Dorothy Donegan Explained

Dorothy Donegan
Birth Date:6 April 1922
Birth Place:Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Death Place:Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Genre:Jazz, blues, classical, boogie-woogie
Occupation:Musician
Instrument:Piano, vibraphone, vocals
Years Active:1936 - 1998
Label:MGM, Capitol
Associated Acts:Lionel Hampton, Brook Benton

Dorothy Donegan (April 6, 1922  - May 19, 1998) was a classically trained American jazz pianist and occasional vocalist, primarily known for performing stride and boogie-woogie, as well as bebop, swing, and classical.[1] [2]

Early life, family and education

Donegan was born and raised in Chicago, Illinois, and began studying piano in 1928.[3] She took her first lessons from Alfred N. Simms, a West Indian pianist who also taught Cleo Brown.[4]

She graduated from Chicago's DuSable High School, where she studied with Walter Dyett, a teacher who also worked with Dinah Washington, Johnny Griffin, Gene Ammons, and Von Freeman. She also studied at the Chicago Musical College and the University of Southern California.

Career

She was known for her work in Chicago nightclubs.[1] In 1942 she made her recording debut.

She appeared in Sensations of 1945 with Cab Calloway, Gene Rodgers, and W. C. Fields.[1] She was a protege of Art Tatum, who called her "the only woman who can make me practice". (She said that Tatum "was supposed to be blind...I know he could see women.") In 1943, Donegan became the first African American to perform at Chicago's Orchestra Hall.[5] She later said of this pathbreaking performance:

In the first half I played Rachmaninoff and Grieg and in the second I drug it through the swamp  - played jazz. Claudia Cassidy reviewed the concert on the first page of the Chicago Tribune. She said I had a terrific technique and I looked like a Toulouse-Lautrec lithograph.

In May 1983, Donegan, along with Billy Taylor, Milt Hinton, Art Blakey, Maxine Sullivan, Jaki Byard, and Eddie Locke, performed at a memorial service for Earl Hines, held at St. Peter's Evangelical Lutheran Church in New York City.[6]

Her first six albums proved to be obscure compared to her successes in performance. It was not until the 1980s that her work gained notice in the jazz world.[1] In particular, a recorded appearance at the 1987 Montreux Jazz Festival and her live albums from 1991 were met with acclaim. Even so, she remained best known for her live performances. She drew crowds with her eclectic mixture of styles and her flamboyant personality. Ben Ratliff argued in The New York Times that "her flamboyance helped her find work in a field that was largely hostile to women. To a certain extent, it was also her downfall; her concerts were often criticized for having an excess of personality."[7]

Donegan was outspoken about her view that sexism, along with her insistence on being paid the same rates as male musicians, had limited her career. In 1992, Donegan received an "American Jazz Master" fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts,[8] and in 1994, an honorary doctorate from Roosevelt University.[9]

Personal life and death

Donegan died of cancer in 1998, aged 76, in Los Angeles, California.

Discography

As leader

Year recordedTitleLabelNotes
1946?September SongJubilee
1954?Dorothy Donegan PianoMGM
1955?Dorothy DoneganJubilee
1957?Dorothy Donegan at the EmbersRoulette
1959Dorothy Donegan Live!CapitolAlbum liner notes claim this trio recording was made at "The Embers on Manhattan's elegant East Side."
1959?Donnybrook with DorothyCapitol
1961It Happened One NightRoulette
1963?Swingin' Jazz in Hi FiRegina
1975The Many Faces of Dorothy DoneganMahoganyTrio, with Arvell Shaw (bass), Panama Francis (drums); reissued by Storyville with trio tracks from 1961
1975Dorothy DoneganFour Leaf Clover (Sweden)Trio, with Red Mitchell (bass), Lars Beijbom (drums); some tracks add Jan Allan (trumpet) - recorded live at "The Best of Harlem" in Stockholm, Sweden; expanded CD re-issue released in 1994 adds 3 tracks
1978Live at the King of France TavernLiSemreleased 2015
1979?Makin' WhoopieBlack & Blue
1980?Sophisticated LadyOrnament
1980Live in Copenhagen 1980StoryvilleTrio, with Mads Vinding (bass), Ed Thigpen (drums); in concert
1980?Live!CNR
1981The Explosive Dorothy DoneganProgressiveTrio, with Jerome Hunter (bass), Ray Mosca (drums)
1986Live at the Widder BarTimeless
1990Live at the 1990 Floating Jazz FestivalChiaroscuroTrio, with Jon Burr (bass), Ray Mosca (drums); in concert
1991The Incredible Dorothy Donegan TrioChiaroscuroMost tracks trio, with Jon Burr (bass), Ray Mosca (drums); some tracks quartet, with Dizzy Gillespie (trumpet) added; in concert
1992Dorothy Donegan Trio with Clark TerryChiaroscuroMost tracks trio, with Jon Burr (bass), Ray Mosca (drums); some tracks quartet, with Clark Terry (trumpet) added; in concert
1995?I Just Want To SingAudiophile

Filmography

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Yanow. Scott. Dorothy Donegan. AllMusic. 1 September 2011.
  2. News: Smithsonian. Fascinating Women. Ted. Scheinman. 20. . January–February 2021.
  3. Book: Travis . Dempsey J.. An Autobiography of Black Jazz. 1983. Urban Research Institute. Chicago . 0-941484-03-3. 1st . registration .
  4. Encyclopedia: Balliett . Whitney. Whitney Balliett. Dorothy Donegan. American Musicians II: Seventy-One Portraits in Jazz . September 14, 2011. February 15, 2006 . University Press of Mississippi. 978-1-57806-834-0. 232–238.
  5. Web site: Waldron. Clarence. Dorothy Donegan: Bouncy as ever at age 61. September 14, 2011. December 1983. . 87–90. 0012-9011.
  6. Web site: Earl Hines Memorial Service. The New York Times. 9 November 2017. 5 May 1983.
  7. Dorothy Donegan, 76, Flamboyant Jazz Pianist . The New York Times . May 22, 1998 . Ratliff . Ben . September 14, 2011.
  8. Web site: Dorothy Donegan Pianist, Vocalist, Educator. NEA Jazz Masters. National Endownment for the Arts. April 5, 2021.
  9. News: Dorothy Donegan, Famed Jazz Pianist, Dies. September 14, 2011 . June 8, 1998 . . 38–39 . 0021-5996. Google Books.