1919 in jazz explained
This is a timeline documenting events of Jazz in the year 1919.
Births in that year included Art Blakey and Nat King Cole.
Events
- The Red Summer took place in the United States. Although 70 blacks were killed by white mobs, a monumental step was made when the NAACP promoted the slogan "The new Negro has no fear", which helped the cause of jazz.[1]
- The Original Dixieland Jazz Band visited England in 1919 and generated new interest in the new music. Swiss conductor Ernest Ansermet also delivered an accolade to Sidney Bechet in Revue Romande, considered the first serious article on jazz in history, and Bechet is lauded as a gifted musician by many classical European musicians.[1]
- Sidney Bechet moves to New York City and joins Will Marion Cook's Southern Syncopated Orchestra and later travels to Europe where he discovers the soprano saxophone.[1]
- February -James Reese Europe and his Hellfighters return home and soon go on a tour of the states .[1]
- May 9- James Reese Europe is stabbed to death by Herbert Wright.[1] [2]
Standards
Deaths
- February
- May
- 9 – James Reese Europe, American ragtime and early jazz bandleader, arranger, and composer (born 1880).
- Unknown date
Births
- January
- February
- March
- April
- May
- June
- July
- August
- September
- October
- December
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: History of Jazz Time Line: 1919. All About Jazz. December 4, 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20110415042129/http://www.allaboutjazz.com/jazz1919.htm. 2011-04-15. dead.
- Book: Badger, Reid . A Life in Ragtime: A Biography of James Reese Europe . Oxford University Press . 1995 . New York, New York . 0-19-506044-X . registration .