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Josh Leeson from Newcastle Herald said "Holland's boogie woogie piano-playing on 'Lonesome Train' is a scintillating highlight and Barnes sounds inspired throughout by his accomplished bandmates. The Barnestormers are having a blast and if they can ever get the band together for a tour, it'll be one hell of a party-starter."
In his autobiography, Handy described how he incorporated elements of black folk music into his musical style. The basic three-chord harmonic structure of blues music and the use of flat third and seventh chords in songs played in the major key all originated in vernacular music created for and by impoverished southern blacks. [21]
English: From the Historic Sheet Music Collection at Connecticut College. Recommended Citation Macdonald, Ballard and Carroll, Harry, "Trail of The Lonesome Pine" (1913). Historic Sheet Music Collection. 1227.
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William Levi Dawson was born in Anniston, Alabama in 1899, [1] the first of seven children born to Eliza Starkey Dawson and George W. Dawson. [2] In 1912, he ran away from home to study music full-time as a pre-college student at the historically Black institution Tuskegee Institute (now University) under the tutelage of school president Booker T. Washington.
Thomas Wright "Fats" Waller (May 21, 1904 – December 15, 1943) was an American jazz pianist, organist, composer, and singer. [1] His innovations in the Harlem stride style laid much of the basis for modern jazz piano.