excerpt from 'Duke Ellington: Music is my Mistress' pp. 122 (108 words)

excerpt from 'Duke Ellington: Music is my Mistress' pp. 122 (108 words)

part of

Duke Ellington: Music is my Mistress

original language

urn:iso:std:iso:639:ed-3:eng

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122

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text excerpt

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Lawrence Brown was born in Lawrence, Kansas, and he acquired a wonderful background in all kinds of music--classical, radio, television, show music, gospel, spiritual, pop, and so-called jazz. He had been playing in Les Hite's band with Louis Armstrong at Sebastian's Cotton Club in Los Angeles before he joined us in 1932, and he had quite a reputation as a kind of "strolling violin," going from table to table playing very soft, beautiful melody.

As a soloist, his taste is impeccable, but his greatest role is that of an accompanist. The old-timers used to say, "Soloists are made, but accompanists are born." Lawrence Brown is the accompanist par excellence.

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excerpt from 'Duke Ellington: Music is my Mistress' pp. 122 (108 words)

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