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Will Marion Cook

 
American Theater Guide: Will Marion Cook

Cook, Will Marion (1869–1944), composer. Born in Washington, D.C., he studied at Oberlin College and then in Europe with Dvorak and Joachim. Although he hoped to find a place for African‐American musical artists in serious music and, indeed, all through his life organized or worked with black choirs and orchestras, he turned to Tin Pan Alley and the Broadway theatre as a source of income. In 1898 he composed the score for the first black musical to play a white theatre, The Origin of the Cake Walk; or, Clorindy. His song from that score, “Darktown Is Out Tonight,” was one of the reigning hits of the era. After interpolating fleetingly successful songs in several musicals, Cook wrote the scores for In Dahomey (1903), The Southerners (1904), Abyssinia (1906), and Bandana Land (1908). He generally orchestrated and conducted his own scores, and in 1910 he provided Fanny Brice with the lyric for her first Ziegfeld Follies hit, “Lovie Joe.”

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Music Encyclopedia: Will Marion Cook
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(b Washington dc, 27 Jan 1869; d New York, 19 July 1944). American composer and conductor. He studied the violin at the Oberlin Conservatory and later with Joseph Joachim in Germany. After a brief career as a violinist he began to work in musical comedy as a director and composer. In 1898 he produced his musical-comedy sketch Clorinda, or The Origin of the Cakewalk on Broadway, the first composed and directed by African-Americans. In 1918 Cook organized a ‘syncopated’ symphony orchestra, which toured the USA and Europe. His music uses themes and idioms from folklore and folk music; his neo-romantic style is notable for its sophisticated melodies, expressive harmonies and vigorous rhythms.



Black Biography: Will Marion Cook
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composer; conductor; violinist; founder; teacher

Personal Information

Born Will Mercer Cook on January 27, 1869, in Washington, DC; died on July 19, 1944, in New York, NY; married Abbie Mitchell, 1899 (divorced 1906); children: Mercer
Education: Studied at Oberlin Conservatory, Oberlin, OH, at both high school and college level; studied in Germany with classical violinist Josef Joachim; studied or performed under Czech composer Antonín Dvorák, early 1890s.

Career

Composer and conductor, 1895-1944; gave classical concert at Carnegie Hall, 1895; Clorindy, the Origin of the Cakewalk, producer and composer, 1898; toured Europe with In Dahomey, 1903; toured Europe with Memphis Students ensemble, 1905; toured Europe with Clef Club orchestra, 1912; Southern Syncopated Orchestra (later American Syncopated Orchestra), founder and conductor, 1918-22; New York City, music teacher and conductor, 1920s-30s; music instructor to "Duke" Ellington, late 1920s.

Life's Work

As a composer of musical theater, Will Marion Cook did much to lay the groundwork for the black popular music industry in the United States. As a conductor, he organized ensembles of such precision and virtuosity that American critics and European observers were astounded. Cook himself, according to the Washington Post, correctly forecast the long-lasting effects of his 1898 musical Clorindy, or The Origin of the Cakewalk, the first show written and performed by blacks to appear on New York's Broadway stages: "Negroes were at last on Broadway," he wrote, "and there to stay. Gone was the uff-dah of the minstrel! Gone the Massa Linkum stuff. We were artists and we were going a long, long way."

Will Mercer Cook was born in Washington, D.C., on January 27, 1869, to parents who had both grown up as free blacks and who were both graduates of Oberlin College in Ohio. (The name Will Marion Cook evolved from the pseudonym of Will Marion that Cook used early in his songwriting career.) At the time of Cook's birth, his father was a clerk in the U.S. government's Freedmen's Bureau, and he later became the first African American to practice law in Washington.

Studied Violin in Europe

Cook showed skill on the violin at an early age, and his parents sent him to the Oberlin Conservatory, which at the time maintained both high school and college-level programs. Cook remained at Oberlin for several years but did not graduate from either program. Nevertheless, one of his professors, Prof. Amos Doolittle, suggested that he go to Germany for further study.

Cook's father had died by that time, but his family scraped together the funds to send Cook to Europe by staging a benefit concert promoted and attended by the onetime abolitionist writer Frederick Douglass, a Cook family friend. In Berlin, Germany, Cook studied with Joseph Joachim, one of the most famous violinists of the nineteenth century. Back in New York, Cook met H. T. Burleigh, a vocalist widely known for his interpretations of African-American spirituals. Burleigh had convinced the visiting Czech composer Antonín Dvorák that the future of American music lay with the cultivation of African-American musical materials, and he sent Cook to Dvorák with a letter of introduction. Cook probably studied under Dvorák at the National Conservatory of Music in New York and certainly performed under his direction in 1894.

Meanwhile Cook had launched his career, making appearances in Chicago and conducting a Washington orchestra sponsored by Douglass. But at this time, when treatment of African Americans had reached the low point of the post-Civil War era, he consistently encountered discrimination. In 1895 Cook gave a violin concert at New York's Carnegie Hall. According to a retrospective article in the Washington Post, the next day a newspaper critic wrote that Cook was "the world's greatest Negro violinist." Cook went to the critic's office, declared that "I am not the world's greatest Negro violinist, I am the greatest violinist in the world," smashed his violin on the critic's desk, and then and there gave up his career on the instrument.

Adapted Minstrel-Show Themes

Living in New York, Cook got to know various writers and black stage performers of the day, and by the late 1890s he had decided that popular music would present fewer barriers to his advancement than would classical music. One of the first fruits of his decision was Clorindy, or The Origin of the Cakewalk, written in collaboration with the poet Paul Laurence Dunbar. It was an auspicious beginning to Cook's popular career. Cook himself described the show's premiere at the Casino Roof Garden theater in the book titled Black Conductors: "When the last note was sounded, the audience stood and cheered for at least ten minutes." African-American critic James Weldon Johnson, quoted in the same book, saw historic significance in the occasion: "'Clorindy' was the talk of New York," he wrote. "It was the first demonstration of the possibilities of syncopated Negro music."

In 1899 Cook married Abbie Mitchell, a dancer from the Clorindy production (the two were divorced in 1906). The beginning of Cook's theatrical career coincided with the rise of the black vaudeville team of Bert Williams and George Walker, two immensely talented comedians and singers who performed in the blackface makeup of the minstrel show. In 1899 Cook became music director for Williams and Walker, turning out instrumental and choral numbers for a series of hit shows that served as vehicles for their performances.

These productions in the early 1900s included The Sons of Ham, In Dahomey, In Abyssinia, and In Bandanna Land. By modern standards these shows, which sometimes featured fanciful images of tribal Africans doing the latest cakewalk dance steps, seem suffused with the racist imagery and terminology of the day. But comparing them with white minstrel shows sheds light on how thoroughly Cook and his collaborators humanized black characters and smoothed down the nastiest edges of white stereotypes. And Cook's tunes, such as "Who Dat Say Chicken?" and "Darktown Is Out Tonight," set all New York's feet to tapping, in the decade just before jazz took the country by storm.

Conducted African-American Orchestral Ensembles

Cook was a key figure in so-called "Black Bohemia," New York's African-American creative community, working with and cultivating friendships with a variety of writers and performers. He traveled to Europe twice in the early 1900s. First he toured with a production of In Dahomey, and then as the conductor of an ensemble called the Memphis Students (though none of the members were either students or from Memphis). The Memphis Students sailed for Europe in late 1905 and began to reorient the world's musical ears to black rhythms. Black philosopher Alain Locke later recalled in Black Conductors, "Real jazz was in the making and Negro music had burst the Nordic strait-jacket unwise imitation had imposed."

In 1912 Cook's composition Swing Along was featured at the 1912 Carnegie Hall concert given by the Clef Club Orchestra, and was another milestone in the integration of African Americans into the institutions of American cultural life. Cook remained active as a conductor who did much to train black instrumental performers, vocalists, and choirs, and in 1918 he organized an ensemble of his own, the Southern Syncopated Orchestra. That group won widespread praise in both the United States and Europe, to which Cook traveled for the third time in 1919. One fan was the Swiss classical conductor Ernest Ansermet, who, according to the Washington Post, called Cook his favorite conductor and wrote that the group's music represented "perhaps the highway the whole world will swing along tomorrow."

Cook returned to New York in 1922 and became eminent on the black music scene in the 1920s and 1930s. He gave private lessons to musicians who gained renown in both the popular and classical fields, including stride pianist and composer James P. Johnson, choral conductor Eva Jessye. His most famous student may have been the bandleader and composer "Duke" Ellington, who studied with Cook in the 1920s, just as Ellington's classical-influenced style was taking shape. In an interview quoted in Black Conductors, Ellington called Cook "His Majesty the King of Consonance."

Cook died in New York City on July 19, 1944. His importance in African-American musical history was underestimated for a time because his musicals, with their questionable racial imagery, were rarely performed. By the end of the twentieth century, however, scholars had begun to investigate and appreciate his legacy.

Works

Selected works

  • Clorindy, or The Origin of the Cakewalk (stage musical), 1898.
  • The Cannibal King (stage musical), 1901.
  • The Southerners (stage musical), 1904.
  • Composed instrumental and choral numbers for comic musicals featuring Bert Williams and George Walker, including The Sons of Ham (1900), In Dahomey (1902), In Abyssinia (1905), and In Bandanna Land (1907).

Further Reading

Books

  • Handy, D. Antoinette, Black Conductors, Scarecrow Press, 1995.
  • Riis, Thomas, Just Before Jazz, Smithsonian Institution Press, 1989.
  • Sadie, Stanley, ed., The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 2nd ed., Macmillan, 2001.
  • Southern, Eileen, The Music of Black Americans, 3rd ed., Norton, 1997.
Periodicals
  • Back Stage, July 16, 1999, p. 64.
  • Washington Post, July 18, 1999, p. X8; February 18, 2000, p. N37.

— James M. Manheim

Artist: Will Marion Cook
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  • Born: January 27, 1869, Washington, D.C.
  • Died: July 18, 1944, New York, NY [Harlem]
  • Genres: Jazz
  • Instrument: Vocals, Bass, Trumpet Representative Album: "Swing Along: The Songs of Will Marion Cook"

Biography

The musical activities of composer, conductor and instrumentalist Will Marion Cook began even prior to the oncome of the 20th century. The son of the first Afro-American lawyer in Washington, D.C., Cook studied classical music at the Oberlin Conservatory in Ohio and with both Josef Joachim and Anton Dvorak in Europe. He was sure that nobody would take him seriously in either the American or European academic world due to his race, so he began utilizing material from traditional black folklore and music for his own works. He wrote a great deal of material for stage presentations featuring star black comic Bert Williams, but the greatest of Cook's early accomplishments was the 1889 Clorindy, the Origin of the Cakewalk, the first musical comedy to be written, directed, and performed entirely by blacks.

Cook subsequently wrote a series of popular musicals in this style including both Dahomey and Abyssinia. He helmed the Southern Syncopated Orchestra, a large ensemble presenting both ragtime and concert music. Cook could also write in the short form, creating ditties closely associated with singing and mugging black faces, whether the color was natural or painted on. Works coming out of this Cook's song kitchen after 1910 include both "I'm Coming, Virginia" and "Mammy". His orchestra's final tour was in 1919 and featured soprano saxophonist Sidney Bechet. Cook then began freelancing with various New York publishers and was influential in the early work of Duke Ellington. His wife was Abbie Mitchell Cook, a soprano vocalist whose career began in his early shows. Their son Mercer Cook was the American ambassador to Nigeria and Senegal. ~ Eugene Chadbourne, All Music Guide
Wikipedia: Will Marion Cook
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Will Marion Cook (January 27, 1869 – July 19, 1944) was a composer and violinist from the United States. Cook was a student of Antonín Dvořák and performed for King George V among others.

Contents

Biography

Cook's musical talent was apparent at an early age. At fifteen, he was sent to the Oberlin Conservatory to study violin. With help from members of the African American community, his benefit recitals were sponsored to help him afford to study abroad. From 1887 to 1889, he studies at the Berlin Hochschule fur Musik working with Josef Joachim's former student, violinist Heinrich Jacobson; Jacobson served as Chairman of the Orchestral Instruments Department. Although it is often stated that Cook studied abroad for nine years, there is no evidence of this. Cook married singer Abbie Mitchell in 1898.

In the years of 1894 and 1895, Cook studied with Dvořák and John White at the National Conservatory of Music. Cook had performed professionally as a student and made his debut in 1889 in Washington, DC. His performance career as a soloist was short lived, however.

Playbill from 1898 showing Edward E. Rice's Production of Cook's Clorindy featuring the song "Darktown is Out Tonight"

In 1890, he became director of a chamber orchestra touring the East Coast. He prepared Scenes from the Opera of Uncle Tom's Cabin for performance. The performance, which was to take place at the Chicago World's Fair in 1893, was canceled. Clorindy; or, The Origin of the Cakewalk—a musical sketch comedy in collaboration with Paul Laurence Dunbar — was the next piece he composed, 1898. It was the first all-black show to play in a prestigious Broadway house, Casino Theatre's Roof Garden.[1] After this period, he was composer-in-chief and musical director for the George Walker-Bert Williams Company. As he continued to write, he produced many successful musicals.

Best known for his songs, Cook used folk elements in an original and distinct manner. Many of these songs first appeared in his musicals. The songs were written for choral groups or for solo singers. Some were published in A Collection of Negro Songs (1912). Later in his career, Cook was an active choral and orchestral conductor. He produced several concerts and organized many choral societies in both New York and in Washington, D.C. The New York Syncopated Orchestra—he had created—toured the United States in 1918 and then went to England in 1919 for a command performance for King George V. Among his company were assistant director Will Tyers, jazz clarinetist Sidney Bechet, Cook's wife Abbie Mitchell.

One of his last shows was Swing Along (1929), written with Will Vodery.

Notable works

  • The Policy Players (1900)
  • Uncle Eph's Christmas (1901), a Broadway musical
  • The Cannibal King (1901), with Will Accooe
  • In Dahomey (1903)
  • The Southerners (1904), a Broadway musical
  • The Ghost Ship (1907)
  • The Traitor (1913)
  • In Darkeydom (1914), with James Reese Europe
  • The Cannibal King (1914)
  • Swing Along (1929), Will Vodery
  • Rain Song: Exhoration—A Negro Sermon (1912)

See also

References

  1. ^ Woll, Allen (1989). Black Musical Theater. Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 0-8071-1469-3.

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

American Theater Guide. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre. Copyright © 2004 by Oxford University Press, 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
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
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Will Marion Cook" Read more