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Bennie Moten

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Birth name
  
Benjamin

Role
  
Jazz Pianist

Name
  
Bennie Moten

Instruments
  
Piano


Bennie Moten httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu


Born
  
November 13, 1894 Kansas City, Missouri, United States (
1894-11-13
)

Associated acts
  
Count Basie, Walter Page, Oklahoma City Blue Devils, Eddie Durham, Hot Lips Page,

Died
  
April 2, 1935, Kansas City, Missouri, United States

Albums
  
Kansas City Swing, Blue Lou Ain't Wrong

Genres
  
Jazz, Kansas City jazz, Moten Swing

Record labels
  
RCA Records, Bluebird Records

Similar People
  
Count Basie, Walter Page, Hot Lips Page, Eddie Durham, Jelly Roll Morton

Occupation(s)
  
Musician, bandleader

Bennie moten s kansas city orchestra as long as i love you jeanette


Benjamin “Bennie” Moten (November 13, 1894 – April 2, 1935) was an American jazz pianist and band leader born and raised in Kansas City, Missouri.

Contents

Bennie Moten Bennie Moten American musician Britannicacom

He led the Kansas City Orchestra, the most important of the regional, blues-based orchestras active in the Midwest in the 1920s, and helped to develop the riffing style that would come to define many of the 1930s Big Bands.

Bennie Moten Jasscom Bennie Moten

Bennie moten s kansas city orch rumba negro 1929


Career

Bennie Moten Bennie Moten39s Kansas City Orchestra Moten39s Swing

Moten started making music from an early age and developed as a pianist, pulling together other musicians in a band. His first recordings were made (for OKeh Records) in 1923, and were rather typical interpretations of the New Orleans style of King Oliver and others. They also showed the influence of the ragtime that was still popular in the area, as well as the stomping beat for which his band was famous. These OKeh sides (recorded 1923–1925) are some of the more valuable acoustic jazz 78s of the era; they are treasured records in many serious jazz collections.

They signed with Victor Records in 1926, and were influenced by the more sophisticated style of Fletcher Henderson. More often than not, their pieces featured a hard stomp beat that was extremely popular in Kansas City. Moten continued to be one of Victor's most popular orchestras through 1930. Their song "Kansas City Shuffle" was recorded during this time. (The band recorded prolifically, and many of their records were issued in Victor's regular series, not specifically marketed to the Black community as some other bands were.)

By 1928 Moten's piano was showing some boogie woogie influences, but the real revolution came in 1929, after he recruited Count Basie, Walter Page, and Oran 'Hot Lips' Page. Walter Page's walking bass lines gave the music an entirely new feel compared to the 2/4 tuba of his predecessor Vernon Page, colored by Basie's understated, syncopated piano fills. Another boon to the band was adding Jimmy Rushing as their primary vocalist.

Their final session showed the early stages of what became known as the "Basie sound", four years before Basie recorded under his own name. (They made 10 recordings at Victor's Camden, New Jersey, studios on December 13, 1932, during a time when the band was suffering significant financial hardship.) By this time Ben Webster and Rushing had joined Moten's band, but Moten himself did not play on these sessions. These sides were mostly arranged by Eddie Durham, and they include a number of tunes that later became swing classics:

  • "Toby"
  • "Moten Swing"
  • "The Blue Room"
  • "Imagination" (vocals: Sterling Russell Trio)
  • "New Orleans" (vocal: Jimmy Rushing)
  • "The Only Girl I Ever Loved" (vocals: Sterling Russell Trio)
  • "Milenberg Joys"
  • "Lafayette"
  • "Prince of Wails" (often mistitled as "Prince of Wales")
  • "Two Times" (recorded with six musicians and with vocalist Josephine Garrison)
  • Moten died at Kansas City's Wheatley-Provident Hospital on April 2, 1935 following a failed tonsillectomy operation. Basie took many of the leading musicians from the former Moten band to gather his own orchestra.

    Moten's popular 1928 recording of "South" on Victor V-38021 (itself a remake of the first version on OKeh from late 1924) stayed in Victor's catalog over the years. (It was reissued as 24893 in 1935, as Victor phased out any remaining V-38000 series that were still in the catalog.) In the late 1940s, it became a big jukebox hit (by then, reissued as 44-0004). It remained in print (as a vinyl 45) until RCA stopping making vinyl records.

    References

    Bennie Moten Wikipedia