The
Week of April 1st, 2007: IN BLACK
HISTORY
BILLY ECKSTINE
CELEBRATE
BLACK HISTORY EVERYDAY
Billy
Eckstine (8 July 1914 8 March 1993),
born William Clerance Eckstein in the East Liberty neighborhood
of Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania. Billy Eckstine's smooth baritone
and distinctive vibrato broke down barriers throughout the 1940s,
first as leader of the original bop big-band, then as the first
romantic black male in popular music.
An
influence looming large in the cultural development of soul and
R&B singers from Sam Cooke to Prince, Eckstine was able to
play it straight on his pop hits "Prisoner of Love,"
"My Foolish Heart" and "I apologize." Born
in Pittsburgh but raised in Washington, D.C., Eckstine began singing
at the age of seven and entered many amateur talent shows. He
had also planned on a football career, though after breaking his
collar bone he made music his focus. After working his way west
to Chicago during the late '30s, Eckstine was hired by Earl Hines
to join his Grand Terrace Orchestra in 1939. Though white bands
of the era featured males singing straightahead romantic ballads,
black bands were forced to stick to novelty or blues vocal numbers
until the advent of Eckstine and Herb Jeffries (from Duke
Ellington's Orchestra).
READ
ABOUT BILLY
ECKSTINE RIGHT
HERE
REST
IN PEACE: (R.I.P.)
Andrea
Lee Oliver Woodson aka "Andy" aka "Mother"
Lucy Curry , Dot Talley, Vera Downing,
Bertrand "Goocher" Frye, Irma Woodson,
Russell Woodson, Cayce "Beany" Woodson, Margorie Robinson-Adams,
Nora Moorehead-Dixon, Irene Moorehead-Battle, James Dixon, Anthony
"Torry" Dorsey, Ross "Booper" Thomas, Termain
"Butter" Woodson, Dorothy Jean Lee Ransom, Charles Andrew
Ransom, John Martin Moorehead, Jr., Donna Ann Davis, Patrice "Trice
Ball" Howze, Louise Ledbetter, Mary Ann Barlow, Edward Pratt
Copyright
2006 Brotha Ash Productions. All Rights Reserved
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