Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Joe Williams

 
Biography: Joe Williams

Singing a mixture of blues, ballads, popular songs, and jazz standards, Joe Williams (1918-1999) was an elegant and sophisticated baritone known for his clear pronunciation and jazz stylings. He became famous as the lead vocalist with the Count Basie Orchestra from 1954 to 1961, recording such popular hits as "Every Day (I Have the Blues)" and "All Right, O.K., You Win."

Joe Williams was born Joseph Goreed in Cordele, Georgia, a small town about 50 miles south of Macon, on December 12, 1918. His grandmother took him to Chicago at the age of three. His mother gone ahead had found work as a cook. He was exposed to music early; both his mother and aunt played piano, which he learned to play a little, and he sang in church. On the radio he would listen to jazz and opera. Jazz singer Ethel Waters was an early favorite.

When he was 14, Joe began singing with a gospel quartet, the Jublee Temple Boys, which he organized. The next year he was diagnosed with tuberculosis and had to have one of his lungs collapsed for treatment. Fortunately, the treatment left his singing voice undamaged, but Joe would continue to suffer from respiratory ailments throughout his life.

At the age of 16 Joe sang for tips and worked as a janitor in an all-white nightclub in Chicago called Kitty Davis's. Around this time he dropped out of high school and changed his surname to Williams. He began singing in clubs around Chicago with bands led by Erskine Tate and Johnny Long. It was a busy time for the young singer, who found himself featured with three different bands.

Professional Singing Debut

In 1937 the 18-year-old Williams joined a band led by clarinetist Jimmie Noone and toured the South. From 1938 to 1940, Williams and Jimmie Noone's Orchestra were heard nationally over the CBS radio network. He would later credit his early radio experience with lending clarity to his pronunciation, a key element of his trademark style. When not working for Noone's band, Williams toured the Midwest with the Les Hite band.

In 1938, Williams heard blues singer Big Joe Turner for the first time and was immediately drawn to the blues. Fifty years later he reminisced about that first exposure to the blues in a The New York Times interview: "In Chicago in those days, we had what were called breakfast dances. The shows would start at six in the morning and be over by eight. The one where I first heard Big Joe Turner was at a club that seated maybe 500. Joe Turner got on the stage, and even though he had no microphone, I could hear him as clear as day singing, Oh baby, you sure look good to me." Williams noted that Turner had an urban, as opposed to a country, sound and was the first blues singer "who made the words discernible."

Williams joined tenor saxophonist Coleman Hawkins's band in 1941, but it broke up soon after. In need of a steady job, he worked as the stage doorman at the Regal Theater in Chicago, where he met the leading jazz and rhythm-and-blues musicians who were on tour. When jazz vibraphonist Lionel Hampton played the Regal with his band, Williams joined in, singing side-by-side with noted jazz vocalist Dinah Washington. He toured with the Hampton band in 1943. It was with Hampton that Williams made his New York City debut, sharing vocals with Dinah Washington. According to Williams, "I was given all the pretty songs like 'Easy to Love' and 'You'll Never Know,' and Dinah sang the blues." Other notable gigs in the 1940s included a six-week stint in a blues show with boogie-woogie pianists Pete Johnson and Albert Ammons and a subsequent job with Andy Kirk's big band.

Williams was married to Wilma Cole from 1943 to 1946 and to Ann Kirksey from 1946 to 1950. It was a troublesome period for the blues singer, who had difficulty finding steady work. In 1947, he suffered a nervous breakdown and spent a year in a state hospital. When he returned to performing, he developed a following at Chicago's Club DeLisa and sang with pianist George Shearing's quintet. Williams married for a third time in 1951, this time to Lemma Reid. Their daughter, JoAnn, was born in 1953. However, this marriage was not a success. After a lengthy separation, the couple divorced in 1964.

Sang with Count Basie Orchestra

Williams first worked with the noted bandleader, Count Basie, in 1950. Basie was fronting a septet at Chicago's Brass Rail, for a ten-week engagement. When Basie formed a new band in 1954, he asked Williams to join. On Christmas Day, Williams flew east to begin performing with them in New York. He consciously avoided duplicating the material or style of Basie's previous vocalist, Jimmy Rushing. Instead, he introduced his own blues-flavored repertoire, including a song he had been singing in clubs, "Every Day (I Have the Blues)." Williams had recorded the song in 1951, and it became a local hit in Chicago. In early 1995 he recorded a new version of the song with the Basie band. It became Basie's first hit in 15 years. According to The Encyclopedia of Jazz, "His success with Basie was so phenomenal that he elevated the entire band to a new plateau of commercial success."

The song appeared on the album, Count Basie Swings, Joe Williams Sings. It brought "overnight" recognition to Williams, who had been singing for 20 years. He was named "New Star of 1956" in the jazz magazine, Down Beat. In addition to his big hit, Williams's repertoire during this period included "All Right, O.K., You Win" and covers of such pop hits as "Too Close for Comfort" and "Teach Me Tonight."

With the Basie band, Williams played his first Newport Jazz Festival in 1955 as well as the first of three annual Birdland tours with pianist George Shearing, vocalist Sarah Vaughan, pianist Erroll Garner, and tenor saxophonist Lester "Prez" Young. Williams also made his first television appearance in 1955, as a guest on the Jackie Gleason-produced Music 55, where he sang "Alright, O.K., You Win." In 1956, he made his first appearance on The Tonight Show, which was then hosted by Steve Allen. He later appeared frequently on The Steve Allen Show.

Williams met his fourth wife, Jilean Hughes-D'Aeth, during a 1957 engagement at the Starlight Room of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York City. They married in 1965.

Pursued Solo Career

During 1960 Williams tired of singing with the Basie band. He played his last engagement with Basie in January 1961 and began a solo career by touring with a quintet led by trumpeter Harry "Sweets" Edison. They recorded three albums together in 1961 and 1962. From 1963 to 1965 Williams recorded for RCA Victor, including a 1963 live album, Joe Williams at Newport. Williams appeared frequently on television during the 1960s, including several appearances on The Tonight Show, starting in 1962.

In a December 1964 interview in Down Beat, Williams discussed the relationship of politics and music at a time when many black performers were under pressure to take a stand in favor of integration and the civil rights movement. Williams clearly fell on the side of entertainers, like Nat "King" Cole, who felt that an entertainer's major responsibility was to entertain. He stated his belief that music is a personal thing and "the moods change too much in music to make a political thing out of it."

Williams also sang with the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis band during the latter half of the 1960s, including a 1966 date at New York's Village Vanguard that was captured on a live album. The collaboration produced a studio album that featured a mixture of blues, Duke Ellington's "Come Sunday" and "It Don't Mean a Thing," and Marvin Gaye's "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)."

Enjoyed Popularity as a Solo Artist

During the 1970s Williams continued to tour, playing clubs, concerts, and festivals throughout the world. In 1971, he and pianist George Shearing collaborated on a recording, The Heart and Soul of Joe Williams. They had been friends for more than 20 years. In 1973, he recorded Joe Williams Live with saxophonist Julian "Cannonball" Adderley. He also sang in Adderley's folk musical, Big Man, which was released on record in 1975.

In 1974, Williams sang an a cappella version of Duke Ellington's First Sacred Concert at a memorial concert for Ellington held at the Hollywood Bowl. That year he also reunited with the Count Basie Orchestra for a Newport Jazz Festival concert in New York City. It was so well received that Williams appeared frequently with the band until Basie's death in 1984. Toward the end of the decade he toured Africa with trumpeter Clark Terry under the sponsorship of the U.S. State Department. A 1979 recording, Prez and Joe, with Dave Pell's Prez Conference, which played ensemble versions of Lester Young's tenor sax solos, earned Williams a Grammy nomination for best jazz vocal. He earned another Grammy nomination in 1981 for the song, "8 to 5 I Lose," from the movie Sharky's Machine.

Williams toured with Edison and other former members of the Basie band as well as with his own trio during the 1980s. He was given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1983, next to Basie's. When Basie died in 1984, Williams sang at his funeral, moving the crowd with a rendition of Duke Ellington's "Come Sunday." That year he also won his first Grammy for the album, Nothin' but the Blues. He sang the title cut in the movie All of Me, starring Steve Martin and Lily Tomlin.

During the 1980s Williams had a role on the popular television series, The Cosby Show, playing Cosby's father-in-law Grandpa A1. He also appeared at the Playboy Jazz Festival ten times. In 1988, his schedule included more than 100 nights of performing, including two trips to Europe, a week aboard the Floating Jazz Cruise, the Monterey Jazz Festival, his annual participation at the Kennedy Center Honors, and more.

When Williams reached the age of 70, a birthday tribute concert was held at New York's prestigious Carnegie Hall as part of the JVC Jazz Festival. The two-part concert featured Williams singing with his own trio during the first half, then joining the Count Basie Orchestra led by Frank Foster for the second half.

Williams recorded for Telarc during the 1990s. In 1992 he recorded with the Count Basie Orchestra, led by Frank Foster, for the first time in 30 years. His last album, recorded in 1994, was a set of spirituals entitled Feel the Spirit. Of his interest in gospel music, Williams told Down Beat in 1999, "The church was the beginning of almost all of our lives. That's where we come from, so it is normal that we should go back to it." In 1992, his recording of "Every Day (I Have the Blues)" with the Basie band was named a Grammy Hall of Fame recording by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (NARAS). The following year, Williams performed at the White House for President and Mrs. Clinton. He continued to attend the Kennedy Center Honors each year. Williams had performed for every American president since Richard Nixon, with the exception of Gerald Ford.

A 1993 video, Joe Williams: A Song is Born, captured the singer in a live performance with pianist George Shearing and his trio. In 1997, he performed to rave reviews in the San Francisco revival of Duke Ellington's 1943 classical and jazz composition, Black, Brown and Beige, which included "Come Sunday" and "The Blues." He subsequently recorded duets with a young singer, Nicole Yarling, for the Manchester Craftsmen's Guild.

Williams was hospitalized for treatment of breathing problems in Las Vegas. When he left the hospital he was reportedly disoriented from his medication. Williams walked about two miles without his oxygen tank before collapsing on the street. He died on March 29, 1999. His manager, John Levy, told the press that Williams had a history of respiratory difficulties, but had always recovered with the assistance of oxygen and other treatments.

The New York Times described the singer's style in its obituary of him: "Well into the 1990's, Mr. Williams was one of the most dependably moving performers in jazz. Standing nearly still, perhaps with his hands folded in front of him, he would make ballads sound like resonant, intimate conversation, then open up a blues with a voice that was both knowing and heartsick." In a tribute published before his death in 1999, Down Beat offered this portrait of Williams: "The mellow beauty of his voice, the unequalled clarity of his diction, the sureness of his swing and his equal ease with ballads and blues place him in the first rank of all jazz singers and among the leading interpreters of the American popular song."

Further Reading

All Music Guide to Jazz. Second edition, edited by Michael Erlewine et. al. Miller Freeman Books, 1996.

Feather, Leonard. The Encyclopedia of Jazz. Revised edition.

Bonanza Books, 1962. Billboard, December 3, 1988.

Down Beat December 17, 1964; March 1994; June 1994; September 1997; January 1999.

Entertainment Weekly, November 20, 1992.

Jet, April 19, 1999.

Michigan Chronicle, April 7-13, 1999.

New York Times, May 23, 1980; June 22, 1989; June 25, 1989;March 31, 1999.

Time, April 12, 1999.

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Black Biography: Joe Williams
Top

singer; actor

Personal Information

Born Joseph Goreed, on December 12, 1918, in Cordele, GA; raised in Chicago, IL; changed surname to Williams, c. 1934; died on March 29, 1999, in Las Vegas, NV; son of Willie Goreed (believed to be a farm laborer) and Anne Beatrice Gilbert (a cook); married Wilma Cole, 1942 (divorced, 1946); married Anne Kirksey, 1946 (divorced, c. 1950); married Lemma Reid, 1951 (divorced, 1964); married Jillean Milne Hughes-D'Aeth, 1965; children: (third marriage) JoAnn, Joe, Jr.

Career

Began singing in his early teens with church quartet the Jubilee Boys; solo singer for Chicago bands during the early 1930s; sang and toured with several different bands, including Jimmie Noone, 1938-39, Les Hite, 1939-40, Coleman Hawkins, 1941, Lionel Hampton, 1942-43, Andy Kirk, 1946-47, and Red Saunders, 1951-53. sang with the Count Basie Orchestra, 1954-1961, touring Europe in the late 1950s; began solo career, 1961; recording artist and singer on soundtracks for films, including Jamboree, 1957 (with the Count Basie Orchestra), Cinderfella, 1960 (with the Count Basie Orchestra), and The Moonshine War, 1969, Sharky's Machine, 1981, City Heat, 1984, All of Me, 1984; played the role of Grandpa Al on The Cosby Show, 1980s.

Life's Work

His name is not as well known to the general public as those of jazz legends like Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, or Ella Fitzgerald, but Joe Williams is nevertheless counted among the masters of jazz and blues singing; he has, in fact, earned the title "Emperor of the Blues." His singing style, which he developed over a long and consistently successful career, contributed to the success of the Count Basie Orchestra and influenced the style of many younger singers.

Joseph Goreed was born in the small farming town of Cordele, Georgia, on December 12, 1918. His father, Willie Goreed, vanished when Williams was very young. His mother, Anne Beatrice Gilbert, who was no older than 18 when she gave birth to her only child, provided a strong emotional bond until her death in 1968.

Soon after Williams was born, his mother moved them in with his grandparents, who had enough money to support an extended family. During this time, Anne Gilbert was saving up for a move to Chicago, Illinois. Once she had made the move--alone--she began saving the money that she earned cooking for wealthier white Chicagoans so that her family could join her. By the time Williams was four, he and his grandmother and his aunt were on a train to Chicago, where they would live for many years.

Probably most important to Williams's later life was the music scene--fueled largely by African American musicians--that thrived in Chicago in the early 1920s. Years later, he recalled going to the Vendome Theatre with his mother to hear Louis Armstrong play his trumpet. Chicago also offered a host of radio stations that featured the then rebellious sound of jazz, exposing Williams to the styling of Duke Ellington, Ethel Waters, Cab Calloway, Joe Turner, and others. By his early teens, he had already taught himself to play piano and had formed a quartet, known as the Jubilee Boys, that sang at church functions.

In his mid-teens, Williams began singing solo at formal events with local bands. The most that he ever took home was five dollars a night, but that was enough to convince his family that he could make a living at it. At the age of 16, Williams dropped out of school. After a family conference, the name "Williams" was chosen as a better last name for a singer, and he began marketing himself in earnest to Chicago clubs and bands. His first job was a kind of compromise--not unusual for a young singer--at a club called Kitty Davis's. Hired to clean the bathrooms, Williams was allowed to sing with the band in the evening and keep the tips, which would sometimes amount to 20 dollars a night.

Toured the U.S. With Big Bands

Williams's first professional break came in 1938 when clarinet and saxophone master Jimmie Noone invited him to sing with his band. Less than a year later, the young singer was earning a reputation at Chicago dance halls and on a national radio station that broadcast his voice from Massachusetts to California. Williams toured the Midwest in 1939 and 1940 with the Les Hite band, which accompanied the likes of Louis Armstrong and Fats Waller. One year later, he went on a larger tour with the band of saxophonist Coleman Hawkins.

Williams quickly attracted the interest of jazz great Lionel Hampton. In 1942, Hampton hired Williams both for the band's home performances at the Tic Toc Club in Boston and for their cross-country tours. His work with Hampton ended when the band's regular male singer was able to return. By that time, Williams was able to resume his burgeoning career in Chicago.

Experienced Personal Upheaval

Williams's first marriage--to Wilma Cole in 1942--set in motion a pattern of marital difficulties that he wouldn't be able to break until the 1960s. The emotional relationship quickly became painful for both partners, although the union remained legal until 1946. That same year, he married Anne Kirksey, with whom he also had a briefly happy relationship; they separated in 1948 and divorced in the early 1950s. It was during his second marriage that Williams experienced his one serious bout with depression. Following a nervous breakdown in the spring of 1947, he spent a year in Elgin State Hospital, where he received now controversial "treatments" such as electroshock therapy.

Williams's marriage to Lemma Reid, which survived from 1951 until 1964, produced two children, JoAnn and Joe Jr. The union wasn't, however, any more resilient than the first two had been: Lemma returned to her mother's home in Cincinnati soon after JoAnn's birth. Williams met Jillean Milne Hughes-D'Aeth, an Englishwoman, in 1957. After their first meeting, Williams and Hughes-D'Aeth did not see each other again until two years later, when the Basie band was touring in England. Before Williams left Europe, he knew that he was in love. In May of 1960, he and Hughes-D'Aeth rented a New York apartment together. The two were married on January 7, 1965.

Basie and Beyond

In the early 1950s, Chicago disc jockey Daddy-O Daily secured for Williams an opportunity to sing with the band of one of the most powerful band leaders of the era--Count Basie. After the gigs, Williams returned to his floating solo career style, but by 1954 Basie wanted him on contract. Williams would stay with the "Basie machine" until 1961, making New York his home base and securing the best exposure a blues singer could have. National tours were interspersed with long spells in a number of America's musical capitals, when the band would play at one club for three or four weeks at a time. After 1955, the band stopped every year at the Newport Jazz Festival, one of the biggest events on the jazz calender. The years 1956, 1957, and 1959 also found the Basie band touring Europe, where the popularity of jazz had skyrocketed.

Williams developed his essential repertoire while he was with Basie, including standards such as "Every Day (I Have the Blues)," "Five O'Clock in the Morning," "Roll 'em Pete," "Teach Me Tonight," "My Baby Upsets Me," and "The Comeback." The recordings that he made with the Basie band cemented his popularity, selling briskly in record shops and earning airplay at major radio stations across the country. In 1955, Williams won Down Beat magazine's New Star Award. That same year, he won Down Beat's international critics' poll for Best New Male Singer, as well as their readers' poll for Best Male Band Singer--citations he would continue to accumulate throughout his career.

Despite his tremendous success with Count Basie, Williams eventually began to feel that his position with the Basie band was limiting his potential as an artist. By 1960, he was planning the beginnings of a solo career that would allow him to pursue a broader range of material in blues and jazz. Initially, Basie's manager, Willard Alexander, set Williams up with a group of strong musicians and a tour schedule that would take him across the United States during a six month period. The bookings increased; Williams toured for almost all of 1961. By the late 1960s, he was on the road performing between 30 and 40 weeks each year.

Williams continued to produce albums and received overwhelmingly positive reviews for both his recordings and his performances. Even after his 70th birthday in 1988, Williams continued touring and recording. He was particularly sought after to sing at tributes to his peers, including Sarah Vaughan, Ella Fitzgerald, and Louis Armstrong. As always, Williams's performances received glowing reviews in magazines and newspapers; a New Yorker interviewer described a 1986 performance: "Williams has an enormous bass-baritone. It is lilting and flexible. It moves swiftly and lightly from a low C to a pure falsetto. It moves through glottal stops and yodels and delicate growls, through arching blue notes and vibratos that barely stir the air."

Received Numerous Accolades

In addition to his music career, Williams acted in several films. At the request of his friend and devoted fan, Bill Cosby, he played the role of Claire Huxtable's father on the popular 1980s sitcom The Cosby Show. Williams also lent his velvety baritone voice to film soundtracks, including Jamboree, Cinderfella, The Moonshine War, Sharky's Machine, City Heat, and All of Me. He performed at the White House for President Bill Clinton in 1993, and appeared at the Kennedy Center Honors in Washington D.C. during the 1990s. He also released the albums Jump for Joy (1993), Here's to Life (1994), and Feel the Spirit (1995).

Williams was the recipient of many accolades and awards. In 1983, he had his star placed beside Count Basie's on the "Gallery of Stars" sidewalk in Hollywood. In 1985, Williams received a Grammy Award for Best Jazz Vocalist for the album I Just Want to Sing. He earned a second Grammy Award for his release Ballad and Blues Master in 1992, and was honored by the Johnson Publishing Company with its prestigious Ebony Lifetime Achievement Award in 1993. In 1997, he was presented with the Jazz Vocalist Award from the Los Angeles Jazz Society. That same year, Williams was inducted into the International Jazz Hall of Fame.

After complaining of respiratory problems, Williams was admitted to a hospital in Las Vegas in March of 1999. One week later, he called his wife to ask her to pick him up from the hospital. However, Williams had wandered away before she arrived. John Levy, his manager, told Jet that "Joe was disoriented. The medication caused him not to have it all together....His conversation was wild and rambling. I knew something was wrong. He wasn't of his right mind. He never would have walked out of that hospital." After walking for nearly two miles, Williams collapsed and died a few blocks from his home.

Although Williams enjoyed a remarkable and varied career, he never achieved the same status as some white vocalists. As he remarked in an interview with the Los Angeles Times, "There's a reason for that. You can't put down a people on one hand and treat them as romantic heroes on the other, can you? How can you do that and still keep up with the status quo? A friend of mine once said that hate is too important an emotion to waste on someone you don't like."

Awards

Down Beat magazine's New Star Award, 1955, international critics' poll award for best male vocalist, 1955, 1974-78, 1980, 1981, 1983, 1984, and 1989-91, and readers' poll award for best male vocalist, 1955, 1956, 1990, and 1991; Grammy Awards for I Just Want to Sing, 1985, and Ballad and Blues Master, 1992; Ebony Lifetime Achievement Award, 1993; performed at the White House for President Bill Clinton, 1993; Jazz Vocalist Award, Los Angeles Jazz Society, 1997; inducted into the International Jazz Hall of Fame, 1997.

Works

Selected discography

  • Count Basie Swings, Joe Williams Sings (includes "Every Day [I Have the Blues]," "The Comeback," "Teach Me Tonight," and "Roll 'em Pete"), Clef, 1955.
  • A Man Ain't Supposed to Cry, Roulette, 1957.
  • Memories Ad-lib, Roulette, 1958.
  • Joe Williams Sings About You, Roulette, 1959.
  • A Swingin' Night at Birdland--Joe Williams Live, Roulette, 1962.
  • Joe Williams at Newport '63, Victor, 1963.
  • The Heart and the Soul of Joe Williams, Sheba, 1971.
  • Joe Williams With Love, Temponic, 1972.
  • Joe Williams Live, Fantasy, 1973.
  • Big Man, the Legend of John Henry, Fantasy, 1975.
  • Prez and Joe, GNPS/Crescendo, 1979.
  • Then and Now, Bosco, 1984.
  • every night: Live at Vine St., Verve/PolyGram, 1987.
  • The Overwhelming Joe Williams, RCA, 1988.
  • Ballad and Blues Master, Verve/PolyGram, 1992.
  • Joe Williams: A Song Is Born, VIEW, 1992.
  • Jump for Joy, Bluebird/RCA, 1993.
  • Here's to Life, Telarc, 1994.
  • Feel the Spirit, Telarc, 1995.

Further Reading

Books

  • Grouse, Leslie, Everyday: The Story of Joe Williams, Quartet, 1984.
Periodicals
  • Entertainment Weekly, November 20, 1992.
  • Jet, September 9, 1985; April 19, 1999.
  • Los Angeles Times, June 14, 1991.
  • New Yorker, October 27, 1986.
  • New York Times, June 22, 1989; June 27, 1991.
  • Washington Post, October 16, 1991.

— Ondine E. Le Blanc and David G. Oblender


(born Dec. 12, 1918, Cordele, Ga., U.S. — died March 29, 1999, Las Vegas, Nev.) U.S. singer and actor. Williams worked with Coleman Hawkins and Lionel Hampton before joining Count Basie's band in 1954. The success of "Every Day I Have the Blues" established Williams as a sophisticated blues singer with a powerful bass-baritone voice. After leaving the Basie band in 1961, Williams led small ensembles singing popular songs, ballads, and blues. He was a frequent performer on television, both as a singer and as an actor. His album Nothin' but the Blues won a Grammy Award in 1984.

For more information on Joe Williams, visit Britannica.com.

Artist: Joe Williams
Top
See Joe Williams Lyrics
  • Born: December 12, 1918, Cordele, GA
  • Died: March 29, 1999, Las Vegas, NV
  • Active: '30s, '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s
  • Genres: Vocal Music
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "Presenting Joe Williams and the Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Jazz Orchestra," "Every Day: The Best of the Verve Years," "Then and Now"
  • Representative Songs: "Every Day I Have the Blues," "Roll 'Em Pete," "Goin' to Chicago Blues"

Biography

Joe Williams was the last great big-band singer, a smooth baritone who graced the rejuvenated Count Basie Orchestra during the 1950s and captivated audiences well into the '90s. Born in Georgia, he moved to Chicago with his grandmother at the age of three. Reunited with his mother, she taught him to play the piano and took him to the symphony. Though tuberculosis slowed him while a teenager, Williams began performing at social events and formed his own gospel vocal quartet, the Jubilee Boys.

By the end of the '30s he had made the transition to the Chicago clubscene, and appeared with orchestras led by Jimmie Noone and Les Hite during the late '30s. He sang with Coleman Hawkins and Lionel Hampton during the early '40s, and toured with Andy Kirk and His Clouds of Joy during the mid-'40s (making his first recording with that band). Still, lingering illness kept him sidelined from active touring, and he worked as a theater doorman and door-to-door cosmetics salesman before his first minor hit for Checker, 1952's "Every Day I Have the Blues."

Finally, at the age of 35, he got his big break when in 1954 he was hired as the male vocalist for Count Basie's Orchestra. He soon helped audiences forget the absence of Basie's long-time vocalist, Jimmy Rushing. Indeed, he did more than just pull his own weight during the '50s; he became a major star in his own right and helped revive the lagging fortunes of the Basie band. His first (and best) LP, Count Basie Swings, Joe Williams Sings, appeared in 1955, containing definitive versions of "Every Day I Have the Blues" (already his signature song) and "Alright, Okay, You Win." "Every Day" hit number two on the R&B charts, and sparked another LP -- 1957's The Greatest! Count Basie Swings/Joe Williams Sings Standards -- spotlighting Williams' command of the traditional-pop repertory. Even while performing and touring the world with Basie during the late '50s, Williams made his solo-billed debut LP for Regent in 1956, and followed it with a trio of albums for Roulette.

Despite an inevitable parting from Basie in 1961, Joe Williams stayed close to the fold, working in a small group led by Basieite Harry "Sweets" Edison, then formed his own quartet in 1962. For his RCA debut, 1963's Jump for Joy, the lineup included jazz greats Thad Jones, Clark Terry, Snooky Young, Kenny Burrell, Oliver Nelson, Urbie Green and Phil Woods. He recorded two more albums during the year -- At Newport '63 and Me and the Blues -- and hit another peak in 1966 with an LP for Blue Note, Presenting Joe Williams and the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Orchestra. Though he toured consistently during the 1970s, his recordings fell off until a pair of mid-'80s LPs for Delos, Nothin' But the Blues and I Just Wanna Sing. After the former won a Grammy Award for Best Jazz Vocal Performance, he landed a recurring role on the popular television series The Cosby Show and signed a contract for Verve.

Live appearances at Vine St. resulted in material for his first two Verve albums, Every Night: Live at Vine St. and Ballad and Blues Master. Still in extraordinarily fine voice, Williams recorded two more albums for Verve and toured constantly during the '90s. He appeared again with Count Basie's Orchestra (led by Frank Foster), released several albums through Telarc, and remained one of the most talented jazz vocalists in the world right up until his death in 1999. ~ John Bush, All Music Guide
Discography: Joe Williams
Top

Presenting Joe Williams and the Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Jazz Orchestra

Buy this CD

Ultimate Joe Williams

Buy this CD

Definitive Joe Williams

Buy this CD

Having the Blues Under a European Sky

Buy this CD

Having the Blues Under a European Sky

Buy this CD

Having the Blues Under a European Sky

Buy this CD

Night at Count Basie's

Buy this CD

Me and the Blues/The Song Is You

Buy this CD

At Newport '63/Jump for Joy

Buy this CD

Joe Williams Sings

Buy this CD
Show More Albums Show Fewer Albums
Wikipedia: Joe Williams (jazz singer)
Top
Joe Williams

Photo by Richard Newhouse
Background information
Birth name Joseph Goreed
Born December 12, 1918(1918-12-12)
Origin Cordele, Georgia, USA
Died March 29, 1999 (aged 80)
Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
Genres Jazz
Blues
Swing
Traditional pop
Occupations Singer
Labels RCA Victor, Delos, Verve
Associated acts Lionel Hampton, Count Basie
Notable instruments
Piano

Joe Williams (December 12, 1918 – March 29, 1999) was a well-known jazz vocalist, a baritone singing a mixture of blues, ballads, popular songs, and jazz standards.

Contents

Early life

Williams was born Joseph Goreed in the small farming town of Cordele, Georgia. His father, Willie Goreed, left the family early on, but Williams' mother, Anne Beatrice Gilbert, who was 18 when she had her only child, provided a strong emotional bond until her death in 1968.[1] Soon after Williams was born, his mother moved them in with her parents, who had enough money to support an extended family. During this time, Anne Gilbert was saving for a move to Chicago. Once she had made the move — alone — she began saving the money that she earned cooking for wealthy Chicagoans so that her family could join her. By the time Williams was four, he, his grandmother, and his aunt had joined his mother in Chicago, where they would live for many years.

Probably most important to Williams' later life was the music scene — fueled largely by African-American musicians — that thrived in Chicago in the early 1920s. Years later, he recalled going to the Vendóme Theatre with his mother to hear Louis Armstrong play the trumpet. Chicago also offered a host of radio stations that featured the then-rebellious sounds of jazz, exposing Williams to the stylings of Duke Ellington, Ethel Waters, Cab Calloway, Big Joe Turner, and many others. By his early teens, he had already taught himself to play piano and had formed his own gospel vocal quartet, known as "The Jubilee Boys", that sang at church functions.

During his mid-teens Williams began performing as a vocalist, singing solo at formal events with local bands. The most that he ever took home was five dollars a night, but that was enough to convince his family that he could make a living with his voice; so, at 16, he dropped out of school.[2] After discussing it with his family, he began using the name "Williams" as a stage name, and he began marketing himself in earnest to Chicago clubs and bands. His first job was at a club called Kitty Davis's. Williams was allowed to sing with the band in the evening and keep the tips, which would sometimes amount to $20.

Career

Williams had his first real break in 1938 when clarinet and saxophone player Jimmie Noone invited him to sing with his band. Less than a year later, the young singer was earning a reputation at Chicago dance halls and on a national radio station that broadcast his voice from Massachusetts to California. He toured the Midwest in 1939 and 1940 with the Les Hite band, which accompanied the likes of Louis Armstrong and Fats Waller. A year later, he went on a more extensive tour with the band of saxophonist Coleman Hawkins.

In 1942, Lionel Hampton hired him to fill in for his regular vocalist, both for the Hampton orchestra's home performances at the Tic Toc Club in Boston and for their cross-country tours. Williams' work with Hampton ended when the band's former singer returned, but by that time Williams was in great demand, his fame particularly burgeoning back in Chicago. In the mid-'40s he toured with Andy Kirk and His Clouds of Joy (making his first recording with that band).[3]

He got his big break in 1954, when he was hired as the male vocalist for with Count Basie Orchestra, 1954 through 1961, garnering some of the best exposure a blues and jazz singer could have. His first LP, Count Basie Swings, Joe Williams Sings, appeared in 1955, containing definitive versions of Memphis Slim's "Every Day I Have the Blues" (already his signature song) and "Alright, Okay, You Win." "Every Day" hit number two on the R&B charts, and sparked another LP—1957 The Greatest! Count Basie Swings/Joe Williams Sings Standards—spotlighting Williams' command of the traditional-pop repertory.[3] After 1955, the Basie group stopped every year at the Newport Jazz Festival, one of the biggest events on the jazz calendar. In 1955, Williams won Down Beat magazine's New Star Award. That same year, he won Down Beat's international critics' poll for Best New Male Singer, as well as their readers' poll for Best Male Band Singer--citations he would continue to accumulate throughout his career. The years 1956, 1957, and 1959 also found the ensemble touring Europe, where the popularity of jazz had skyrocketed.

He appeared with Count Basie and his Orchestra in the 1957 rock and roll movie Jamboree (1957 film), released by Warner Brothers.

In the 1960s Williams worked mostly as a single, often accompanied by top-flight jazzmen, including Harry Edison, Clark Terry, George Shearing and Cannonball Adderley.[4] In 1962 Williams sings along with Jimmy Rushing with Count Basie & His Orchestra at the Newport Jazz Festival.[5] In 1971, he and pianist George Shearing collaborated on a recording, The Heart and Soul of Joe Williams. He became a familiar face on television, appearing on such variety programs as Johnny Carson's The Tonight Show, Steve Allen, Joey Bishop, Merv Griffin, and Mike Douglas shows.[6] Williams gained further notoriety when Bill Cosby cast him as Heathcliff Huxtable's father-in-law "Grandpa Al" Hanks in a recurring role on the hit 1980s sitcom The Cosby Show.

Williams sang the lead in 1975 in Cannonball Adderley's musical play Big Man (based on the John Henry legend) in Carnegie Hall. Helped by his brother Nat Adderley, composed music for a full-blown, nearly-hour-long theater piece, which he called a "folk musical", the subject is John Henry, the mythical black hero.[7]

Williams continued to perform regularly at jazz festivals, both in the U.S. and aboard, as well as on the nightclub circuit. Williams had performed at the legendary Monterey Jazz Festival 12 times, spanning from 1959 thru 1993, sharing the stage with jazz greats such as Sarah Vaughan, Dianne Reeves, Thelonious Monk, Oscar Peterson, Miles Davis, Cal Tjader, Carmen McRae, Herbie Hancock, Nat Adderley, and Dizzy Gillespie. [8] During the 1980s Williams appeared at Chicago's, Playboy Jazz Festival ten times.

He was given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1983, next to Basie's. When Basie died in 1984, Williams sang a rendition of Duke Ellington's "Come Sunday" at his funeral. The 1984 movie All of Me starring Steve Martin and Lily Tomlin gives credit to Williams as performer of the title track. In 1985, Williams received a Grammy Award for Best Jazz Vocalist for the album I Just Want to Sing. In 1991 Williams attended his own gala tribute, "For the Love of Joe", which celebrated the contribution that he had made and was still making to music. In 1992, he won his second Grammy Award, for the release Ballad and Blues Master—"I Just Want to Sing." In 1997, Williams sang a duet with Nancy Wilson during the opening show of the San Francisco Jazz Festival, singing the song "You're Too Good to Be True."[9]

Williams enjoyed a successful career and worked regularly until his death. Williams died at age 80, on March 29, 1999 in Las Vegas, Nevada. He collapsed on a city street a few blocks from his home after walking out of Sunrise Hospital, where he had been admitted for a respiratory ailment. The hospital had reported him missing several hours before his body was found. "He's an adult and chose to leave," Ann Lynch, vice president for human services at the hospital, said. "We don't confine people here. Upon finding him missing, the facility was checked, and then the police were notified to continue the search." Ron Flud, the Clark County Coroner, said Mr. Williams had apparently died of natural causes.

He is buried at Palm Valley View Memorial Park in Las Vegas, Nevada.[10]

Awards, recognitions and legacy

Grammy Award

Joe Williams Grammy Award History[11]
Year Category Title Genre Result Notes
1989 Best Jazz Vocal Performance In Good Company Jazz Nominee
1989 Best Jazz Vocal Performance Is You Is or Is You Ain't My Baby Jazz Nominee with Marlena Shaw
1988 Best Jazz Vocal Performance I Won't Leave You Again Jazz Nominee with Lena Horne
1987 Best Jazz Vocal Performance Every Night Jazz Nominee
1986 Best Jazz Vocal Performance I Just Want to Sing Jazz Nominee
1984 Best Jazz Vocal Performance Nothin' But the Blues Jazz Winner
1982 Best Jazz Vocal Performance 8 to 5 I Lose Jazz Nominee
1979 Best Jazz Vocal Performance Prez and Joe Jazz Nominee

Grammy Hall of Fame

The Grammy Hall of Fame was established by The Recording Academy's National Trustees in 1973 to honor recordings of "lasting qualitative or historical significance" that are at least 25 years old.[12]

Year Recorded Title Genre Label Year Inducted Notes
1955 Everyday I Have The Blues Jazz (Single) Clef 1992 with Count Basie Orchestra

The Blues Foundation Awards

Joe Williams: Blues Music Awards[13]
Year Category Title Result
1985 Traditional Blues Album Nothin' But The Blues Winner

Honors

Year Category Result Notes
2001 ASCAP Jazz Wall of Fame[14] Inducted
1995 Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame Inducted
1993 NEA Jazz Masters Winner
1993 Ebony Lifetime Achievement Award Winner
1983 Hollywood Walk of Fame Honored at 6508 Hollywood Blvd.
next to Count Basie

Legacy

Prior to his death, Joe Williams, with his wife Jillean and some of his closest friends and collaborators, created the not-for-profit "Joe Williams Every Day Foundation". Its aim -- to provide support for music and musicians, especially those in jazz, and to create career opportunities for deserving young talent.[15]

Selective discography

Year Title Label Billboard Chart
Top Jazz Albums[16]
2002 The Definitive Joe Williams Verve
2001 The Heart and Soul of Joe Williams and George Shearing Verve
1993 Every Day: The Best of the Verve Years Verve #2
1992 Ballad and Blues Master Verve #7
1997 The Best of Joe Williams: The Roulette, Solid State & Blue Note Years Verve #20
1989 In Good Company Verve #5
1984 Nothin' But the Blues Delos
1979 Dave Pell's Prez Conference GNP Crescendo
1973 Joe Williams Live Fantasy
1985 I Just Wanna Sing Delos
1964 Me and the Blues RCA
1963 At Newport '63 RCA
1957 One O'Clock Jump Verve
1956 Count Basie Swings, Joe Williams Sings Verve

Notable Recordings

Filmography

  • 1991 Jazz at the Smithsonian (Kultur Video) - Rereleased in the Jazz Masters Series on DVD by Shanachie (2005)
  • 1992 Joe Williams with George Shearing: A Song is Born (VIEW) - Rereleased on DVD by VIEW (2004)[17]

Footnotes

  1. ^ All About jazz: Joe Williams
  2. ^ San Francisco Gate (Sunday, October 5, 1997): Blues singer Joe Williams
  3. ^ a b All Music: Joe Williams
  4. ^ Larkin, Colin. The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music, Guinness (1995), page 4494 - ISBN 1561591769
  5. ^ Count, William & Rushing at Newport Jazz Festival
  6. ^ Santelli, Robert. The Big Book of Blues: A Biographical Encyclopedia (2001), page 514 - ISBN 0140159398
  7. ^ Cannonball Adderley: Big Man
  8. ^ San Francisco Examiner (March 30, 1999): Beautiful voice, elegant man: Joe Williams was perfect combination of jazz, blues and balad singer
  9. ^ Photo: William & Wilson 1997
  10. ^ Joe Williams (jazz singer) at Find a Grave
  11. ^ Grammy Award History
  12. ^ Grammy Hall of Fame Database
  13. ^ The Blues Foundation Database
  14. ^ The ASCP Jazz Wall of Fame list
  15. ^ Joe Williams Every Day Foundation
  16. ^ Top Jazz Albums
  17. ^ VIEW DVD Listing

External links


Best of the Web: Joe Williams
Top

Some good "Joe Williams" pages on the web:


HOFer
www.baseballhalloffame.org
 

Baseball Library
www.baseballlibrary.com
 
 
 

 

Copyrights:

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
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, 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
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Joe Williams (jazz singer)" Read more