Eubie Blake

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Charleston Rag 00:00 Tools
Fare Thee Honey Blues 00:00 Tools
Sounds Of Africa 00:00 Tools
Mirandy 00:00 Tools
Memories Of You 00:00 Tools
Boll Weevil Blues 00:00 Tools
I'm Just Wild About Harry 00:00 Tools
Fizz Water 00:00 Tools
It's Right Here For You 00:00 Tools
The Down Home Blues 00:00 Tools
Chevy Chase 00:00 Tools
Arkansas Blues 00:00 Tools
The Good Fellow Blues 00:00 Tools
Dangerous Blues 00:00 Tools
Don't Tell Your Monkey Man 00:00 Tools
Memphis Blues 00:00 Tools
Crazy Blues 00:00 Tools
Eubie's Classical Rag 00:00 Tools
Dream Rag 00:00 Tools
Stars And Stripes Forever 00:00 Tools
If You Don't Want Me Blues 00:00 Tools
Bandana Days 00:00 Tools
Tricky Fingers 00:00 Tools
Raggin The Rag 00:00 Tools
Shuffle Along Medley 00:00 Tools
Wang Wang Blues 00:00 Tools
Spanish Venus 00:00 Tools
Dicties On 7th Avenue 00:00 Tools
Alexander's Ragtime Band 00:00 Tools
The Lily Rag 00:00 Tools
The Teasin' Rag 00:00 Tools
You're Lucky to Me 00:00 Tools
Classical Rag 00:00 Tools
Home Again Blues 00:00 Tools
Maple Leaf Rag 00:00 Tools
Roberta: Memories Of You: Memories of You 00:00 Tools
Poor Jimmy Green 00:00 Tools
Scarf Dance 00:00 Tools
Funeral March And Rag 00:00 Tools
I’m Just Wild About Harry 00:00 Tools
The Baltimore Todolo 00:00 Tools
Broadway Blues 00:00 Tools
Goodnight Angeline 00:00 Tools
Somebody's Done Me Wrong 00:00 Tools
Dictys On Seventh Avenue 00:00 Tools
Gee I Wish I Had Someone To Rock Me (In The Cradle) 00:00 Tools
Dictys On 7th Avenue 00:00 Tools
Charlestone Rag 00:00 Tools
Brittwood Rag 00:00 Tools
Strut Miss Lizzie 00:00 Tools
Shubert Gaieties Of 1919 (medley): I've Made Up My Mind To Mind A Maid Made Up Like You / Cherry Blossom Lane / Beale Street Blues / I'll Be Your Baby Vampire / My Beautiful Tiger Girl 00:00 Tools
Your Lucky To Me 00:00 Tools
Poor Katie Redd 00:00 Tools
Ma 00:00 Tools
Raggin The Rag (live) 00:00 Tools
Down Home Blues 00:00 Tools
Shuffle Along: Bandana Days / I'm Just Wild About Harry 00:00 Tools
The Memphis Blues 00:00 Tools
Good Fellow Blues 00:00 Tools
Hungarian Rag 00:00 Tools
Poor Jimmy Green (live) 00:00 Tools
You're Gonna Be My Baby 00:00 Tools
Troublesome Ivories 00:00 Tools
Shuffle Along: I'm just wild about Harry 00:00 Tools
Roumania 00:00 Tools
Its Right Here For You 00:00 Tools
Lovey Joe 00:00 Tools
Sounds Of Africa (Charleston Rag) 00:00 Tools
Mobile Rag 00:00 Tools
Eubie Dubie 00:00 Tools
A Medley Of Gertrude Lawrence Song Successes 00:00 Tools
Sound of Africa 00:00 Tools
Two Hearts In Tune 00:00 Tools
bo weavil blues 00:00 Tools
Troublesome Ivy 00:00 Tools
Memories Of You (live) 00:00 Tools
Shuffle Along: Election Day (demonstration recording) 00:00 Tools
Blue Thoughts 00:00 Tools
Melodic Rag 00:00 Tools
Eugie's Boogie Rag 00:00 Tools
Sunflower Slow Rag 00:00 Tools
Shuffle Along: Love Will Find a Way 00:00 Tools
Shuffle Along: Gypsy Blues (demonstration recording) 00:00 Tools
Shuffle Along: I'm Just Simply Full of Jazz 00:00 Tools
Shuffle Along: Baltimore Buzz 00:00 Tools
Shuffle Along: If You've Never Been Vamped by a Brownskin (demonstration recording) 00:00 Tools
Mr. Freddie Blues 00:00 Tools
Negro Spirituals (medley): Go Down Moses / I'm Rolling / Nobody Knows The Trouble I've Seen / I Got Shoes 00:00 Tools
Junilee Tonight 00:00 Tools
Shuffle Along: Baltimore Buzz / In Honeysuckle Time 00:00 Tools
Fare Three Honey Blues 00:00 Tools
Charleston Rag (Version 2) 00:00 Tools
Shuffle Along: Mirandy - In Honeysuckle Time (demonstration recording) 00:00 Tools
Shuffle Along: I'm Craving for that Kind of Love (demonstration recording) 00:00 Tools
You Do Something to Me 00:00 Tools
The Snowman 00:00 Tools
Shubert Gaieties of 1919 (Medley) : I've Made up My Mind to Mind a Maid Made up Like You / Cherry Blossom Lane / Beale Street Blues / I'll Be Your Baby Vampire / My Beautiful Tiger Girl 00:00 Tools
When The Pale Moon Shines 00:00 Tools
Jazzin Around 00:00 Tools
Meet Me in St. Louis 00:00 Tools
The Chevy Chase 00:00 Tools
Judge Fogarty 00:00 Tools
Shuffle Along: Bandana Days (demonstration recording) 00:00 Tools
Shuffle Along: Oriental Blues 00:00 Tools
Negro Spirituals (Medley) : Go Down Moses / I'm Rolling / Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen / I Got Shoes 00:00 Tools
Corner Chestnut and Low 00:00 Tools
Sounds Of Africa - Eubie Blake 00:00 Tools
I Can't Get You Out of My Mind 00:00 Tools
Shuffle Along: Low Down Blues 00:00 Tools
Shuffle Along (demonstration recording) 00:00 Tools
Sounds Of Africa - Eng En Juil 1921 New York 00:00 Tools
When Day Is Done 00:00 Tools
Valse Marion 00:00 Tools
Shuffle Along: Daddy Won't You Please Come Home 00:00 Tools
Charleston Rag (Version 1) 00:00 Tools
Baltimore Buzz 00:00 Tools
Fizz Water (arr. for band) 00:00 Tools
Regal Stomp (aka Bow To Your Papa) 00:00 Tools
Capricious Harlem 00:00 Tools
Kitchen Tom 00:00 Tools
Waiting for the Robert E. Lee 00:00 Tools
He May Be Your Man 00:00 Tools
Eubie's Boogie 00:00 Tools
The Stars And Stripes Forever 00:00 Tools
The Charleston Rag 00:00 Tools
Shubert Gaieties Of 1919 (medley): I've Made Up My Mind To Mind A Maid Made Up Like You / Cherry Bl 00:00 Tools
Shuffle Along: Pickaninny Shoes 00:00 Tools
Shuffle Along: Ain't You Comin' Back to Maryland, Mary Ann? (demonstration recording) 00:00 Tools
Go Down Moses 00:00 Tools
Rain Drops 00:00 Tools
Joshua Fit the Battle of Jerico 00:00 Tools
Bandana Days 1921 00:00 Tools
Introduction 00:00 Tools
Song Introduction 00:00 Tools
Semper Fidelis 00:00 Tools
Butterfly 00:00 Tools
Dixie Moon 00:00 Tools
Old Fashioned Love 00:00 Tools
Pork and Beans 00:00 Tools
As Long As You Live 00:00 Tools
The Chevy Chase (arr. for band) 00:00 Tools
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James Hubert Blake (February 7, 1887 – February 12, 1983), better known as Eubie Blake, was an American composer, lyricist, and pianist of ragtime, jazz, and popular music. In 1921, Blake and long-time collaborator Noble Sissle wrote the Broadway musical Shuffle Along, one of the first Broadway musicals to be written and directed by African Americans. Blake's compositions included such hits as, "Bandana Days", "Charleston Rag", "Love Will Find A Way", "Memories of You" and "I'm Just Wild About Harry". The musical Eubie!, which opened on Broadway in 1978, featured his works. Blake was born at 319 Forrest Street in Baltimore, Maryland, to former slaves John Sumner Blake (1838–1917) and Emily "Emma" Johnstone (1861–1927). He was the only surviving child of eight, all the rest of whom died in infancy. In 1894, the family moved to 414 North Eden Street, and later to 1510 Jefferson Street. John Blake worked earning US$9.00 weekly as a stevedore on the Baltimore docks. In later years, Blake claimed to have been born in 1883, but his Social Security application and all other official documents issued in the first half of his life list his year of birth as 1887. Many otherwise reliable sources mistakenly give his year of birth as the earlier year, reprinting the false information that had been printed before these official documents and census records came to light. Blake's musical training began when he was just four or five years old. While out shopping with his mother, he wandered into a music store, climbed on the bench of an organ, and started "foolin’ around". When his mother found him, the store manager said to her: "The child is a genius! It would be criminal to deprive him of the chance to make use of such a sublime, God-given talent." The Blakes purchased a pump organ for US$75.00, making payments of 25 cents a week. When Blake was seven, he received music lessons from their neighbor, Margaret Marshall, an organist from the Methodist church. At age fifteen, without knowledge of his parents, he played piano at Aggie Shelton’s Baltimore bordello. Blake got his first big break in the music business when world champion boxer Joe Gans hired him to play the piano at Gans' Goldfield Hotel, the first "black and tan club" in Baltimore in 1907. According to Blake, he also worked the medicine show circuit and was employed by a Quaker doctor. He played a Melodeon strapped to the back of the medicine wagon. Blake stayed with the show only two weeks, however, because the doctor's religion didn't allow the serving of Sunday dinner. Blake said he first composed the melody to the "Charleston Rag" in 1899, when he would have been only 12 years old. It was not committed to paper, however, until 1915, when he learned to write musical notation. In 1912, Blake began playing in vaudeville with James Reese Europe's "Society Orchestra" which accompanied Vernon and Irene Castle's ballroom dance act. The band played ragtime music which was still quite popular at the time. Shortly after World War I, Blake joined forces with performer Noble Sissle to form a vaudeville music duo, the "Dixie Duo." After vaudeville, the pair began work on a musical revue, Shuffle Along, which incorporated many songs they had written, and had a book written by F. E. Miller and Aubrey Lyles. When it premiered in June 1921, Shuffle Along became the first hit musical on Broadway written by and about African-Americans. The musicals also introduced hit songs such as "I'm Just Wild About Harry" and "Love Will Find a Way." In 1923, Blake made three films for Lee DeForest in DeForest's Phonofilm sound-on-film process. They were Noble Sissle and Eubie Blake featuring their song "Affectionate Dan", Sissle and Blake Sing Snappy Songs featuring "Sons of Old Black Joe" and "My Swanee Home", and Eubie Blake Plays His Fantasy on Swanee River featuring Blake performing his "Fantasy on Swanee River". These films are preserved in the Maurice Zouary film collection in the Library of Congress collection. He also appeared in the short film Pie, Pie Blackbird (1932), with the Nicholas Brothers, Nina Mae McKinney, and Noble Sissle, and released by Warner Brothers. In July 1910, Blake married Avis Elizabeth Cecelia Lee (1881–1938), proposing to her in a chauffeur-driven car he hired. Blake and Lee met around 1895 while both attended Primary School No. 2 at 200 East Street in Baltimore. In 1910, Blake brought his newlywed to Atlantic City, New Jersey, where he had already found employment at the Boathouse nightclub. In 1938, Avis was diagnosed with tuberculosis and died later that year at 58. Of his loss, Blake is on record saying, "In my life I never knew what it was to be alone. At first when Avis got sick, I thought she just had a cold, but when time passed and she didn’t get better, I made her go to a doctor and we found out she had TB … I suppose I knew from when we found out she had the TB, I understood that it was just a matter of time." While serving as bandleader with the United Service Organizations (USO) during World War II, Blake met and married Marion Grant Tyler, widow of violinist Willy Tyler, in 1945. Tyler, also a performer and a businesswoman, became his valued business manager until her death in 1982. In 1946, as Blake's career was winding down, he enrolled in New York University, graduating in two and a half years. Later his career revived again, culminating in the hit Broadway musical, Eubie!. In the 1950s, interest in ragtime revived and Blake, one of its last surviving artists, found himself launching yet another career as ragtime artist, music historian, and educator. Blake signed recording deals with 20th Century Records and Columbia Records, lectured and gave interviews at major colleges and universities all over the world, and appeared as guest performer and clinician at top jazz and rag festivals. He was a frequent guest of The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson and Merv Griffin. Blake was featured by leading conductors such as Leonard Bernstein and Arthur Fiedler. By 1975, he had been awarded honorary doctorates from Rutgers, the New England Conservatory, the University of Maryland, Morgan State University, Pratt Institute, Brooklyn College, and Dartmouth. On October 9, 1981, he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, awarded by President Ronald Reagan. On March 10, 1979, Blake performed with Gregory Hines on Saturday Night Live. Blake claimed that he started smoking cigarettes when he was 10 years old, and continued to smoke all his life. The fact that he smoked for 85 years was used by some politicians in tobacco-growing states to build support against anti-tobacco legislation. Eubie Blake continued to play and record into late life, until his death February 12, 1983, in Brooklyn, just five days after celebrating his (claimed) 100th birthday (actually his 96th—see below). He was interred in the Cypress Hills Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York. His head stone, engraved with the musical notation for "I'm Just Wild About Harry", was commissioned by the African Atlantic Genealogical Society (AAGS). The bronze sculpture of Blake's bespectacled face was created by David Byer-Tyre, curator/director of the African American Museum and Center for Education and Applied Arts, in Hempstead, New York. The original inscription indicated his correct year of birth, but individuals close to him insisted that Blake be indulged; and paid to have the inscription changed. “ If I'd known I was going to live this long, I would have taken better care of myself. ” — Eubie Blake While Blake was reported as having said this on his birthday in 1979, it has been attributed to others, and appears in print at least as early as 1966 (where it is attributed to an anonymous 90-year-old golf caddie). In later years, Blake listed his birth year as 1883; his 100th birthday was celebrated in 1983. Most sources, including the Encyclopædia Britannica, and a U.S. Library of Congress biography, incorrectly list his birth year as 1883 based on his word. Every official document issued by the government, however, records his birthday as February 7, 1887. This includes the 1900 Census, his 1917 World War I draft registration, 1920 passport application, 1936 Social Security application, and death records as reported by the United States Social Security Administration. Peter Hanley writes: "In the final analysis, however, the fact that he was only ninety-six years of age and not one hundred when he died does not in any way detract from his extraordinary achievements. Eubie will always remain among the finest popular composers and songwriters of his era." Timeline 1887 Birth 1900 US Census – Hubert Blake, Baltimore 1907 Boxer Joe Gans hires Blake, Goldfield Hotel, Baltimore 1910 US Census – Hubert Blake, Baltimore 1910 Marriage to Avis Elizabeth Cecelia Lee 1915 Meets Noble Sissle May 16 1917 World War I draft registration card 1920 US passport application 1920 US passport 1920 US Census – James Blake, New York City 1921 Shuffle Along debut 1925 US passport 1930 US Census - Hubert Blake, New York City 1938 Avis dies of tuberculosis 1973 The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson on January 27 1978 Eubie! Broadway debut 1979 Saturday Night Live: musical guest for the episode hosted by Gary Busey on March 10 1981 Awarded Medal of Freedom 1983 100th birthday celebration 1983 Death Honors and awards 1969: Eubie Blake's nomination for a Grammy Award for The 86 Years of Eubie Blake in the category of "Best Instrumental Jazz Performance, Small Group or Soloist with Small Group".[10] 1972: Omega Psi Phi Scroll of Honor 1974: Diploma, Rutgers University Doctor of Fine Arts 1974: Diploma, Dartmouth College, Doctor of Humane Letters 1978: Diploma, University of Maryland Doctor of Fine Arts 1979: Diploma, Morgan State University Doctor of Music 1980: Received the Johns Hopkins University's, George Peabody Medal 1981: Received the Presidential Medal of Freedom on October 9, 1981, awarded by President Ronald Reagan. 1982: Diploma, Howard University Doctor of Music 1983: Inducted in the Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame 1995: The United States Postal Service issued a stamp in his honor. 1995: Inducted into the New York's American Theatre Hall of Fame. 1998: James Hubert Blake High School was built in Cloverly, Maryland in his honor. Eubie Blake HS has a strong focus on the performing arts. 2006: The album The Eighty-Six Years of Eubie Blake (1969) was included by the National Recording Preservation Board in the Library of Congress' National Recording Registry. The board selects songs in an annual basis that are "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant." Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.