This
is another two-part program. Unfortunately, Part 1 was lost, but we
have the original interview (without music).
Theodore
Shaw Wilson
(1912-1986)
grew
up in Tuskegee, Alabama, and
briefly studied music at Talladega College. After working in Chicago
with Jimmie Noone, Louis Armstrong, and others he moved in 1933 to New
York to join Benny Carter's band. He played informally with Benny
Goodman in 1935 and officially joined Goodman's trio the following
year, thereby becoming one of the first black musicians to appear
prominently with white artists. Wilson remained with Goodman until
1939, playing on many of the latter's small group recordings and also
on recordings under his own name with other important swing musicians,
above all Billie Holiday and Lester Young. After leaving Goodman he
briefly led his own big band (1939-40), and thereafter worked primarily
as a leader of small ensembles and as a soloist. Around 1950 he was an
instructor at the Juilliard School in New York, an early instance of
the recognition of jazz by an important conservatory. He frequently
rejoined Goodman for reunions, most notably for a tour of the USSR
(1962), an appearance at the Newport Festival (1973), and a concert at
Carnegie Hall (1982).
Wilson was the most important pianist of the swing period. His early
recordings reveal a percussive style, with single-note lines and bold
staccatos, that was indebted to Earl Hines; but by the time of his
first performances with Goodman he had fashioned a distinctive legato
idiom that served him for the rest of his career. Wilson's style was
based on the use of conjunct 10ths in the left hand; by emphasizing the
tenor voice and frequently omitting the root of the chord until the end
of the phrase he created great harmonic refinement and contrapuntal
interest. For the right hand he adapted Hines' "trumpet" style, playing
short melodic fragments in octaves, frequently separated by rests and
varied with fleet, broken-chord passage work. He used the full range of
the piano, often changing register or texture to underscore formal
divisions. His poised, restrained manner and transparent textures are
especially evident on his solo recordings from the late 1930s, which
served as models for countless pianists in the late swing period. From
1940 Wilson's playing became somewhat florid, with frequent pentatonic
passage work, but he retained his basic approach and prowess into the
1980s.
Wilson died on July 31, 1986 at age 73 in New Britain, Connecticut.
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