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The Gershwin Legacy This Week on Riverwalk Jazz
This week, frequent Riverwalk Jazz guest artist

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Dick Hymana brilliant pianist, composer and arranger of film scores, ballet and Broadway showsjoins The

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Jim Cullum Jr. Jazz Band to celebrate

composer / conductor
1898 - 1937
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George Gershwin's works.
The program is distributed in the US by Public Radio International, on Sirius/XM sattelite radio and can be streamed on- demand from the Riverwalk Jazz website.
The music of George Gershwin has Made in the USA" stamped all over it. Coming of age in the 1920s and '30s in New York City, Gershwin wrote music for a new generation of Americans. To this day, two of Gershwin's Broadway show tunes are all-time most-often- played standard vehicles for jazz musicians and their endless improvisations. Oh, Lady Be Good!" was introduced as the title tune of a 1924 stage musical starring the dance team sensation Fred and Adele Astaire.
Another Gershwin composition highly popular as a jazz vehicle, I Got Rhythm" debuted in a 1930 Broadway musical,
Girl Crazy. The chord changes of I Got Rhythm" are so commonly used in jazz that musicians just call them Rhythm changes." This simple harmonic framework forms the basis of countless jazz standards, such as Count Basie's Lester Leaps In," Duke Ellington's Cotton Tail," Charlie Parker's Anthropology" or Nat Cole's Straighten Up and Fly Right." Dick Hyman says, In jazz, there's a saying that either you're playing the blues or you're playing 'I Got Rhythm.' Next to the blues, it's just about the most common jazz form."
In 1932,
George Gershwin's Song Book was published. It included the original sheet music and Gershwin's own piano transcriptionshis songs as he liked to play them. They were difficult arrangements, many worthy of concert presentation. Gershwin explained, Playing my songs as frequently as I do at private parties, I have naturally been led to compose numerous variations upon them, and to indulge the desire for complication and variety that every composer feels when he manipulates the same material over and over again." At these celebrity-studded parties in the living room of his Manhattan penthouse, he would often play versions of his variations" arranged for two pianos, with his friend Oscar Levant on second piano. Just such an arrangement from the
Song Book is Fascinating Rhythm" with Hyman and John Sheridan.
Gershwin began composing his
Piano Preludes in 1925. Prelude #2" with its 12-bar blues structure lends itself particularly well to our jazz treatment by the Band with Hyman and Sheridan.
Gershwin began his career in music at the age of 15 as a song-plugger for Remick's, a music publishing house in New York. He'd spend his days in a small roomjust about the size of a boarding house bedroomat an upright piano, playing songs for singers and producers. At night he'd make the rounds of saloons playing these same tunes for the publishing company with the idea that somebody important would hear the tune, like it and put it in a big show.
At the age of 21 he got a huge break. The popular singing star

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