Frank P. Banta Explained

Frank P. Banta
Birth Date:29 March 1870
Birth Place:New York, NY
Death Place:New York, NY
Occupation:Pianist, Recording artist
Years Active:1890s-1900s

Frank P. Banta (March 29, 1870 - November 30, 1903) was an American pianist and recording artist active in the 1890s and 1900s.

Banta was born in New York City to John William Banta and Frances Green Banta (Darrow).[1] He learned to play piano while working as a piano tuner,[2] and by 1893 was the house pianist for the New York Phonograph Company (a subsidiary of the North American Phonograph Company).[3] By December of the same year, he was leading "Banta's Parlor Orchestra" for the North American Phonograph Company.[4] He recorded as a piano accompanist and as leader of "Banta's Orchestra" for Walcutt and Leeds by 1896, and may have done the same for Walcutt, Miller & Co., its predecessor, in the intervening years.[5] Banta's Orchestra recorded 15 cylinders for the Columbia Phonograph Company in 1896.[6] The Chicago Talking Machine Company also marketed recordings by Banta's Orchestra, though it's unclear whether they recorded them or duplicated records taken by another company.[7]

The bulk of Frank P. Banta's recording activity was as the house pianist of Edison's National Phonograph Company. His death notice in the company's trade paper Edison Phonograph Monthly, noted "His were the hands that played the piano accompaniments to more than half of the records in the Edison catalogue".[8] He also recorded for Edison one solo of his own composition, "Violets" (Edison Gold Moulded no. 8394).[9] He recorded three sides for Victor in September 1903, one piano solo (Hello! Ma Baby) and two accompaniments for cornetist Herbert L. Clarke.[10]

Banta was an early adopter and proponent of ragtime and his accompaniments are some of the earliest recorded examples of the style. He was also regarded as a reliable powerhouse, who could play the same pieces many times over before mass-duplication of records was reliably available. In addition to his recording work, Banta composed at least 14 pieces between 1895 and 1903, primarily ragtime piano solos or popular songs, and arranged the famous "Laughing Song" popularized by George W. Johnson.[11]

Frank P. Banta was the father of the somewhat more famous pianist Frank E. Banta, who recorded prolifically between 1916 and 1939, especially for Victor.[12] Frank P. Banta died in New York aged 33 after an extended period of poor health.[13]

Compositions

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Edwards . Bill . Frank P. Banta . Ragpiano.com.
  2. Walsh . Jim . Favorite Pioneer Recording Artists : Fred Van Eps . Hobbies . January 1956 . 32 .
  3. News: Singing to the Cylinders . New York Sun . June 25, 1893.
  4. Book: New Records Made by the North American Phonograph Company . December 1893 . North American Phonograph Co. . New York, NY . 2 .
  5. Book: Catalogue of New York Records for the Phonograph or Graphophone . 1896 . Walcutt and Leeds . New York, NY .
  6. Book: Lorenz . Kenneth . Two-Minute Brown Wax and XP Cylinder Records of the Columbia Phonograph Company . 1981 . Kastlemusick . Wilmington, Del. .
  7. Book: The Talking Machine Company [catalog] . c. 1897 . Chicago Talking Machine Company . Chicago, Ill..
  8. Frank P. Banta . Edison Phonograph Monthly . January 1904 . 1 . 11 . 4 .
  9. Web site: Violets (Frank P. Banta) . UCSB Cylinder Audio Archive . 1903 . UC Santa Barbara Library.
  10. Web site: Frank P. Banta (instrumentalist : piano) . Discography of American Historical Recordings . UC Santa Barbara Library.
  11. Web site: Edwards . Bill . Frank P. Banta . Ragpiano.com.
  12. Web site: Frank E. Banta (instrumentalist : piano) . Discography of American Historical Recordings . UC Santa Barbara Library.
  13. Frank P. Banta . Edison Phonograph Monthly . January 1904 . 1 . 11 . 4 .