Concerto for Cootie
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About The Book

Jazz legend Cootie Williams left home to start his career as a professional musician at the age of fifteen. In 1940 after eleven years as one of the major soloists with the Duke Ellington orchestra Williams was lured away to the band of Benny Goodman one of the most popular bands in the country. At the time it was a controversial move--it was still taboo for African Americans to share the bandstand with white people. Current references to the move usually reduce it to a song written by Raymond Scott When Cootie Left the Duke. In reality it was a seismic event. The Black press predicted Black bands would collapse from raids on their ranks. White musicians were afraid they would be put out of work. And the white press stirred up visions of Black musicians mixing with white women in the new landscape of integrated orchestras. <p/>The twenty years trumpeter Williams spent as a band leader (1942-1962) have been covered in only the barest of details. His involvement in politics and the civil rights movement have not been detailed before. An astute talent scout Williams and his band launched the careers of Eddie Cleanhead Vinson Earl Bud Powell Eddie Lockjaw Davis and Pearl Bailey. He also was the first to record the music of a young Thelonious Monk using two of Monk's compositions (Epistrophy and 'Round Midnight) as theme songs for his band. <p/> Steven C. Bowie respectfully tells Williams's story from his Alabama ancestry onward including many new details rediscovered from the historical archives of the African American press and those gleaned from the author's interviews with his friends and colleagues.
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