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Ford Dabney

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Songwriter Ford Dabney squatted astride a massive mound of royalty gold based on the song "Shine" alone , recorded by Louis Armstrong, Count Basie and Bing Crosby, to start with just the first three letters of the alphabet. Already publishing sophisticated numbers such as "That Minor Strain" as early as 1910, Dabney's career is more the stuff of epic poems then Tin Pan Alley ditties. He was a struggling young theatre owner in Washington, wrote "Haitian Rag" while employed as the president of Haiti's official musician from 1904 to 1907 and first gained notoriety as a vaudeville performer. One of his most important close musical associates was bandleader and composer James Reese Europe, both of whom became collaborators of famed showman Florenz Ziegfeld. The show Ziegfeld's Midnight Frolic was actually performed on the roof of the New Amsterdam Theater in Manhattan; for Dabney and Europe, the showbiz adage "break a leg" had milder implications than usual considering the potential for a serious accident under these circumstances. A much safer side of their musical life was the Clef Club, an exclusive gathering point for the best players where many of the new developments in black orchestral music were born amongst idle chatter and casual jamming. Dabney wrote what would be his most famous song early on in his career. Following the death of Europe--stabbed by one his percussionists during a 1919 performance--Dabney lost something of his creative edge. He was unable to maintain a standard suitable for Ziegfield's men with cigars, or for jazz critics either, apparently, quick as they are to criticize the 1919 Dabney's Band for a percieved lack of variety. Ford Dabney's Syncopated Orchestra was another of his active performing units. Among Dabney's best composed pieces were...

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