Willie Gant

Willie "The Tiger" Gant (1900 – February 1979) was an American jazz bandleader and pianist.[1]

Willie Gant
Birth nameWilliam D. Gant
Born1900
OriginNew York City
Died1979
GenresDixieland, jazz, swing, stride, ragtime
Occupation(s)Musician
InstrumentsPiano

History

Gant began on piano at age 12, and at 13 he began studying under James P. Johnson.[2] He played in local New York clubs and cafes from age 17. Gant recorded some sides in the 1920s, and after the dissolution of his Ramblers devoted himself almost exclusively to solo piano work. He played in New York at places like the Hotel Fairfax and Carutti's from the 1930s into the 1960s.

Musical groups

Although he appears in a photograph with Lillyn Brown & Her Jazzbo Syncopators in 1921, he wasn't a band member and filled in for an absent piano player for the photo.[2] He formed his own band, the Ramblers, that same year. Over the course of the next six years, Gant's band rivaled Fats Waller in popularity; it also served as early experience for many noted sideman, including Freddie Green, Ward Pinkett, Billy Taylor, Happy Caldwell, and Manzie Johnson.

Discography

Per the Jazz and Ragtime Records Index[3]

With Eliza Christmas Lee

  • I Ain't Givin' Nothin' Away (1921)
  • Arkansas Blues (1921)

With Josie Miles

  • If You Want to Keep Your Daddy Home (1922)
  • You're Fooling with the Wrong Gal Now (1922)
  • When I Dream of Old Tennessee Blues (1922)
  • I Don't Want You (If You Don't Want Me) (1922)
  • Low Down 'Bama Blues (1923)

With Lavinia Turner

  • How Many Times (1921)
  • Can't Get Lovin' Blues (1921)
  • A-Wearin' Away the Blues (1921)
  • Sweet Man of Mine (1921)
gollark: You could call it "Easy Butter" or something.
gollark: ... orange coffee?
gollark: If you can't sleep, just stay up until you collapse from exhaustion.
gollark: I mean, I can't really provide a more useful answer than "it is a genre which encompasses a lot of music I like listening to".
gollark: I figure that, having had some time to think, I'll answer the bot pretty late, then: Erra, Motionless in White, Brothers of Metal, Fit For A King, Rising Insane, Thornhill.

References

  1. Cadence. 8 (6): 47. June 1982. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. Lipskin, Mike; Kunstadt, Len (October 1960). "This Is William D. Gant". archive.org. p. 3. Retrieved 26 May 2020.
  3. Rust, Brian (2002). Jazz and Ragtime Records (1897-1942): L-Z, index. Mainspring Press. pp. 1021, 1144, 1708. ISBN 9780967181929.
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