Listen Live
WOLB Featured Video
CLOSE

William “Count” Basie, pianist and musician died in Hollywood, FL,on April 26,1984.

 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

William Basie was born in Red Bank, New Jersey, on August 21, 1904. His parents, Harvey and Lillian (Childs) Basie, were both musicians. Basie played drums in his school band and took some piano lessons from his mother. But it was in Harlem, New York City, that he learned the basics of piano, mainly from his sometime organ teacher, the great Fats Waller (1904–1943).

Basie made his professional debut playing piano with vaudeville acts (traveling variety entertainment). While on one tour he became stranded in Kansas City, Missouri. After working briefly as house organist in a silent movie theater, he joined Walter Page’s Blue Devils in 1928. When that band broke up in 1929, he Bennie Moten’s band hired him. He played piano with them, with one interruption, for the next five years. It was during this time that he was given the nickname “Count.”

After Moten died in 1935, Basie took what was left of the band, expanded the personnel, and formed the first Count Basie Orchestra. Within a year the band developed its own variation of the Kansas City swing style—a solid rhythm backing the horn soloists, who were also supported by sectional riffing (the repeating of a musical figure by the non-soloing brass and reeds). This familiar pattern was evident in the band’s theme song, “One O’Clock Jump,” written by Basie himself in 1937.

TO LEARN MORE OF THIS PERSON VISIT YOUR LOCAL LIBRARY.