Dick Rogers

Dick Rogers (1912—1970) was a singer, comedian, songwriter and pianist, who wrote the lyrics for "Harlem Nocturne".[1][2][3] He was a member of the Ray Noble orchestra and the Will Osborne band.[4]

Dick Rogers
Born1912
Died1970
Genrestraditional pop, jazz, comedy
Occupation(s)musician, lyricist, bandleader
InstrumentsPiano

Rogers was associated with Will Osborne, a "star crooner" who was on the radio in the 1930s.[2] Osborne's band was on the decline in 1940.[2] Osborne created a "bus and truck vaudeville show", with comedy acts, which did not do well.[2] Dick was hired on as "Stinky" Rogers, doing a singing comedy act.[2] When Osborne moved to Hollywood in 1940, Rogers took over the band.[2] He did well, according to Billboard Magazine, who said he "acquitted himself credibly, as did his orchestra."[3] The magazine called him capable, saying he could sing, compose, play and lead.[3]

Composed music or lyrics

Footnotes

  1. "Harlem Nocturne". musicnotes.com. Retrieved September 27, 2016.
  2. Gavin, James (2015). Is That All There Is?: The Strange Life of Peggy Lee. Simon and Schuster. pp. 60–61.
  3. "Hippodrome Baltimore". Billboard. August 8, 1942. p. 16. Retrieved September 27, 2016.
  4. "'Andy Griffith' Composer Dies at 88". CNN. May 27, 2008. Archived from the original on June 18, 2008. Retrieved December 15, 2008.
  5. "Frankie Carle – Era: The 40s – Music Of The Great Bands". discogs. Retrieved September 27, 2016.
  6. Spaghetti Rag: Popular Standard; Single Songbook. New York: Shapiro, Bernstein & Co. 1950.
  7. "Teresa Brewer – Time For Teresa". discogs. Retrieved September 27, 2016. From record side 1: Magazines (Are Magic For Lonely People), (Dick Rogers-Jimmy Eaton-Larry Wagner)
  8. "The Mills Brothers – 14 Karat Gold". discogs. Retrieved September 27, 2016.
  9. "Will Osborne And His Slide Music – Would'st Could I But Kiss Thy Hand, Oh Babe". discogs. Retrieved September 27, 2016.
gollark: The words are composed genderlessly within facilities but unfortunately gain gender through poorly understood gender field interactions after exit.
gollark: At GTech™ there are in fact memetic fields removing the concept of gender from all GTech™ facilities, which cannot* go wrong.
gollark: Unfortunately, being linked to reproduction and whatever, it seems to be wired into lots of random brain features.
gollark: Anyway, ideally, for some purposes, we wouldn't associate gender with tons of weird things as is currently done.
gollark: It may also be worth investigating high energy gender physics as apparently this is vaguely quantumly similar to small distance scale gender physics.
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