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Pittsburgh Jazz: A Brief History

At first glance, Pittsburgh might not seem the most likely place to produce great jazz musicians. Situated on the western edge of the state, "Smoketown" was a gritty industrial city, better known for being the center of the nation's steel industry, than for its popular music or culture. Like Philadelphia, its industries attracted many African Americans from the south, men and women who were looking for decent jobs and a better way of life.
In the 1920s, while

Louis Armstrong
trumpet and vocals1901 - 1971

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

Earl Hines
piano1903 - 1983

Billy Eckstine
vocals1914 - 1993

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991

Mary Lou Williams
piano1910 - 1981
Pittsburgh's distance from the major East Coast markets, in certain ways, limited the opportunities for its musicians. But in many ways it also helped local players develop their own jazz scene, and a regional sound that they carried to Cincinnati, and other midwestern cities. Pittsburgh was on the way to Chicago, but far enough away that bands traveling through the city tended to stay for a few days. This gave locals like

Art Blakey
drums1919 - 1990

Ray Brown
bass, acoustic1926 - 2002

Ahmad Jamal
piano1930 - 2023
By the 1930s local musicians had developed a Pittsburgh "sound" that combined a strong, straight-ahead urban swing feeling that they merged with a deep blues, carried north by the black men and women drawn to Pittsburgh during the Great Migration. The sound was also defined by very strong drumming; drumming that Art Blakey and

Kenny Clarke
drums1914 - 1985
Pittsburgh also had a strong black middle class that encouraged the arts, especially music. In 1926, many of them began to send their children to Mary Cardwell Dawson's music school. Cardwell Dawson, a former high school teacher, founded the National Negro Opera Company, the first black opera company in the United States, in 1941. There she trained Bobby McFerrin Sr., the first African-American hired as a permanent member of the Metropolitan Opera Company in New York.
The black middle class, however, did not fully embrace jazz, which they associated with sin and crime. Religious people called it the "devil's music." But many of the youths trained in Pittsburgh's black churches and music schools saw the great artistry possible in this emerging art form, and the possibilities for work. By the 1930s dozens of nightclubs in Pittsburgh's Hill District supported a vibrant jazz scene. After playing the white theaters and downtown clubs, jazz musicians from around the country would head down to one of the dozens of clubs in the Hill to cut loose and play late into the night, and often into the early morning hours. There was Crawford Grill, the Ellis Hotel, the Webster Grill, the Blue Note, the Ritz, the Bamboola, Stanley's, the American Legion's Carney Post and the Iron City Elks Club. When those closed, black and white musicians eager for a jam headed to the Musicians Club, operated by the American Federation of Musicians Local 471, the black musicians' local.
The jams at the Musicians Club also attracted movie stars and other visitors eager to hear some good music. As Pittsburgh jazz musician Nelson Harrison remembered, "That's where the action was... whatever you were here for, you found a way to get there rather than go to your hotel room and get some sleepyou didn't want to miss that action!" In Pittsburgh's after-hours clubs the national stars knew they were in some stiff competition, for word was out that, as saxophonist Hill Jordan recalled, in Pittsburgh "a guy might jump off a garbage truck and play you off the stage."
Duke Ellington,

Count Basie
piano1904 - 1984
The list of outstanding jazz musicians from Pittsburgh is a long one and includes bass players

Paul Chambers
bass, acoustic1935 - 1969
Eddie Safranski
bassb.1918

Erroll Garner
piano1921 - 1977

Dodo Marmarosa
piano1925 - 2002

Stanley Turrentine
saxophone, tenor1934 - 2000

George Benson
guitarb.1943

Dakota Staton
vocals1932 - 2007

Roy Eldridge
trumpet1911 - 1989

Roger Humphries
drumsb.1944

Thelonious Monk
piano1917 - 1982

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955
Today, the Pittsburgh jazz scene remains strong. Now appreciated as one of the great musical art forms of the twentieth century, jazz is taught in this city's music schools and universities. The city hosts an annual Jazz Festival and continues to produce new generations of top-flight musicians, including Beaver Harris,

Horace Parlan
piano1931 - 2017

Jeff Tain Watts
drumsb.1960
Tags
History of Jazz
Billy Strayhorn
Steve Rowland
United States
Pennsylvania
Pittsburgh
Philadelphia
Louis Armstrong
New Orleans
Chicago
duke ellington
Earl "Fatha" Hines
Billy Eckstine
Miles Davis
Mary Lou Williams
Cincinnati
Art Blakey
Ray Brown
Ahmad Jamal
Kenny Clarke
Count Basie
Paul Chambers
Eddie Safranski
Errol Garner
Dodo Marmarosa
Stanley Turrentine
george benson
Dakota Staton
Roy Eldridge
Roger Humphries
Thelonious Monk
Charlie Parker
Horace Parlan
Jeff "Tain" Watts
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