More Rock and Roll, From My "Commonplace Book"

David Post | 11.12.2024 5:16 PM

This is #8 in a very occasional series plucked from my files of quotes and snippets and what-have-you. I've spent a lot of time over the last year or so immersed in the early history of rock-and-roll, both because I find it inexhaustibly fascinating [a shout-out to Andrew Hickey's stupendous "History of Rock Music in 500 Songs" podcast] and because I'm thinking of writing something "serious" about the way that several arcane provisions of US copyright law affected the structure and development of the music industry in the '40s and '50s. So this post, and probably others into the future, will be full of rockandroll-iana.

Stoller was the better technical musician of the two, a talented classically-trained pianist (a big Bartok fan, apparently) whose true passion was jazz and rhythm-and-blues. He was able to persuade the great jazz pianist James P. Johnson to give him lessons in stride/boogie-woogie piano, a style that Johnson himself had basically invented back in the 1910s and 20s, and which Johnson had taught to, among others, Fats Waller and Willie ("The Lion") Smith, and whose influence on a whole generation of great jazz pianists is impossible to overstate.

Stoller later said: "It was as if Beethoven were giving me lessons — except that, unlike James P. Johnson, Beethoven had never given lessons to Fats Waller."

2. Rock Around the........

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