|
||||||||
|
Obit: Claude 'Fiddler' Williams
|
Share Thread
|
|||||||
|
Subject: Obit: Claude 'Fiddler' Williams From: GUEST,Mary Katherine Date: 26 Apr 04 - 08:39 AM Jazz violinist Claude 'Fiddler' Williams dead at 96 DATELINE: KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)Jazz violinist Claude "Fiddler" Williams, who was part of Kansas City's thriving music scene during the swing era of the 1930s and enjoyed new-found popularity in his later years, is dead at 96. Williams died early Sunday at Research Medical Center, The Kansas City Star reported. His wife, Blanche, said he'd been hospitalized there since April 5 with double pneumonia. Mrs. Williams, who married the musician in 1991, said he would love to be remembered "as a passionate, passionate violinist." "He loved his music," she said. "And he loved making people happy and feeling his music. He wanted them to feel it. He lived for his music." "He was a good musician," pianist Jay McShann, another pioneering Kansas City jazz performer who like Williams was originally from Muskogee, Okla. "He enjoyed playing." His wife said Williams had continued as an active musician, and until he was taken ill his schedule had included a masters class in California in August and a music camp in New Jersey in August and September. "He said that as long as his fingers still worked he would," she said. To celebrate his latest birthday, Williams went with relatives to a restaurant in Kansas City's Country Club Plaza area, bringing his fiddle along and joining in with the band. "They gave him a very warm welcome," said his wife. "Claude stood up for most of the songs, and that's an accomplishment in itself." "I'm doing pretty well," Williams said then. "I can still work with my fingers a little bit." Williams, who played the guitar, mandolin and bass as well as the violin, first came to Kansas City in 1928, joining the Twelve Clouds of Joy band led first by Terrence Holder and then Andy Kirk. He also played later with a band led by Alphonso Trent, which Williams said was "the first black big band allowed to play at white clubs in Oklahoma." In the 18th and Vine Street area of Kansas City, there were many night clubs featuring jazz music, after-hours jam sessions and "battles of the bands" that drew many musicians to the area to learn and show what they could do. "Musicians would come from as far away as Texas and Chicago to learn how to do it," Williams said. "We showed them the right way to do it and straightened up their playing." After hearing him play in Chicago, Count Basie hired Williams to play both guitar and violin with his band. "Count came up looking for me because the guys in Kansas City told him about my playing," Williams said. But when Basie moved his band to New York, Freddie Green replaced Williams as the guitarist, something which Williams was later to say turned out to be a good thing. ""If I had stayed with Count, I would have been playing that ching-ching rhythm for 40 years," he once said. Williams once told an interviewer for Down Beat that hearing trumpeter Louis Armstrong play a diminished chord in Tulsa one time inspired him to learn about changes and chords. "All the cats wanted to jam with me because they knew they would hear changes, something different, not just jazzin' the melody," he said. "That's because I mostly jammed with trumpeters and saxophones." Williams played with various Kansas City bands until moving in 1940 to Michigan with George Lee, another well-known Kansas City musician. "We put together a band of the common laborers there," Williams said. "It finally broke up when several of the boys had to go into the service." Williams worked as a welder by day and musician at night, coming back to Kansas City in 1952. In 1988 he was featured in the Broadway revue "Black and Blue," focusing new attention on his skills, and in the early 1990s he was inducted into the Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame. He became a popular attraction at nightclubs and music festivals around the country and overseas, where he always had a strong following. Williams was among the performers at events during President Clinton's second inauguration in 1997. That same year he performed at the grand opening of Kansas City's American Jazz Museum, a show that was later televised nationally. He suffered a broken leg in an auto accident in 2000, and shortly after that, his wife said, he was diagnosed with the early stages of Alzheimer's disease, but he still continued to perform regularly. Musician Bobby Watson remembered that at one performance not long after the accident when he was supposed to play sitting down, "he just kicked that stool back and turned the place out." "I've just always admired his strength, his longevity and youthful attitude," Watson said Sunday. "He never stopped. He was always pushing it." A visitation and memorial jazz session has been tentatively scheduled for next Sunday, with the funeral the following day at St. Louis Catholic Church. |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Claude 'Fiddler' Williams From: GLoux Date: 26 Apr 04 - 09:17 AM I saw him once on the NCTA Masters of the Violin tour and was blown away...to me, he was the epitome of "cool"...a sad loss, indeed. |
| Share Thread: |
| Subject: | Help |
| From: | |
| Preview Automatic Linebreaks Make a link ("blue clicky") | |