[For this
year’s installment of my annual VirginiaStudying
series, I wanted to highlight a handful of the many famous Americans who
have been born in the state. Add your Virginia highlights—people, places, or
otherwise—for a crowd-sourced weekend post for (Virginia) lovers!]
Three songs that
help trace the hugely influential 20th century career and life of Newport News, Virginia’s
First Lady of Song.
1)
“A-Tisket, A-Tasket”
(1938): Fitzgerald moved with her mother and stepfather to Yonkers, New York in
the early 1920s, when she was just a young girl; but it was just over a decade
later, when she moved in with an aunt in Harlem (perhaps to escape her
stepfather’s abuses after her mother’s death, although this story remains
uncertain), that her musical career really began. She became connected to the
drummer and bandleader Chick
Webb in early 1935, and would go on to record over 150 songs and several big
hits with him and his orchestra over the next half-dozen years. Probably their
biggest hit together was “A-Tisket, A-Tasket,” a jazzy reimagining of the old
children’s rhyme that featured Fitzgerald’s stunning vocals in a major way.
When Webb passed away in 1939, the group was renamed Ella and Her Famous
Orchestra, and Fitzgerald was truly on her way to superstardom.
2)
“Flying Home” (1945): Fitzgerald
left the orchestra to go solo in 1942, and worked with a number of prominent
artists and musicians over the next decade. Her work with trumpeter Dizzy
Gillespie and his band led her to experiment with scat singing, a form that
others such as Louis Armstrong had tried but with which Fitzgerald would
eventually become almost synonymous. That style was never more apparent or
groundbreaking than on “Flying Home,” Fitzgerald’s performance of a Vic Schoen arrangement that
the New York Times later called “one
of the most influential jazz records of the decade.” Fitzgerald was far, far
more than just scat singing, of course; but her
work with that form truly changed not only jazz but also American music and
culture more broadly, and “Flying Home” is thus one of the 20th
century’s single most significant recordings.
3)
“All That Jazz” (1989): Fitzgerald
would spend the next half century recording albums of both the great American
songbook and the decades’ popular hits, touring the world, appearing in
television and film projects, and otherwise living up to the First Lady of Song
title. Any number of songs and moments could help trace her presence in and
influence on the second half of the 20th century. But I’ll conclude
here with the title track from her
last studio album (also called All
That Jazz), in which Fitzgerald returned to the 30s and 40s swing and jazz
hits that had helped launch her career back in that Harlem Renaissance era. While
great artists like Fitzgerald always evolve and change, there’s also a way in
which they remain guardians and keepers of a certain tradition, and Fitzgerald
was that for the jazz tradition from the 1930s right through her
1996 passing. Listening to these songs and her many, many others reminds us
of that legacy and hers, and helps us keep them alive into the 21st
century as well.
Next Virginian
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other Virginians or Virginia connections you’d highlight?
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