Fletcher Henderson
Wikimp3 information about the music of Fletcher Henderson. On our website we have 70 albums and 70 collections of artist Fletcher Henderson. You can find useful information and download songs of this artist. We also know that Fletcher Henderson represents Jazz genres.
Biography
[Edit]Fletcher Henderson was very important to early jazz as leader of the first great jazz big band, as an arranger and composer in the 1930s, and as a masterful talent scout. Between 1923-1939, quite an all-star cast of top young black jazz musicians passed through his orchestra, including trumpeters Louis Armstrong, Joe Smith, Tommy Ladnier, Rex Stewart, Bobby Stark, Cootie Williams, Red Allen, and Roy Eldridge; trombonists Charlie Green, Benny Morton, Jimmy Harrison, Sandy Williams, J.C. Higginbottham, and Dickie Wells; clarinetist Buster Bailey; tenors Coleman Hawkins (1924-1934), Ben Webster, Lester Young (whose brief stint was not recorded), and Chu Berry; altoists Benny Carter, Russell Procope, and Hilton Jefferson; bassists John Kirby and Israel Crosby; drummers Kaiser Marshall, Walter Johnson, and Sid Catlett; guest pianist Fats Waller; and such arrangers as Don Redman, Benny Carter, Edgar Sampson, and Fletcher's younger brother Horace Henderson. And yet, at the height of the swing era, Henderson's band was little-known.
Fletcher Henderson had a degree in chemistry and mathematics, but when he came to New York in 1920 with hopes of becoming a chemist, the only job he could find (due to the racism of the times) was as a song demonstrator with the Pace-Handy music company. Harry Pace soon founded the Black Swan label, and Henderson, a versatile but fairly basic pianist, became an important contributor behind the scenes, organizing bands and backing blues vocalists. Although he started recording as a leader in 1921, it was not until January 1924 that he put together his first permanent big band. Using Don Redman's innovative arrangements, he was soon at the top of his field. His early recordings (Henderson made many records during 1923-1924) tend to be both futuristic and awkward, with strong musicianship but staccato phrasing. However, after Louis Armstrong joined up in late 1924 and Don Redman started contributing more swinging arrangements, the Fletcher Henderson Orchestra had no close competitors artistically until the rise of Duke Ellington in 1927. By then, Henderson's band (after a period at the Club Alabam) was playing regularly at the Roseland Ballroom but, due to the bandleader being a very indifferent businessman, the all-star outfit recorded relatively little during its peak (1927-1930).
With the departure of Redman in 1927, and the end of interim periods when Benny Carter and Horace Henderson wrote the bulk of the arrangements, Fletcher himself developed into a top arranger by the early '30s. However, the Depression took its toll on the band, and the increased competition from other orchestras (along with some bad business decisions and the loss of Coleman Hawkins) resulted in Henderson breaking up the big band in early 1935. Starting in 1934, he began contributing versions of his better arrangements to Benny Goodman's new orchestra (including "King Porter Stomp," "Sometimes I'm Happy," and "Down South Camp Meeting"), and ironically Goodman's recordings were huge hits at a time when Fletcher Henderson's name was not known to the general public. In 1936, he put together a new orchestra and immediately had a hit in "Christopher Columbus," but after three years he had to disband again in 1939. Henderson worked as a staff arranger for Goodman and even played in B.G.'s Sextet for a few months (although his skills on the piano never did develop much). He struggled through the 1940s, leading occasional bands (including one in the mid-'40s that utilized some arrangements by the young Sun Ra). In 1950, Henderson had a fine sextet with Lucky Thompson, but a stroke ended his career and led to his death in 1952. Virtually all of Fletcher Henderson's recordings as a leader (and many are quite exciting) are currently available on the Classics label and in more piecemeal fashion domestically.
Title: The Complete Louis Armstrong With Fletcher Henderson (CD1)
Artist: Fletcher Henderson, Louis Armstrong
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Complete Louis Armstrong With Fletcher Henderson (CD2)
Artist: Fletcher Henderson, Louis Armstrong
Genre: Jazz
Title: Fletcher Henderson the Harmony & Vocalion Sessions Volume 1 1925-1926
Artist: Fletcher Henderson
Genre: Jazz
Title: I'll Be Glad When You're Dead You Rascal You / Blue Rhythm - Single
Artist: Fletcher Henderson
Genre: Classical
Title: Treasures Big Band Classics, Vol. 2: Fletcher Henderson
Artist: Fletcher Henderson
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Very Best Of Fletcher Henderson (Nostalgic Memories Volume 125)
Artist: Fletcher Henderson
Genre: Jazz
Collections
Title: Charleston All Night! The Very Best Of
Genre: Jazz
Title: Top 100 Classics - The Very Best of the 1920's, Vol. 3
Genre: Jazz
Title: Top 100 Classics - The Very Best of the 1920's, Vol. 1
Genre: Pop
Title: Speakeasy Music of the 1920's
Genre: Jazz
Title: Top 100 Classics - The Very Best of the 1920's, Vol. 2
Genre: Jazz
Title: Music From Robert De Niro Films
Genre: Theatre/Soundtrack
Title: Ken Burns Jazz: The Story of America's Music
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Hot 100 - Swing Jazz, Vol. 2
Genre: Jazz
Title: Classic Hollywood Jazz Era
Genre: Jazz
Title: Oldies Mega Hits of the Jazz Era
Genre: Jazz, Contemporary Jazz
Title: The Finest Vintage Melodies & Retro Tunes Vol. 49
Genre: Pop
Title: Music of the Roaring Twenties
Genre: Jazz
Title: Call of Duty - Songs of Civil & World Wars
Genre: Jazz
Title: That Devilin' Tune: A Jazz History (1895-1950)
Genre: Jazz
Title: Old Time Charleston
Genre: Pop
Title: Legends of the Big Band Era
Genre: Alternative
Title: Underneath the Harlem Moon - Nostalgic Jazz
Genre: Jazz
Title: Big Band Instrumentals - 16 Most Requested Songs
Genre: Jazz
Title: New York In The 20ties
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Greatest American Swing Jazz
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Music of the Thrilling Thirties
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Hot 100 - Swing Jazz, Vol. 3
Genre: Jazz
Title: Makin Whoopee
Genre:
Title: Jazz & Blues On Edison Vol. 2
Genre: Jazz
Title: Harlem Shuffles from the 20s
Genre: Jazz
Title: Themusicotheque: Blues
Genre: Blues
Title: Roaring 20s Revue, Vol. 6
Genre: Jazz
Title: Early Big Band Hits, Vol. 2
Genre: Jazz
Title: Swing & Jazz Essentials
Genre: Jazz
Title: Gangsters, Guns, & Molls! Jazz of the 1940's
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Golden Era of the Big Band Swing
Genre: Jazz
Title: New Orleans Jazz
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Best of Big Band Jazz, Vol. 3
Genre: Jazz
Title: 100 Vocal & Jazz Classics - Vol. 1 (1921-1927)
Genre: Jazz
Title: Storyville Masters of Jazz - Big Band Vol. 1
Genre: Jazz
Title: Swing Time! The Fabulous Big Band Era 1925-1955
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Hot 100 - Swing Jazz, Vol. 1
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Jazz Story - Memory Lane
Genre: Blues
Title: Kings of Swing - the Platinum Collection
Genre:
Title: The Hot 100 - Swing Jazz, Vol. 4
Genre: Jazz
Title: The American Big Band Collection Vol 1
Genre: Jazz
Title: 100 Jazz Classics Of The '20s & '30s
Genre: Jazz
Title: Mouthful O' Jam (Selected by DJ Swing Maniac)
Genre: Jazz
Title: Big Band Jazz Favorites
Genre: Jazz
Title: Big Bands Favourites
Genre: Jazz
Title: An Introduction to Swing
Genre: Jazz
Title: Ben Webster's Finest Hour
Genre: Jazz
Title: Modern Art of Music: The Golden 20ties in New York
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Finest Vintage Melodies & Retro Tunes Vol. 46
Genre: Pop
Title: The Best of Big Band Jazz, Vol. 4
Genre: Jazz
Title: The 50's Big Band Jazz Vol 4
Genre: Jazz
Title: Song Street , Vol. 6
Featuring albums
Title: A Study In Frustration - The Fletcher Henderson Story
Artist: Fletcher Henderson And His Orchestra
Genre: Jazz
Title: Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries (Music from the TV Series)
Artist: Various Artists
Genre: Theatre/Soundtrack