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Claude Williams (musician)

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Name
  
Claude Williams

Role
  
Music performer

Albums
  
King of Kansas City


Claude Williams (musician) libraryumkcedusitesdefaultfilesimagesspecc

Died
  
April 26, 2004, Kansas City, Missouri, United States

Similar People
  
Karrin Allyson, Bill Easley, Roland Hanna, Red Richards, Chris Strachwitz

Claude williams


Claude "Fiddler" Williams (February 22, 1908 – April 26, 2004) was an American jazz violinist and guitarist who recorded and performed into his 90s. He was the first guitarist to record with Count Basie and the first musician to be inducted into the Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame.

Contents

Claude Williams (musician) okjazzorgimgULimagewilliamsjpg

Music career

Claude Gabriel Williams was born in Muskogee, Oklahoma. At the age of 10 he played guitar, mandolin, banjo, and cello. After hearing Joe Venuti on the violin, he decided he wanted to play violin. He went to Kansas City, Missouri, in 1927 and became part of the Twelve Clouds of Joy, led by trumpeter Terrence Holder and then Andy Kirk, with Mary Lou Williams on piano. He recorded with them for Brunswick Records the following year. After leaving Kirk, he played in Chicago in a band with Nat King Cole and his brother Eddie Cole and then became the first guitarist to record with Count Basie.

He spent most of his life in Kansas City. In the 1950s, he played with Eddie Vinson, Hank Jones, and another musician from Muskogee, pianist Jay McShann. For the next twenty years he led his own groups but did not record. Nearly thirty years since his last recording, he reunited with McShann in the 1970s to record McShann's album Man from Muskogee.

In the 1990s, Williams performed at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, and at the inauguration of President Bill Clinton. He was profiled on the TV program CBS News Sunday Morning and became the first person to be inducted into the Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame. His last album, Swingin' the Blues, was recorded in 2000. He was 96 when he died in 2004.

He was the last surviving jazz musician to have recorded before 1930. His memorabilia was donated to the University of Missouri–Kansas City.

Discography

  • Kansas City Greats (Big Bear, 1974)
  • Call for the Fiddler (SteepleChase, 1976)
  • Fiddler's Dream (Classic Jazz), 1981
  • Live at J's, Pt. 1 (Arhoolie, 1989)
  • Live at J's, Pt. 2 (Arhoolie, 1989)
  • Swingtime in New York (Progressive, 1994)
  • Jazz Violin & Guitar Duets (Global Village, 1995)
  • King of Kansas City (Progressive, 1996)
  • Swingin' the Blues (Bullseye Blues, 2000)
  • My Silent Love (Black & Blue, 2002)
  • With Count Basie

  • The Original American Decca Recordings (GRP, 1937–39 [1992])
  • References

    Claude Williams (musician) Wikipedia