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Danny Barker

 
Black Biography: Danny Barker

jazz musician; guitarist; writer; curator; banjoist

Personal Information

Born Daniel Moses Barker on January 13, 1909, in New Orleans, LA; died March 13, 1994, in New Orleans; married Louise Dupont (later known as Blue Lu Barker), 1930; children: Sylvia.

Career

Played banjo with various bands including the Boozan Kings, New Orleans, 1920s; toured in various southern cities; moved to New York, 1930; switched to guitar; performed with wife Louise as Blue Lu Barker with Danny Barker's Fly Cats; performed as guitar sideman with many leading bands; performed with Lucky Millinder's big band, 1937-38; member of Cab Calloway Orchestra, 1939-46; made over 1,000 recordings; heard on This Is Jazz radio broadcasts, late 1940s; performed in New Orleans jazz revival bands, 1950s; returned to New Orleans, 1965; New Orleans Jazz Museum, assistant curator, 1965-75; founded Fairview Baptist Church Christian Band, 1974; inspired brass band revival; active as musician into 1990s; author, A Life in Jazz; Bourbon Street Black; Buddy Bolden and the Last Days of Storyville.

Life's Work

A jazz banjoist and guitarist with a career that stretched over parts of eight decades, Danny Barker lived the history of jazz in the twentieth century. Then, late in life, he became one of its most qualified chroniclers, drawing upon his recollections of the early days of jazz in New Orleans. As a soloist in Cab Calloway's orchestra in the 1930s he made important contributions to jazz guitar technique, but he was most often remembered for having played during all the permutations of jazz.

Born in New Orleans on January 13, 1909, Barker was not the first New Orleans musician in his family. His uncle, Paul Barbarin, was a popular drummer in the city, and several other members of his mother's Catholic family were musically active. His father's family, on the other hand, was immersed, Barker was quoted as saying in the London Daily Telegraph, "in the activities of the Baptist church, the screamin' and the shoutin' and the runnin' and the jumpin' and the 'Praise to the Lawd!'" Thus Barker grew up amidst the mixture of musical influences.

Formed Spasm Band

As a child Barker played for tips on the street in the Storyville entertainment district that figured heavily in early jazz. "I never was an amateur," Barker was quoted as saying in Billboard. "I wanted that almighty dime." The young man gravitated toward the funeral music that was such an important part of African-American culture in New Orleans, and by the age of 12 he had put together what was known as a "spasm band," a group that included simple and homemade instruments such as the kazoos and ukuleles.

Barker learned to play drums from his uncle Paul Barbarin and studied clarinet with future Duke Ellington Orchestra virtuoso Barney Bigard. But at age 16 he took up the banjo, whose sound was integral to the early New Orleans jazz sound. Barker played tenor banjo in various bands, including one called the Boozan Kings, around New Orleans in the city's heyday as the capital of the new music called jazz in the 1920s, and toured the South as well. In 1930 Barker married the singer Louise Dupont, and the pair followed the migration undertaken by other jazz musicians and moved to New York. They often performed together, as Blue Lu Barker with Danny Barker's Fly Cats. Barker switched from banjo to the more modern guitar.

In New York, Barker rubbed elbows with some of the legends of jazz. Ferdinand "Jelly Roll" Morton called him "Hometown," and Barker played with stride pianist James P. Johnson and clarinetist Sidney Bechet. The greatest New Orleans migrant of all was trumpeter and singer Louis Armstrong, and Barker performed with him as well. Barker got an inkling of Armstrong's musical importance one day in a Harlem tavern, he recalled in his autobiography A Life in Jazz, when he saw "a half-dozen noted trumpet players, stripped to the waist, bare-chested, sitting in a circle by a wide-open window. The cold air was swishing snowflakes on them." The musicians were trying to catch cold so that they could duplicate Armstrong's distinctive vocal rasp.

Joined Calloway Orchestra

Barker's personal high-water mark as a musician came in the late 1930s, when he played with bands led by Lucky Millinder, Benny Carter, and, for an eight-year stint extending through World War II, Cab Calloway. Barker played sharp melodic solos on the guitar that diverged from the chordal playing that had previously been the norm. He appeared on over 1,000 recordings, and, by some estimates, played with a greater number of jazz bands and artists than any other musician. Barker's efforts as a songwriter suffered a setback when Decca Records refused to release a sexy song he had written called "Don't You Feel My Leg," but Barker did contribute a few standards to the jazz repertory.

Always quick to keep up with the times and adopt new styles, Barker left Calloway's band in 1946. He played in the 1940s with bebop pioneers Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker, and even essayed the new and guitar-heavy rhythm-and-blues style in the postwar years. By the 1950s, however, audiences were beginning to manifest a new interest in the roots of jazz--an interest Barker himself had helped to stimulate in 1947 with appearances on a series of radio broadcasts entitled This Is Jazz. Barker took up yet another new instrument, the six-string banjo, and began to perform in so-called "Dixieland" New Orleans jazz revival bands.

That impulse took Barker back to New Orleans in 1965. Barker took a job as a curator at the New Orleans jazz museum and continued to perform; his plaid jacket and derby hat were familiar sights at jazz events around the city. He worked to carry on the traditions not only of early jazz, but also of the brass bands that inspired them, forming the Fairview Baptist Church Christian Band in 1974. Young New Orleans brass players who had contact with Barker went on to form the nucleus of a brass band revival that flourished in the 1990s and beyond. "I told him that he was responsible for giving the music 50 more years through that church band," trumpeter Greg Stafford told Billboard, "because we've all grown up and we're bringing another generation behind us."

Wrote Several Books

On the national stage, Barker worked to perpetuate jazz traditions, both as a musician--his final album, Save the Bones, was released in 1988--and as an author. Barker co-authored a 1973 collection of jazz reminiscences entitled Bourbon Street Black, released his own autobiography, A Life in Jazz, in 1986, and then published a biography of cornetist Buddy Bolden, the legendary but unrecorded New Orleans musician who, in the opinion of many historians, did more than anyone else to create jazz as a distinct music. In that volume Barker drew on stories he had heard from his own family, tightly woven as it was, into the musical life of New Orleans.

Barker was honored at the end of his life with a Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Endowment for the Humanities in 1991, and with other awards. He died of cancer on March 13, 1994, not long after appearing as the king in a New Orleans Mardi Gras parade. "Jazz will live on," Barker wrote in A Life in Jazz, "because it digs down inside the body, the brain, the heart, the nerves and muscles." He himself had aided profoundly in the creation and inscription of the jazz tradition.

Awards

Lifetime Achievement Award, National Endowment for the Arts, 1991; inducted into American Jazz Hall of Fame, 1993.

Works

Selected discography

  • Journey into Jazz, GHB, 1967.
  • Save the Bones, Orleans, 1988.
Selected writings
  • (with Alyn Shipton, ed.) A Life in Jazz, Oxford, 1987.
  • (with Jack Buerkle) Bourbon Street Black, 1973.
  • Buddy Bolden and the Last Days of Storyville, Cassell.

Further Reading

Books

  • Feather, Leonard, and Ira Gitler, The Biographical Encyclopedia of Jazz, Oxford, 1999.
Periodicals
  • Billboard, March 26, 1994, p. 16.
  • Daily Telegraph (London, England), March 17, 1994, p. 23.
  • Down Beat, June 1994, p. 15.
  • Guitar Player, July 1994, p. 18.
  • Los Angeles Times, March 15, 1994, p. A26.
  • Newsday, March 16, 1994, p. 14.
  • Times-Picayune (New Orleans, LA), March 14, 1994, p. A1.
Online
  • All Music Guide, http://allmusic.com.

— James M. Manheim

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Artist: Danny Barker
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  • Born: January 13, 1909, New Orleans, LA
  • Died: March 13, 1994, New Orleans, LA
  • Active: '30s, '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s
  • Genres: Jazz
  • Instrument: Vocals, Guitar, Banjo
  • Representative Albums: "Save the Bones," "New Orleans to New York 1949-1964," "Journey into Jazz"

Biography

A humorous personality as important for his storytelling and teaching as for his playing, Danny Barker had a long and colorful career. He played with the Boozan Kings early on in New Orleans and toured Mississippi with Little Brother Montgomery. In 1930, he moved to New York, switching from banjo to guitar and working with Dave Nelson, Sidney Bechet, Fess Williams, Albert Nicholas, James P. Johnson, Lucky Millinder (1937-1938), Benny Carter (1938), and Cab Calloway (1939-1946). He wrote "Don't You Feel My Leg" for his wife Blue Lu Barker (with whom he recorded frequently) and also had a hit with "Save the Bones for Henry Jones" (recorded by Nat King Cole). By 1947, Barker was fully involved in the Dixieland revival (he never cared for bebop), appearing on the This Is Jazz radio series, recording with Bunk Johnson, and returning to the banjo. He performed at Ryan's throughout the 1950s (often with Conrad Janis or Wilbur DeParis) and then returned to New Orleans in 1965 where he worked as the assistant curator of the New Orleans Jazz Museum (1965-1975), led the Onward Brass Band, encouraged younger players, and wrote about his experiences. Danny Barker, who appeared at the 1993 Monterey Jazz Festival with Milt Hinton, penned his memoirs (A Life in Jazz) in 1986 and was active in keeping New Orleans jazz alive up until to the end. His definitive recording is a solo set for Orleans; Barker can also be heard late in life on records by Wynton Marsalis and the Dirty Dozen Brass Band. ~ Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
Wikipedia: Danny Barker
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Danny Barker

Background information
Birth name Daniel Moses Barker
Born 13 January 1909(1909-01-13)
Origin New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S.
Died 13 March 1994 (aged 85)
Genres Jazz
Blues music
Creole
Occupations Vocalist
Guitarist
Banjoist
Instruments vocals
Guitar
Banjo
Ukelele
Associated acts Cab Calloway
Blue Lu Barker
Fairview Baptist Church Marching Band

Danny Barker (13 January 190913 March 1994), born Daniel Moses Barker, was a jazz banjoist, singer, guitarist, songwriter, ukelele player and author from New Orleans, founder of the locally famous Fairview Baptist Church Marching Band. He was a rhythm guitarist for some of the best bands of the day, including Cab Calloway, Lucky Millinder and Benny Carter throughout the 1930s.

On September 4, 1945 he recorded with Ohio's native jazz pianist—Sir Charles Thompson—a date that included saxophonists Dexter Gordon and Charlie Parker.[1] Barker's work with the Fairview Band was pivotal in ensuring the longevity of jazz in New Orleans, producing generations of new talent. Brothers Wynton Marsalis and Branford Marsalis both played in the band as youths. One of Barker's earliest teachers in New Orleans was fellow banjoist Emanuel Sayles, whom he recorded with. Throughout his career, he played with Jelly Roll Morton, Baby Dodds, James P. Johnson, Sidney Bechet, Mezz Mezzrow, and Red Allen. He also toured and recorded with his wife, singer Blue Lu Barker.

Contents

Biography

Jazz musicians Kermit Ruffins and Danny Barker (right), French Quarter Festival.

Danny Barker was born to a family of musicians in New Orleans in 1909, the grandson of bandleader Isidore Barbarin and nephew of drummers Paul Barbarin and Louis Barbarin; he first took up clarinet and drums before switching to a ukelele that his aunt got him, and then a banjo from his uncle or a trumpeter named Lee Collins.[2][3][4]

Barker began his career as a musician in his youth with his streetband the Boozan Kings and also toured Mississippi with Little Brother Montgomery. In 1930 he moved to New York City and switched to the guitar. On the day of his arrival in New York his uncle Paul took him to the Rhythm Club, where he saw an inspiring performance by McKinney's Cotton Pickers. Ironically, that was also their first performance in New York as a band.[5] During his time in New York he frequently played with West Indian musicians, who often mistook him for one of them due to his Creole style of playing.[6]

Barker played with several acts when he initially moved to New York, including Fess Williams, Billy Fowler and the White Brothers. He worked with Buddy Harris in 1933, Albert Nichols in 1935, Lucky Millinder from 1937 to 1938, and Benny Carter in 1938. From the years 1939 to 1946 he was frequently recording with Cab Calloway, and started his own group featuring his wife Blue Lu Barker after leaving Calloway. In 1947 he was performing again with Lucky Millinder, and also with Bunk Johnson. He returned to working with Al Nichols in 1948 and in 1949 rejoined efforts with his wife in a group. During the 1950s he was primarily a freelance musician, but did work with his uncle Paul Barbarin from 1954 to 1955. In the mid-1950s he went to California to record yet again with Albert Nichols.[7]

...I had certain teachers that really inspired me, like Danny Barker, and John Longo.
Wynton Marsalis[8]

Sometime in the early 1960s he formed a group he called Cinderella. He performed at the 1960 Newport Jazz Festival with Eubie Blake. In 1963 he was working with Cliff Jackson, and then in 1964 appeared at the World Fair leading his own group.[9]

In 1965, Barker returned to New Orleans and took up a position as assistant to the curator of the New Orleans Jazz Museum. In 1972 he found and led a church-sponsored brass band for young people—the Fairview Baptist Church Marching Band—which became popular. In later years the band became known as the Dirty Dozen Brass Band. During this time he also led the French Market Jazz Band.[10]

It was the earnest and general feeling that any Negro who...entered the hell-hole called the state of Mississippi for any reason other than to attend the funeral of a very close relative...was well on the way to losing his mentality, or had already lost it.
Danny Barker in reference to touring with Little Brother Montgomery in Mississippi quoted in Escaping the Delta by Elijah Wald[11]

The Fairview band also launched the careers of a number of professional musicians who went on to perform in both brass band and mainstream jazz contexts, including Leroy Jones, Wynton Marsalis, Branford Marsalis, Kirk Joseph, and Nicholas Payton. As Joe Torregano—another Fairview band alumnus—described it, "That group saved jazz for a generation in New Orleans."[12]

Barker played regularly at many New Orleans venues from the late 1960s through the early 1990s, in addition to touring. During the 1994 Mardi Gras season Barker reigned as King of Krewe du Vieux. He also published an autobiography and many articles on New Orleans and jazz history.

Barker also authored and had published two books on jazz from the Oxford University Press. The first was "Bourboun Street Black" in 1973, which was followed by "A Life In Jazz" in 1986. He also enjoyed painting and was an amateur landscape artist.[13]

Living during a period when segregation was still common practice in the United States, Barker faced many obstacles during his career.[11] Barker suffered from diabetes throughout most of his adult life, and was often in general poor health.[14] He died of cancer in New Orleans on 13 March 1994 at age 85.

Discography

A very incomplete listing of Barker's recordings includes:

Year Album Leader Label
1945 "Charlie Parker: Every Bit Of It 1945" Sir Charles Thompson Spotlite Records
1947 "Creole Reeds " Sidney Bechet Riverside Records
1955 "Paul Barbarin And His New Orleans Jazz" Paul Barbarin Atlantic Records
1957 "Broadcast Performances, Vol. 3: Radio And TV Broadcasts (1956–1958)" Billie Holiday ESP Disk
1958 "Mainstream" Vic Dickenson Atlantic Records
1958 "LaVern Baker Sings Bessie Smith" Phil Moore Orchestra Atlantic Records
1959 "A Girl And Her Guitar" Mary Osborne Quintet Apollo Records
1960 "Ham And Eggs / Liza Little Liza Jane" Leroy Parkins Bethlehem Records
1961 "Things Ain't What They Used To Be" "The Swingville All Stars" Swingsville Records

Awards

  • 1994 - Big Easy Entertainment Awards - Best Traditional Jazz Group for Danny Barker
  • 1993 - Big Easy Entertainment Awards - Lifetime Achievement In Music
  • 1993 - Big Easy Entertainment Awards - Best Traditional Jazz Group for Danny Barker
  • 1991 - National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) NEA Jazz Masters Award
  • 1991 - Big Easy Entertainment Awards - Best Traditional Jazz Group for Danny Barker
  • 1990 - Big Easy Entertainment Awards - Best Traditional Jazz Group for Danny Barker and the Jazz Hounds
  • 1989 - Big Easy Entertainment Awards - Best Traditional Jazz Group for Danny Barker and the Jazz Hounds with Blue Lu Barker

References

  1. ^ "Ibid"; Levin, Floyd
  2. ^ "Ibid"; Levin, Floyd
  3. ^ Parsonage, Catherine (2005). The Evolution of Jazz in Britain. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.. p. 111. ISBN 0754650766. 
  4. ^ Gillis, Frank (1989). Oh, Didn't He Ramble: The Life Story of Lee Collins as Told to Mary Collins. University of Illinois Press. p. 44. ISBN 0252060814. 
  5. ^ DeVeaux, Scott (1997). The Birth of Bebop: A Social and Musical History. University of California Press. p. 209. ISBN 0520216652. 
  6. ^ Bolden, Buddy. "New Orleans Jazz and Caribbean Music". http://www.prjc.org/roots/nojazzandcarribe.html. Retrieved 2007-05-31. 
  7. ^ Chilton, John (1985). Who's Who of Jazz: Storyville to Swing Street. Da Capo Press. p. 20. ISBN 0306762714. 
  8. ^ "Wynton Marsalis Interview Transcript". http://content.scholastic.com/browse/article.jsp?id=2264. Retrieved 2007-05-31. 
  9. ^ "Ibid"; Chilton, John
  10. ^ Koster, Rick (2002). Louisiana Music: A Journey from R&B to Zydeco, Jazz to Country, Blues to Gospel, Cajun Music to .... Da Capo Press. p. 64. ISBN 0306810034. 
  11. ^ a b Wald, Elijah (2004). Escaping the Delta: Robert Johnson and the Invention of the Blues. HarperCollins. p. 84. ISBN 0060524235. 
  12. ^ Burns, Mick (2006). Keeping the Beat On the Street: The New Orleans Brass Band Renaissance. Baton Rouge: LSU. p. 16. 
  13. ^ Levin, Floyd (2002). Classic Jazz: A Personal View of the Music and the Musicians. University of California Press. p. 191. ISBN 0520234634. 
  14. ^ Balliett, Whitney (2000). Collected Works: A Journal of Jazz 1954-2000. St. Martin's Press. p. 268. ISBN 0312270089. 

See also


 
 
Learn More
The Dukes of Dixieland: Tribute to Jelly Roll Morton (Music Film)
Save the Bones (1988 Album by Danny Barker)
JazzFest Masters: The Traditionalists (1969 Album by Various Artists)

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Black Biography. Contemporary Black Biography. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  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
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