Elmo Posted 21 hours ago Report Posted 21 hours ago (edited) The most iconic group photograph in the history of jazz, entitled “A Great Day in Harlem" was taken on August 12, 1958 in front of a brownstone at 17 East 126th St. The photographer was Art Kane who was on assignment from Esquire Magazine. The image was to become the centerpiece of the January 1959 “Golden Age of Jazz " issue. The “cast” for the picture included 57 jazz musicians, 56 of whom were either legends, soon-to- be legends or men and women with at least rather thick jazz resumes. The 57th musician was one decidedly non-legendary mystery man, a talented, yet journeyman musician who, decades after the image was taken, was still unknown to most jazz experts viewing the photo... https://jazzprofiles.blogspot.com/2020/07/bill-crump-great-day-in-harlems-mystery.html?m=1 Edited 21 hours ago by Elmo Quote
medjuck Posted 21 hours ago Report Posted 21 hours ago Great story. I've always been impressed that the editors of Esquire understood that they were living in a Golden Age. Quote
Big Beat Steve Posted 3 hours ago Report Posted 3 hours ago (edited) Didn't the background story of Bill Crump get some mention here before? https://www.organissimo.org/forum/topic/82644-some-never-before-seen-photos-from-the-great-day-in-harlem”/#comment-1616133 A couple of years ago I found the below link on the internet that had the original publication of the research by Steve Siegel on Bill Crump: https://jazzbuffalo.org/2020/07/22/bill-crump-a-great-day-in-harlems-mystery-man/ All in all I feel Bill Crump totally deserves his place on that photograph as a represenative (along with Scoville Browne, in a way) of all those journeyman jazz musicians who staffed the countless bands that formed the basis of the entire jazz scene in clubs, stage shows, roadhouses and wherever ... and without whom it would have been far more difficult (and far less likely) to sustain a vibrant scene that allowed for interaction and interchanges among musicians as well as their audience in many ways and in that many places in all corners of the country and elsewhere. So it was quite fitting that he actually was a member of the Apollo house band (wonder how many budding stars he backed - if only briefly each time - at the Apollo talent shows)? And being a multi-instrumentalist is no mean feat either. There also is this person-by-person rundown of brief biographies of all those present here: https://harlem.org/index.html https://harlem.org/people/name.html Bill Crump is here (his entry reflects the findings of the above story of 2020): https://harlem.org/people/crump.html Edited 3 hours ago by Big Beat Steve Quote
Big Beat Steve Posted 2 hours ago Report Posted 2 hours ago Another detail: As also mentioned on Bill Crump's Wikipedia page, he was a member of the J. Frank Terry Chicago Nightingales territory band around 1934. A photo of this band (including 27-year old Crump) figures in the "Swing Out - Great Negro Dance Bands" book by Gene Fernett (first published in 1970): Quote
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