Sidney Bechet
(1897 - 1959)
Sidney Bechet was an early jazz legend.
Considered by most to be one of the finest of the early New Orleans jazz
musicians, he led an interesting life---on and off stage.
Life and times:-
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Sidney came from a musical family and started playing the clarinet at age
6
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He played with all the New Orleans greats in his teens
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He could not read music and never developed the skill
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In 1919 he went to Europe with the Will Marion Cook Orchestra but was deported
because of a brush with the law
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After returning to the US he joined a show featuring Bessie Smith where
he started playing soprano saxophone
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He worked with Duke Ellington for a short time
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He returned to Paris in 1928 but a shooting scrape landed him in jail for
11 months
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In 1932 he rejoined Ellington where he tutored Johnny Hodges
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After the war Bechet moved to Brooklyn and opened a music school
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He moved to France permanently in 1951 and married his third wife, a german
woman
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He kept a mistress by whom he had a son and continued to play and record
until his death in 1959
email:
daym@ncat.edu
Last update: May 30, 1998
All contents copyright (c) 1997.
Department of Music, NC A&T State University.
All rights reserved.
This page created/maintained by Dr. Michael Day
Music
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