PAT FLOWERS

  

                   

                  
Ivelee Patrick Flores , conocido artísticamente como PAT FLOWERS, aprendió piano clásico, pero pronto mostró interés por la música de jazz, más específicamente en el estilo stride piano de Fats Waller. Nunca perdió la oportunidad de escuchar a su ídolo, y rápidamente construyó una técnica pianística fuerte afianzándose con una  muy buena reputación entre los  pianistas de stride Tras la muerte de Fats Waller, se decidió a formar su propia orquesta como  líder con el nombre de "Pat Flores & his Rhythm " consiguiendo dejar una impronta importante dentro del estilo que tanto le gustó 

                                     


                              
                      

                                    


Ivelee Patrick "Pat" Flowers (October 16, 1917, Detroit – October 6, 2000, Detroit) was an American jazz pianist and singer.
Flowers started his professional career as the pianist during intermissions at Uncle Tom's Cabin in Detroit when he was 18 years old. He moved to New York City in 1939, where he played private engagements and hotel lobbies; he worked in Philadelphia and then New York again, and recorded for the first time in 1941. After returning to Detroit, Flowers took up a residency at Baker's Keyboard Lounge, where he played intermittently into the middle of the 1950s.

From 1943 to 1948 Flowers was based out of New York again, where he initially collaborated frequently with Fats Waller at the Greenwich Village Inn. After Waller's death, Waller's manager Ed Kirkeby drafted Flowers as a possible successor for Waller, booking him for extended residencies at the Ruban Bleu and Cafe Society as well as radio appearances and recordings. In 1945 he made three films, Scotch Boogie, Dixie Rhythm, and Coalmine Boogie.

Following his return to Detroit, Flowers became a mainstay of the local jazz scene. He had a residency at Farmington, Michigan's Danish Inn from 1974 to 1983. He toured Europe with a Fats Waller tribute show in 1975. At the end of his life he worked at the Grosse Pointe Country Club in Detroit.

Flowers's early recordings were collected as I Ain't Got Nobody, released on Black & Blue Records in 1972.

AlCaseyHermanAutreyArthurTrappierGe.jpg



The photo I posted seems to have disappeared from the thread, so here it is again. It shows Al Casey, Herman Autrey, Arthur Trappier, Gene Sedric, Cedric Wallace, and Pat Flowers saluting Fats Waller at WNEW's "Second Annual American Swing Festival," 1945:




Comentarios

ENTRADES MES VISTES DARRERS 30 DIES