to tutelage from Brooks and
Johnson, he may, according to his own unconfirmed accounts, taken some formal training with professors from Julliard. At any rate, he
learned to read and write musical
notation, which other pioneers like Jellyroll Morton could never do.
At the age of 18 the prodigy made his first recordings as a soloist of Okeh Records including his own piano rags. He also began recording as pianist for a
number of blues singers including Sara Martin, Alberta Hunter, and Maude
Mills. In ’23 he collaborated with Clarence Williams to write and publish Wild
Cat Blues which Williams reordered.
Soon he was regularly writing songs for other artists.
Waller was an early radio star--one of the few Black performers to headline shows on network radio in the early 1930's. |
The same year he began his first radio program, a series on a New Jersey station which proved so
popular that he was signed to WHN in
New York. In addition to his organ music
program he also launched Fats Waller’s Rhythm Club which had
a long run on the station. By 1934
Waller’s house band for the program
solidified into a tight six piece combo
with which he recorded as Fats Waller
and His Rhythm.
But first Waller began regular collaboration with a number of lyricists, the most important of whom
was Andy Razof. Together they collaborated on a number of shows, some of which made the jump from
Harlem to Broadway including Keep
Shufflin’ in 1928, Load of Coal, and Hot
Chocolates in 1929. In Harlem
the musical was a showcase for Cab
Calloway, but Louis Armstrong took
over on Broadway. Among the memorable songs from that show was Ain’t
Misbehavin’ which became one of Armstrong’s signature songs and Waller’s most famous composition.
Waller copyrighted over 400 songs either alone or in partnership with
various lyricists. There may have been
hundreds more not copyrighted, bits of ephemera
perhaps used in a single performance or broadcast.
Despite being prolific and busy as a
composer and as a performer, in the late ‘20’s Waller was often hard up for cash due to his appetite
for plenty of food, drink, and good times and would sometimes sell songs for a flat fee which other usually white
artists published and used as their own.
Many of these were novelty songs
for vaudeville and nightclubs with a short expected shelf life. But others were more
substantial. There is almost irrefutable
evidence that Waller sold I Can't Give You Anything but Love
with lyrics by Razof to white composer Jimmy
McHugh and lyricist Dorothy Fields
for $500. The two included it in their
show Blackbirds
of 1928. The song became a jazz standard. Waller would later have radios shut off if
the song came on the air. A similar
claim has been made for The Sunny Side of the Street, also
attributed to McHugh and Fields.
If those classics slipped through
his fingers, however, there were plenty more to which Waller can lay undisputed
claim.
In 1927 Waller signed with Victor, the principal label for the
rest of his life. His first issues were
on the pipe organ—W. C. Handy’s St.
Louis Blues and his own Lenox Ave. Blues. With Victor he recorded in various
combinations including Morris’s Hot
Babes, Fats Waller's Buddies—one
of the earliest interracial groups to record—and McKinney’s Cotton Pickers.
But he really stood out as a solo
performer on piano and singing. A series
of his Victor solo sessions are now considered the purest and best examples of the Harlem stride piano. These records
included Handful of Keys, Smashing Thirds, Numb
Fumblin’, and Valentine Stomp. He also recorded
sessions with Ted Lewis in 1930, Jack Teagarden in 1931, and Billy Banks’s Rhythmakers 1932.
Gene
Sedric, a clarinetist who played with
Waller on some of his 1930s recordings explained why Waller was so sought after
as a collaborator in the recording studio, “Fats was the most relaxed man I
ever saw in a studio, and so he made everybody else relaxed. After a balance
had been taken, we'd just need one take to make a side, unless it was a kind of
difficult number.”
Waller took his radio studio band on tour as the nucleolus of Fats Waller and His Rhythm . |
In ’34 Waller put together his most important band, mostly from
musicians on his radio show. They played
together on numerous sides and in public performance through much of the rest
of the decade. Musicians included Herman Autrey (sometimes replaced by Bill Coleman or John Bugs” Hamilton), Gene Sedric or Rudy Powell, and Al Casey.
Also in the ‘30’s Waller played
frequently in California where his
stage presence was a big hit. With an ebullient personality he salted quips and jokes between songs. He had
also mastered so many styles from rag to what was becoming known as Dixieland, blues, and of course his
signature stride that his performances were always varied and nuanced. He could drive hard and dirty or melodic
and soulful as in his and Razof’s lovely Honeysuckle Rose.
That winning style won him parts in
two otherwise forgettable B musicals in
1935—Hooray
for Love for RKO and King
of Burlesque for 20th Century
Fox.
Waller also showed himself adaptable
to changing tastes, which were leaving small jazz bands behind in favor of big bands and swing. In fact he had
recorded his own composition Whiteman Stomp with Fletcher Henderson pioneering big band
way back in ’27. He was comfortable in
almost any style. He began to take a
band originally put together by Charley
Turner, his base player on the
road. With the addition of most of the
Rhythm personnel Waller’s big band was a success both on tour and on wax
beginning with their first recording in 1935 of a version of I Got
Rhythm with a memorable cutting
contest of alternating piano solos by Waller and Hank Duncan.
Waller was always most at home in Harlem. Seen here grabbing a hot dog lunch off of a street peddler's cart. |
Other big bands of the era were
influenced by Waller and his style, but none more than those of pianists Count Basie and Duke Ellington who acknowledged the influence of his stride style
and often performed his songs.
In ’38 Waller took the core of the
band on tour to Europe where he
experienced great success. Spending
considerable time in London Waller
recorded with his Continental Rhythm consisting
of a few regulars and English session men. He also indulged an old passion and also
recorded a number of songs for EMI on
their Compton Theatre organ at Abbey Road Studios.
A second European tour the next year
was cut short by the outbreak of World War II. Semi-stranded in London, Waller composed and
recorded his most ambitious work yet—his London Suite, an extended series of six related pieces for solo piano: Piccadilly,
Chelsea,
Soho,
Bond
Street, Limehouse, and White
Chapel. It is Waller’s bid to be considered a serious composer like Duke Ellington, rather than just a hit song machine.
Waller on the set with Bill "Bojangles" Robinson on the set of Stormy Weather just weeks before his death. |
Back in the States, Waller was never
more popular. He toured
extensively. And in 1943 he was called
to Hollywood to participate in the
most prestigious Black musical ever
made by a major studio—MGM’s Stormy
Weather with Lena Horne and Bill Robinson, in which he led an
all-star band including Benny Carter
and Zutty Singleton. He also collaborated with the lyricist George Marion, Jr. on the score for the
stage show Early to Bed which opened for Boston tryouts in October.
During a solo engagement at the Zanzibar Room in Hollywood, Waller was taken seriously
ill. He decided to try to return to
New York by train. He died on the way of pneumonia on December 15, 1943, just weeks after wrapping up
filming on Stormy Weather.
Waller's 1943 funeral at Rev. Adam Clayton Powell Jr.'s Absyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem. |
Back in Harlem the popular Rev. Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. preached
at a funeral attended by more than
4,000 mourners who spilled out onto the street.
Surveying the scene Powel noted, “Fat’s always played to a full house.”
The original Broadway cast album cover for Ain't Misbehavin' , the show that made Nell Carter and Andre DeShields stars. |
Interest in Waller has never
waned. His songs continued to be
recorded and interpreted by jazz and pop artists. In 1978 Ain’t Misbehavin’ exploded on
Broadway with an ensemble cast including Nell
Carter, André DeShields, Armelia McQueen, Ken Page, and Charlayne
Woodard performing an uninterrupted parade of Waller’s music. It won the Tony for Best Musical and
a Best Actress in a Musical for
Carter. The original cast album became a
break away hit. The show was remounted in London, and restaged with the original cast on
Broadway ten years later to equal acclaim.
Touring companies with the Pointer
Sisters, and more recently American
Idol contestants have also met with success.
Your just can’t keep a piano man
down.
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