Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Fats Waller

 
Who2 Biography: Fats Waller, Pianist / Bandleader / Jazz Musician
Fats Waller
Source

  • Born: 21 May 1904
  • Birthplace: New York, New York
  • Died: 15 December 1943 (Pneumonia)
  • Best Known As: Joyous piano player who wrote "Ain't Misbehavin'"

Name at birth: Thomas Wright Waller

Fats Waller played stride piano and pipe organ, beginning his career making player piano rolls in the 1920s. He accompanied singers on the vaudeville stage (including Bessie Smith) and wrote hit songs such as "Ain't Misbehavin'" and "Honeysuckle Rose." Waller's rollicking style and sense of humor made him a popular star, and his output was tremendous. He had a reputation for wild living, and it eventually caught up to him: he developed pneumonia and died on a train near Kansas City at the age of 39.

Waller's last performance was in the 1943 film Stormy Weather.

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics

(born May 21, 1904, New York, N.Y., U.S. — died Dec. 15, 1943, Kansas City, Mo.) U.S. jazz pianist, singer, and composer. Waller was influenced early by stride pianist James P. Johnson. He became an important exponent of stride piano by the late 1920s, recording solo piano pieces such as "Handful of Keys." From 1934 he recorded with a small ensemble, Fats Waller and His Rhythm, integrating his vocals and unique comic timing with instrumental finesse. His rhythmically contagious performances of his own songs, such as "Ain't Misbehavin'" and "Honeysuckle Rose," are timeless classics of jazz.

For more information on Fats Waller, visit Britannica.com.

Music Encyclopedia: Fats Waller
Top

(b New York, 21 May 1904; d Kansas City, mo, 15 Dec 1943). American jazz pianist, organist, singer, bandleaderandcomposer. In his brief, extraordinarily active career he made nearly 500 discs and many piano rolls and composed c 400 works, including such successful songs as Honeysuckle Rose ( c 1928) and Ain′t Misbehavin′ (1929). His outrageously funny performances brought him a wide following but overshadowed his serious talents.



Biography: Thomas Wright Waller
Top

Thomas Wright Fats Waller (1904-1943) was a popular American jazz singer, pianist, organist, band-leader, and composer; on radio and records and in movies. His ebullient personality endeared him to a wide jazz and pop audience.

Thomas Wright Waller was born in New York City on May 21, 1904. His father was a Baptist minister; his mother was a musician who played and taught piano and organ. As a child Waller studied piano, bass, and violin, but after a time devoted himself exclusively to keyboards - chiefly piano (with a bit of organ), which he had begun playing at age six. His father wanted him to be a clergyman and objected emphatically when, at age nine, Waller jazzed up a hymn on the church organ.

Waller worked in a grocery store to pay for music lessons and played in his grade school orchestra, which was led by Edgar Sampson (later a famous arranger for Benny Goodman). Waller then attended DeWitt Clinton High School, but quit after a year, and at 15 was organist in a Harlem movie theater, earning $32 a week. (He was later to earn as much as $72,000 in a single year.) He continued to study with a number of teachers, including ragtime piano great James P. Johnson. He began his recording career in 1922, played in a silent movie house in Washington, D.C., and led his own trio in Philadelphia into the mid-1920s. The first of his nearly four hundred compositions, "Squeeze Me," was published in 1924.

The late 1920s was a watershed period for Waller. Despite a distracting series of court appearances for nonpayment of alimony, he began a highly successful collaboration with lyricist Andy Razaf; and in 1927, reunited with his former mentor James P. Johnson, he led the band and wrote the score for a hit revue, "Keep Shufflin'," which featured two of Fats' trademark songs, "Ain't Misbehavin"' and "Honeysuckle Rose." In 1928 he performed at Carnegie Hall along with Johnson and W. C. Handy ("The Father of the Blues"); and in 1929 he was the featured organist at New York's Paramount Theater and composed some of the music for another hit revue, "Hot Chocolates."

In the early 1930s Waller did a series of radio broadcasts for WABC and CBS and worked in a variety of bands, usually as leader. His first semi-permanent unit was formed in 1935 and made a classic series of fun-pop-and-jazz recordings; their great appeal for both the jazz audience and the larger commercial market led to many tours for the small band (usually a sextet) and, ultimately, to international fame.

In the late 1930s and early 1940s the group played frequently at New York's Famous Door and the Apollo Theater, at Chicago's Hotel Sherman, and at Boston's Tic-Tac Club. In 1943 Waller's last big show, "Early to Bed," opened in Boston. Also in the year that was to be his last, he toured armed service camps, made some cameo appearances in Hollywood movies - most notably "Stormy Weather" - and played at Los Angeles' Zanzibar Club. It was on the return trip from the West Coast to New York, on December 15, 1943, that Waller, at age 39, died in his train berth of bronchial pneumonia.

Waller's reputation is permanently embedded in jazz and pop lore, and his fame was underscored by the huge late 1970s success of the Broadway musical revue "Ain't Misbehavin'," a funny and loving tribute to the man and his music.

Nowhere in musical history has there been a closer alliance of man and music than in Fats Waller. He was 5 feet 11 inches and his weight wavered between 280 and 300 pounds. He was a jolly, quick-witted man whose compositions were almost always playful (even the sad ones are leavened by a cheerful acceptance of life's difficulties and vagaries). He was generous to a fault, frequently selling a minor compositional masterpiece for a pittance to a needy friend or even a down-and-out barstool acquaintance; money simply didn't matter to him.

For white America Waller seemed to play the self-mocking Negro clown, but attentive listening dispels the notion that his was the persona of a racially accommodating fool: his sense of fun and self-mockery were most often slyly satiric of the culture-at-large.

Fats was well-loved in the music business and his musicianship respected. His digital dexterity, particularly considering the plumpness of his fingers, was astonishing, and jazz critics regard him as one of the very greatest of "stride," or early, pianists. His vocal style - the light, grainy voice, with its sly inflections and defensively argumentative stance - was unique.

Many of Waller's vocal and pianistic performances of his own and others' compositions were reissued in the 1970s on RCA's Vintage series. Included, of course, are his earliest compositions, "Squeeze Me," "Ain't Misbehavin'," and "Honeysuckle Rose," in addition to some unjustly forgotten late 1930s tunes such as "Jitterbug Waltz," "Hold My Hand," "Thief in the Night," "The Girl I Left Behind Me," "What's the Reason I'm Not Pleasin' You," "The Joint Is Jumpin"' (on which he typically interpolates "Don't give your right name!" as police sirens are heard in the background), and "Spring Cleaning" (Waller interpolates "No, lady, we can't haul your ashes for 25 cents - that's bad business!").

There are also splendid (often humorous) vocal readings of tunes written by others: "Jingle Bells" (a strangled "Jingle Bells!" followed by a concerned "What's the matter with him?" "I don't know - I think the jingle bells got him."); "Two Sleepy People"; "It's a Sin to Tell a Lie" ("If you break my heart/I'll break your jaw/And then I'll die."); Earl Hines' "Rosetta," Harburg & Schwartz's lovely "Then I'll Be Tired of You"; Caesar & Lerner's "(O Susanna) Dust Off That Old Pianna"; and "Your Feet's Too Big" (Gun the gunboats!"). Waller's instrumental skills are in full evidence throughout, especially on the straight instrumental versions of "Ain't Misbehavin'," "Honeysuckle Rose," and "Tea for Two."

Further Reading

Waller is the subject of a great number of periodical articles and book chapters; there are several biographies, the most noteworthy of which are his son Maurice Waller's Fats Waller (1979) and Alyn Shipton's Fats Waller (1988).

Additional Sources

Kirkeby, W. T. Ed., Ain't misbehavin': the story of Fats Waller, New York: Da Capo Press, 1975, 1966.

Vance, Joel, Fats Waller, his life and times, Chicago: Contemporary Books, 1977.

Waller, Maurice, Fats Waller, New York: Schirmer Books, 1977.

Black Biography: Fats Waller
Top

musician; composer; singer; entertainer

Personal Information

Born on May 21, 1904, in New York, NY; died of pneumonia on December 15, 1943, in Kansas City, MO; son of Adeline Lockett and Edward Martin Waller; married Edith Hatchet (divorced 1924); children: Thomas; married Anita Rutherford; children: Maurice and Ronald.
Education: Attended Julliard.

Career

Lincoln Theater, organist; pianist at various block parties and clubs, including Leroy's Caberet; toured with vaudeville group, "Liza and Her Shufflin' Six;" hosted WLW Radio show; film appearances: Hooray for Love, 1935; King of Burlesque, 1935; Ain't Misbehavin'; , 1941; and Stormy Weather, 1943.

Life's Work

Fats Waller has been called one of the most entertaining and vivacious singers, composers, and pianists in jazz history. Popular in his own lifetime and still today, he was a prolific songwriter--he wrote more than 450 songs--and also made more than 500 records. TCSN.net said of Waller, "The spirited personality of the man was so powerful that he was able to easily transmit it even through the narrow boundaries of a record groove." Born Thomas Wright Waller on May 21, 1904, in New York City, Waller was an early comer to music, singing in his church choir and picking up his first bits of organ playing from his mother. Waller's parents, Adeline Lockett and Edward Martin Waller, had twelve children--only six of whom made it to adulthood--and were deeply religious. Waller's father was a preacher at the Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem, and his mother helped out at the church, and played the organ there on Sundays. Because of this, Waller and his siblings were raised with the integrity and values that were necessary for them to survive the rowdy Harlem streets.

Waller attended Public School 89 in Harlem where he quickly became involved in the school's music program. There he learned to play bass and violin, and it wasn't long before he was playing piano in the school's orchestra. He gained some important performance experience while taking part in marches and concerts, and these became the precursor to a very entertaining career. Waller's father may have wished his son would follow in his footsteps, but by the age of 15, Fats Waller was already working as a professional organist at the Lincoln Theater. This was his first paying job, according to Jass.com, "playing organ background music for silent films." He took over the job from a woman named Mazie Mullins who is said to have helped inspire Waller early on to improve and perfect his organ playing skills.

Waller's mother died when he was 14 and he went to live with a family friend, Russell Brooks. According to GetMusic.com it was around this time that he met one of his most beneficial teachers, James P. Johnson. Johnson was a well-known pianist famous for his stride tickler style of piano playing. Stride piano, according to ClassicJazz.about.com is a style where the "left hand jumps from a bass note to a chord that is played on the upbeat." Equally important to this style of playing is "the dazzling improvisational embellishments by the right hand known in the business as "tricks," or "fast-moving flourishes that break up or ornament the melody line," according to Atlantic Monthly. Anyone listening to Waller's piano music can immediately recognize these elements in his playing, and it was when he was but 15 years old that he began practicing them.

Studying under Johnson opened a new world to Waller. Not only did Johnson help him get a job at Leroy's Cabaret on 135th Street in New York, but he also introduced him to many famous musicians, including Luckey Roberts, Willie Grant, Duke Ellington, Stephen Henderson, Eubie Blake, and Willie "the Lion" Smith. At this time Waller also started playing in clubs and at block parties with other up and coming Harlem musicians, and it was at one of these block parties that he met his first wife, Edith Hatchet. They lived quietly and happily for a little while until Waller was offered a position with a vaudeville group called "Liza and Her Shufflin' Six." He went on tour with them--very successfully--and it was while he was on tour that he met Bill "Count" Basie. Waller and Basie became good friends and Waller eventually ended up teaching Basie how to play the organ, something that Basie, too, became famous for later on in his career. Fats also studied under Leopold Godowsky in Vienna and Carl Bohn in New York, both famous pianists at the time.

Edith and Fats had a son, Thomas Waller, Jr., but despite this and protestations from his wife, Waller continued to tour and play music at clubs and parties. He loved his music far too much to abandon it, so in 1923 Edith divorced Waller. One of the great tragedies of early Jazz music came later when Waller was jailed for not paying alimony to Edith. To get out of his imprisonment Waller was forced to sell some of his popular songs for a fraction of their real worth, and because of this, experts believe that some songs regarded as the property of other musicians were actually Waller originals. Unfortunately, the world will never know. In the 1930s Waller married his second wife, Anita Rutherford. They had two sons: Maurice and Ronald.

In the meantime, Waller's career was really beginning to take off. He had recorded his first songs, "Birmingham Blues" and "Muscles Shoals Blues," in 1922, and in 1926 his first pipe organ recordings were done. And then on December 1, 1927, Waller made his singing debut with the Ted Lewis Band singing "I'm Crazy 'Bout My Baby." Although not his first intention, it was his singing paired with his fantastic piano playing abilities that made Waller a national celebrity. According to Get Music, he was an "exuberantly funny entertainer," and people enjoyed hearing his amusing vocal interpretations. Experts have commented that this is why he hasn't always been taken as a serious musician, but no one hearing his improvisational piano could believe that he did not have great musical ability.

It was during this time period that he wrote the score for the Broadway show Hot Chocolates with lyrics supplied by his friend Andy Razaf. One of Waller's most famous songs, "Ain't Misbehavin'" comes from that show. Waller also teamed up with Razaf for two more Broadway shows: Keep Shufflin and Load of Coal.

In 1932 Waller went to Cincinnati and joined the artist staff of the WLW radio station. There he instituted the famous Fats Waller Rhythm Club. The first recordings of the Fats Waller Rhythm Club, on May 16, 1934, marked a new trend in jazz, one that frightened the radio personnel. According to TCSN.com, "Waller had definite strong feelings about allowing room for creativity and inventiveness by his groups and was averse to using written arrangements preferring instead to talk things over with his musicians, with mutually agreed upon routines and solo spots." This was unheard of. Before this, musicians had practiced heavily before going on the air, but despite qualms from the radio staff, Fats and his Rhythm Club became a national sensation with their looser, although technically accurate, improvisational style.

From here on out, Fats Waller became a household name. He appeared in four films: Hooray for Love (1935), King of Burlesque (1935), Ain't Misbehavin'; (1941), and Stormy Weather (1943). He made several tours of Europe, playing everywhere, even on the cathedral organs of Notre Dame. He accompanied Florence Hills and Bessie Smith, both well-known singers. And he collaborated with many other talented musicians, including Alberta Hunter, Sidney Bechet, Jack Teagarden, and Fletcher Henderson. In 1942 he gave a jazz concert in Carnegie Hall that, although receiving bad reviews because Waller seemed a trifle stiff and uncomfortable, was a monumental occasion in the life of the young preacher's son from Harlem.

In 1943, in the prime of Waller's career, he died. He was on a train back from Hollywood that had stopped in Kansas City, Missouri when he was rushed to the hospital with pneumonia. It was a rather unglamorous end to the man who brought the world songs like "Honeysuckle Rose," "Blue Turning Grey Over You," and "Jitterbug Waltz." But his legacy lives on. One of the most popular and technically-gifted musicians of his day, Waller's talent has stood the test of time.

Awards

Down Beat Hall of Fame, 1968.

Works

Selected discography

  • Fats Waller in London, 1922.
  • Fats at the Organ, 1923.
  • Fats Waller and His Buddies, 1927.
  • You Rascal You, 1929.
  • Jugglin' Jive of Fats Waller and His Orchestra, 1938.
  • Fine Arabian Stuff, 1939.
  • Last Testament: His Final Recordings, 1943.

Further Reading

Periodicals

  • Atlantic Monthly, March, 2000.
Other
  • Additional information for this profile was obtained on-line at: http://www.users.yknet.yk.ca; http://www.infozine.com; http://www.worldbook.com; http://www.getmusic.com; http://freepress.org; http://alevy.com; http://www.jazzbymail.com; http://www.tcsn.net; http://www.theatreorgans.com; http://www.redhotjazz.com; http://encarta.msn.com; http://www.downbeat.com; http://artsedge.kennedy-center.org; http://www.britannica.com http://www.duke.edu; http://www.jazzpromo.com; http://classicjazz.about.com; and http://jass.com.

— Catherine Victoria Donaldson

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Fats Waller
Top
Waller, Fats, 1904-43, American jazz musician, singer, and composer, whose original name was Thomas Wright Waller, b. New York City. Waller began playing the piano as a child, and later studied with Carl Bohm and Leopold Godowsky. He became a protégé of James P. Johnson, who gave him piano lessons and furthered his career. From about 1920, Waller appeared in night-clubs and theaters, and in the 1930s he began recording. Waller's style influenced many jazz pianists. His compositions include Ain't Misbehavin', Black and Blue, Honeysuckle Rose, and London Suite.

Bibliography

See biography by E. Kirkeby (1975); study by P. S. Machlin (1985).

Artist: Fats Waller
Top

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Worked With:

Formal Connection With:

Charlie Turner, Gene Sedric, Thomas Morris, Don Redman, Williams & Brown, Al Casey, Snub Mosley
See Fats Waller Lyrics
  • Born: May 21, 1904, New York, NY
  • Died: December 15, 1943, Kansas City, MO
  • Active: '20s, '30s, '40s
  • Genres: Jazz
  • Instrument: Piano, Organ
  • Representative Albums: "Fats Waller and His Buddies", "Piano Masterworks, Vol. 1", "Turn on the Heat: The Fats Waller Piano Solos
  • Representative Songs: "Honeysuckle Rose", "Ain't Misbehavin'", "Handful of Keys

Biography

Not only was Fats Waller one of the greatest pianists jazz has ever known, he was also one of its most exuberantly funny entertainers -- and as so often happens, one facet tends to obscure the other. His extraordinarily light and flexible touch belied his ample physical girth; he could swing as hard as any pianist alive or dead in his classic James P. Johnson-derived stride manner, with a powerful left hand delivering the octaves and tenths in a tireless, rapid, seamless stream. Waller also pioneered the use of the pipe organ and Hammond organ in jazz -- he called the pipe organ the "God box" -- adapting his irresistible sense of swing to the pedals and a staccato right hand while making imaginative changes of the registration. As a composer and improviser, his melodic invention rarely flagged, and he contributed fistfuls of joyous yet paradoxically winsome songs like "Honeysuckle Rose," "Ain't Misbehavin,'" "Keepin' Out of Mischief Now," "Blue Turning Grey Over You" and the extraordinary "Jitterbug Waltz" to the jazz repertoire.

During his lifetime and afterwards, though, Fats Waller was best known to the world for his outsized comic personality and sly vocals, where he would send up trashy tunes that Victor Records made him record with his nifty combo, Fats Waller & His Rhythm. Yet on virtually any of his records, whether the song is an evergreen standard or the most trite bit of doggerel that a Tin Pan Alley hack could serve up, you will hear a winning combination of good knockabout humor, foot-tapping rhythm and fantastic piano playing. Today, almost all of Fats Waller's studio recordings can be found on RCA's on-again-off-again series The Complete Fats Waller, which commenced on LPs in 1975 and was still in progress during the 1990s.

Thomas "Fats" Waller came from a Harlem household where his father was a Baptist lay preacher and his mother played piano and organ. Waller took up the piano at age six, playing in a school orchestra led by Edgar Sampson (of Chick Webb fame). After his mother died when he was 14, Waller moved into the home of pianist Russell Brooks, where he met and studied with James P. Johnson. Later, Waller also received classical lessons from Carl Bohm and the famous pianist Leopold Godowsky. After making his first record at age 18 for Okeh in 1922, "Birmingham Blues"/"'Muscle Shoals Blues,"" he backed various blues singers and worked as house pianist and organist at rent parties and in movie theaters and clubs. He began to attract attention as a composer during the early- and mid-'20s, forming a most fruitful alliance with lyricist Andy Razaf that resulted in three Broadway shows in the late '20s, Keep Shufflin', Load of Coal, and Hot Chocolates.

Waller started making records for Victor in 1926; his most significant early records for that label were a series of brilliant 1929 solo piano sides of his own compositions like "Handful of Keys" and "Smashing Thirds." After finally signing an exclusive Victor contract in 1934, he began the long-running, prolific series of records with His Rhythm, which won him great fame and produced several hits, including "Your Feet's Too Big," "The Joint Is Jumpin'" and "I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter." He began to appear in films like Hooray for Love and King of Burlesque in 1935 while continuing regular appearances on radio that dated back to 1923. He toured Europe in 1938, made organ recordings in London for HMV, and appeared on one of the first television broadcasts. He returned to London the following spring to record his most extensive composition, "London Suite" for piano and percussion, and embark on an extensive continental tour (which, alas, was canceled by fears of impending war with Germany). Well aware of the popularity of big bands in the '30s, Waller tried to form his own, but they were short-lived.

Into the 1940s, Waller's touring schedule of the U.S. escalated, he contributed music to another musical, Early to Bed, the film appearances kept coming (including a memorable stretch of Stormy Weather where he led an all-star band that included Benny Carter, Slam Stewart and Zutty Singleton), the recordings continued to flow, and he continued to eat and drink in extremely heavy quantities. Years of draining alimony squabbles, plus overindulgence and, no doubt, frustration over not being taken more seriously as an artist, began to wear the pianist down. Finally, after becoming ill during a gig at the Zanzibar Room in Hollywood in December, 1943, Waller boarded the Santa Fe Chief train for the long trip back to New York. He never made it, dying of pneumonia aboard the train during a stop at Union Station in Kansas City.

While every clown longs to play Hamlet as per the cliche -- and Waller did have so-called serious musical pretensions, longing to follow in George Gershwin's footsteps and compose concert music -- it probably was not in the cards anyway due to the racial barriers of the first half of the 20th century. Besides, given the fact that Waller influenced a long line of pianists of and after his time, including Count Basie (who studied with Fats), Teddy Wilson, Art Tatum, Thelonious Monk, Dave Brubeck and countless others, his impact has been truly profound. ~ Richard S. Ginell, All Music Guide
Discography: Fats Waller
Top

If You Got to Ask, You Ain't Got It!

Buy this CD

Joint Is Jumpin' [RCA]

Buy this CD

1938-1939

Buy this CD

Ain't Misbehavin' [BMG]

Buy this CD

I'm 100% for You

Buy this CD

Honeysuckle Rose [Jazz Hour]

Buy this CD

Yacht Club Swing & Other Radio Rareties

Buy this CD

Handful of Keys: 1922-1935

Buy this CD

Ain't Misbehavin' [Hallmark 1996]

Buy this CD

Best of Fats Waller [Jazz Forever]

Buy this CD
Show More Albums

Essential Collection

Buy this CD

Legendary Radio Broadcasts

Buy this CD

1941

Buy this CD

Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 2: A Handful of Keys

Buy this CD

Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 2: A Handful of Keys

Buy this CD

Fascinating Rhythm, Vol. 2

Buy this CD

Fats Waller at the Organ, Vol. 3: 1926-1929 [Brown Cover]

Buy this CD

Fats Waller at the Organ, Vol. 3: 1926-1929 [Purple Cover]

Buy this CD

Planet Jazz

Buy this CD

Fats Waller Doesn't Sing! 23 Swing Classics

Buy this CD

Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 3: Rhythm and Romance

Buy this CD

1937-1938

Buy this CD

His Best Recordings 1928-1942

Buy this CD

Live at the Yacht Club

Buy this CD

1939 Transcriptions, Vol. 2

Buy this CD

Cream Series

Buy this CD

Fats Waller, Vol. 2

Buy this CD

Unique Mr. Waller

Buy this CD

Irrepressible Humor of Fats

Buy this CD

Introduction to Fats Waller

Buy this CD

Very Best of Fats Waller [RCA]

Buy this CD

Fats Waller and His Rhythm: The Middle Years, Part 1 (1936-1938)

Buy this CD

Honeysuckle Rose [ASV/Living Era]

Buy this CD

At the Piano

Buy this CD

Take It Easy

Buy this CD

Indispensable Fats Waller, Vol. 9-10

Buy this CD

Good Man Is Hard to Find: The Middle Years, Part 2

Buy this CD

Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 6

Buy this CD

Great Fats Waller

Buy this CD

Centenary Collection [Castle]

Buy this CD

Alternative Takes, Vol. 3: 1938-1941

Buy this CD

Alternative Takes, Vol. 2: 1929-1938

Buy this CD

Alternative Takes, Vol. 1: 1923-1929

Buy this CD

100 Ans de Jazz

Buy this CD

Best of the War Years

Buy this CD

Have a Little Dream on Me [Jazz Hour]

Buy this CD

Have a Little Dream on Me [Jazz Hour]

Buy this CD

Fats Waller & His Rhythm, Vol. 1: 1934-1936

Buy this CD

Breakin' the Ice: The Early Years, Part 1

Buy this CD

More Radio Rarities

Buy this CD

Complete Recorded Works Vol. 1: Messin' Around With The Blues

Buy this CD

Quintessence New York - Camden - Los Angeles: 1929-1943

Buy this CD

Golden Greats

Buy this CD

Honeysuckle Rose [Drive]

Buy this CD

Best of Fats Waller [Box Set]

Buy this CD

Portrait of Fats Waller

Buy this CD

Fascinating Rhythm, Vol. 1

Buy this CD

Fats Waller Sings

Buy this CD

Ain't Misbehavin' [Collectables]

Buy this CD

Fractious Fingering: The Early Years, Part 3 (1936)

Buy this CD

Portrait, Vol. 1

Buy this CD

Portrait, Vol. 2

Buy this CD

Fine Arabian Stuff

Buy this CD

Masterpieces, Vol. 3

Buy this CD

Yacht Club Swing 1938

Buy this CD

Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 4: New York Chicago Hollywood

Buy this CD

Ultimate Collection [Castle]

Buy this CD

Fats Waller [Platinum Disc]

Buy this CD

Last Testament: His Final Recordings

Buy this CD

1939

Buy this CD

Fats Waller in London

Buy this CD

Lulu's Back in Town

Buy this CD

Sugar Blues

Buy this CD

Us on a Bus

Buy this CD

I'm Gonna Sit Right Down: The Early Years, Part 2

Buy this CD

Ain't Misbehavin' [ASV/Living Era]

Buy this CD

1935 Transcriptions

Buy this CD

Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 5

Buy this CD

Piano Masterworks, Vol. 1

Buy this CD

Handful of Fats: Original 1929-1942 Recordings

Buy this CD

Happy Birthday Fats

Buy this CD

1939-1940 [Classics]

Buy this CD

Handful of Keys

Buy this CD

Handful of Keys [Box Set]

Buy this CD

Handful of Keys [Sony]

Buy this CD

Centennial Collection [RCA]

Buy this CD

Fats Waller Stomp/Fractious Fingering

Buy this CD

Greatest Hits [RCA]

Buy this CD

Turn on the Heat: The Fats Waller Piano Solos

Buy this CD

Ain't Misbehavin' 1934-1943

Buy this CD

Complete Victor Piano Solos

Buy this CD

London Suites

Buy this CD

Numb Fumblin'

Buy this CD

Truckin'

Buy this CD

Joint Is Jumping [Proper]

Buy this CD

Ain't Misbehavin' [Proper]

Buy this CD

Complete Associated Transcription Session 1935-1939

Buy this CD

1942-1943

Buy this CD

1940-1941

Buy this CD

Ultimate Collection [Prime Leisure]

Buy this CD

Piano Masterworks, Vol. 2 (1929-1943)

Buy this CD

Career Perspective 1922-1943

Buy this CD

1938

Buy this CD

Ain't Misbehavin' [Laserlight]

Buy this CD

1936-1937

Buy this CD

1937, Vol. 2

Buy this CD

Fats Waller and His Rhythm

Buy this CD

1937

Buy this CD

Piano Rolls & Organ 1934-1938 Vol.3&4

Buy this CD

Piano Rolls & Organ 1923-1934 Vol.1&2

Buy this CD

1936

Buy this CD

1935

Buy this CD

1935-1936

Buy this CD

1935, Vol. 2

Buy this CD

Complete Early Band Works (1927-1929)

Buy this CD

Joint Is Jumpin' [Jazztory]

Buy this CD

1929

Buy this CD

1934-1935

Buy this CD

1927-1929 [Classics]

Buy this CD

1929-1934

Buy this CD

Fats Waller and His Buddies

Buy this CD

1922-1926

Buy this CD

1926-1927

Buy this CD

Fun with Fats

Buy this CD

1939-1940: Private Acetates and Film Soundtracks

Buy this CD

Definitive Fats Waller, Vol. 2: Hallelujah

Buy this CD

Definitive Fats Waller, Vols. 1 & 2

Buy this CD

Low Down Papa

Buy this CD

Low Down Papa

Buy this CD

1934-1939

Buy this CD

Last Years (1940-1943)

Buy this CD

Classic Jazz from Rare Piano Rolls

Buy this CD

1934-1936

Buy this CD

You Rascal You

Buy this CD

You Rascal You

Buy this CD

Fats at the Organ

Buy this CD

Piano Solos (1929-1941)

Buy this CD

Believe in Miracles

Buy this CD
   
Show Fewer Albums
Wikipedia: Fats Waller
Top
Fats Waller

Background information
Birth name Thomas Wright Waller
Born 21 May 1904(1904-05-21)
Origin New York City
Died 15 December 1943 (aged 39)
Genres Jazz, swing, stride
Occupations Pianist, singer, organist
Instruments Piano, vocals, organ

Fats Waller (May 21, 1904 - December 15, 1943) born Thomas Wright Waller was an American jazz pianist, organist, composer and comedic entertainer. He was the youngest of four children born to Adaline Locket Waller, wife of the Reverend Edward Martin Waller.

Contents

Significance

Fats Waller started playing the piano when he was six and graduated to the organ of his father's church four years later. At the age of fourteen he was playing the organ at Harlem's Lincoln Theater and within twelve months he had composed his first rag. Waller's first piano solos (Muscle Shoals Blues and Birmingham Blues) were recorded in October 1922 when he was just 18 years old.

He was a skilled pianist, and master of stride piano, having been the prize pupil and later friend and colleague of the greatest of the stride pianists, James P. Johnson. Waller was one of the most popular performers of his era, finding critical and commercial success in his homeland and in Europe. He was also a prolific songwriter, and many songs he wrote or co-wrote are still popular, such as "Honeysuckle Rose", "Ain't Misbehavin'" and "Squeeze Me". Fellow pianist and composer Oscar Levant dubbed Waller "the black Horowitz".[1] Waller composed many novelty swing tunes in the 1920s and 30s, and sold them for relatively small sums. When the compositions became hits, other songwriters claimed them as their own. Many standards are alternatively and sometimes controversially attributed to Waller.

The anonymous sleeve notes on the 1960 RCA (UK) album 'Handful of Keys' state that Waller copyrighted over 400 new tunes, many of which co-written with his closest collaborator Andy Razaf. After Waller's death in 1943, Razaf described his partner as 'the soul of melody....a man who made the piano sing...both big in body and in mind...known for his generosity...a bubbling bundle of joy'. Gene Sedric, a clarinettist who played with Waller on some of his 1930's recordings, is quoted in these same sleeve notes recalling Waller's recording technique with considerable admiration. 'Fats was the most relaxed man I ever saw in a studio', he said, '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'.

Musical contributions

Waller was a much copied jazz pianist and improvisor, and he was considered one of the best stride style players.[who?] His touch varied from subtle and extremely light to very powerful, and he was a master of dynamics and tension and release. However, it was Waller's singing, songwriting, and lovable, roguish stage personality that sold his hundreds of recordings for Victor Records. He played with many performers, from Gene Austin to Erskine Tate to Adelaide Hall, but his greatest success came with his own five- or six-piece combo, "Fats Waller and his Rhythm."

His playing once put him at risk of injury. Waller was kidnapped in Chicago leaving a performance in 1926. Four men bundled him into a car and took him to the Hawthorne Inn, owned by gangster Al Capone. Fats was ordered inside the building, and found a party in full swing. Gun to his back, he was pushed towards a piano, and told to play. A terrified Waller realized he was the "surprise guest" at Al Capone's birthday party, and took comfort that the gangsters didn't intend to kill him. According to rumor, Waller played for three days. When he left the Hawthorne Inn, he was very drunk, extremely tired, and had earned thousands of dollars in cash from Capone and other party-goers as tips.[2]

Waller wrote "Squeeze Me" (1919), "Keepin' Out of Mischief Now", "Ain't Misbehavin'" (1929), "Blue Turning Grey Over You", "I've Got a Feeling I'm Falling" (1929), "Honeysuckle Rose" (1929), and "Jitterbug Waltz" (1942). He collaborated with the Tin Pan Alley lyricist Andy Razaf. Waller also composed stride piano display pieces such as "Handful of Keys", "Valentine Stomp" and "Viper's Drag." His songs have become standards of the jazz repertoire.

He enjoyed success touring the United Kingdom and Ireland in the 1930s, and appeared in one of the first BBC Television broadcasts. While in Britain, Waller also recorded a number of songs for EMI on their Compton Theatre organ located in their Studios in St John's Wood, London. He appeared in several feature films and short subject films, most notably "Stormy Weather" in 1943, which was released only months before his death.

For the hit Broadway show, "Hot Chocolates", he and Razaf wrote "(What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue" (1929), which became a hit for Ethel Waters and Louis Armstrong. This searing treatment of racism refutes the early criticism of Waller that his creations and performances were "shallow entertainment".

Waller was an accomplished composer and performer due to his classical keyboard studies. He performed [Bach] organ pieces for small groups on occasion. Waller influenced many pre-bop jazz pianists; Count Basie and Erroll Garner have both reanimated his hit songs (notably, "Ain't Misbehavin'"). Today, Dick Hyman, Mike Lipskin, Louis Mazatier and other jazz pianists perform in the Waller idiom.

Although the stride style, like all jazz, must be learned primarily by ear, many scholars have transcribed his brilliant improvisations from old recordings and radio broadcasts in sheet music form.

In addition to his virtuosic playing, Waller was known for his many quips during his performances, including:- "One never knows, do one?" ... "No lady, we can't haul your ashes for 25 cents, that's bad business" ... "Mercy!" ... "Well, all right then!" ... "I wonder what the poor people are doing - I'd love to be doing it with them!" ... "Run in and stab me, but don't bruise me!" ... "Wot's da matta wit DAT?!" ... and - of a large lady vocalist - "All that meat and no potatoes!"

Waller contracted pneumonia and died on a cross country train trip near Kansas City, Missouri on 15 December 1943. Upon arrival at Kansas City, word of Waller's demise immediately spread throughout the station and onto another train headed west. On that train was Louis Armstrong who upon hearing the news cried for hours.[citation needed]

Grammy Hall of Fame

Recordings of Fats Waller were inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame which is a special Grammy award established in 1973 to honour recordings that are at least 25 years old and that have "qualitative or historical significance."

Fats Waller: Grammy Hall of Fame Awards[3]
Year Recorded Title Genre Label Year Inducted Notes
1934 Honeysuckle Rose Jazz (Single) Victor 1999
1929 Ain't Misbehavin' Jazz (Single) Victor 1984 Listed in the National Recording Registry
by the Library of Congress in 2004.

Revival and posthumous awards

A Broadway musical revue showcasing Waller tunes entitled Ain't Misbehavin' was produced in 1978. (The show and a star of the show, Nell Carter, won Tony Awards for the show.) The show opened at the Longacre Theatre and ran for over 1600 performances. It was revived on Broadway in 1988. Performed by five African American actors, it included such songs as "Honeysuckle Rose", "This Joint Is Jumpin'", and "Ain't Misbehavin'".

Waller's music is featured in the 2008 movie Be Kind Rewind.

Inductions

Year Inducted Title
2008 Gennett Records Walk of Fame
2005 Jazz at Lincoln Center: Nesuhi Ertegun Jazz Hall of Fame
1993 Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award
1989 Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame
1970 Songwriters Hall of Fame

In popular culture

  • Referenced in the 1979 movie The Muppet Movie.
  • Referenced in Robert Pinsky's poem "History of My Heart."
  • Subject of the Irish poet Michael Longley's "Elegy for Fats Waller."
  • In the 1984 film The Natural, one of the baseball players sings "Honeysuckle Rose" in the shower.
  • An episode of Whose Line Is It Anyway had Wayne Brady perform as Fats Waller doing the ad-libbed safari-themed song "Lion Nibblin' On My Toes".
  • His organ music is prominently featured in the David Lynch cult hit, Eraserhead.
  • A part of Alligator Crawl is featured during the "Intermission" sequences of Monty Python and the Holy Grail.
  • The 2008 film Be Kind Rewind features a young man played by Mos Def who believes Fats Waller was born in the Passaic, New Jersey building that now houses the video shop where he works. He brings his neighbors together to make a wildly inaccurate "documentary" film celebrating the spirit of Fats and of their community. However, Waller was not from nor had ever lived in Passaic.
  • Bill Withers references Fats Waller in the song Soul Shadows.
  • He was caricatured in several Warner Brothers animated shorts, most notably Tin Pan Alley Cats
  • For many years, the popular PBS show This Old House used a Fats Waller recording of "Louisiana Fairytale" as its theme music.

See also

References

  1. ^ Palmer, David. All You Need Is Love. Viking Press. 1976. ISBN 0670114480.
  2. ^ Waller, Maurice and Anthony Calabrese. Fats Waller. Schirmer Books. 1977. ASIN B000JV3G1U.
  3. ^ Grammy Hall of Fame Database

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Who2 Biography. Copyright © 1998-2008 by Who2, LLC. All rights reserved. See the Fats Waller biography from Who2.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Black Biography. Contemporary Black Biography. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Fats Waller" Read more