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Frank Teschemacher

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182: 306:("Sugar" and "China Boy"). A second session took place one week later ("Nobody’s Sweetheart" and "Liza"). The sessions included members of the Austin High School Gang: Jimmy McPartland, Bud Freeman, and Jim Lanigan, as well as Chicagoans Eddie Condon, Gene Krupa and Joe Sullivan. Red McKenzie was the session leader. 294:
professionally in 1925. He began recording under his own name in 1928 and made what are believed to be his final recordings two years later, although there is now reason to believe (via sine wave recording research, aka Smith/Westbrook Method) that he appeared on unidentified recordings as late as
314:(“Jazz Me Blues” and “Singing the Blues”). The group recorded under the name Frank Teschmacher's Chicagoans. A test pressing of “Jazz Me Blues” was made which was released in 1939 on the United Hot Clubs of America (UHCA) label and later reissued by 309:
In the spring of 1928, he recorded with two other Red McKenzie and Eddie Condon groups, the Chicago Rhythm Kings and the Jungle Kings. On April 28, 1928, he made his first recordings under his own name for
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Teschemacher's solo work laid the groundwork for a rich sound and creative approach that is credited with influencing a young Benny Goodman and a style of which
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Teschemacher was killed in an automobile accident on the morning of March 1, 1932, a passenger in a car driven by his performing associate cornetist
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during the early- 1920s. They rose to prominence as pioneers of the Chicago Style in the 1920s, which was modeled on a faster version of
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Donovan, Mike. Frank Teschemacher (1906-1932). The Red Hot Jazz Archive: A History of Jazz Before 1930.
448:"Viola Fair History of Music & Recording: Birth of Early Jazz 2: Ragtime and Other Instrumentation" 575: 156:
Teschemacher was a member of the Austin High School Gang, a group of young, white musicians from the
447: 192: 110: 239: 390: 130: 34: 529: 500: 550: 545: 8: 400: 157: 282:, Teschemacher was mainly self-taught on his instruments; early on he also doubled on 428: 404: 363: 342: 311: 334: 114: 322: 279: 84: 340:
Teschemacher was featured in episode two, "The Gift", in the 2001 documentary
539: 315: 142: 303: 299: 146: 118: 106: 102: 330: 206: in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. 347: 326: 165: 366:. He was twelve days shy of what would have been his 26th birthday. 181: 291: 138: 80: 49: 150: 134: 45: 283: 287: 99: 70: 351: 329:. Late in his career, he returned to playing violin with 98:(March 13, 1906 – March 1, 1932) was an American 537: 298:His first recording was with Red McKenzie and 487:Discography of American Historical Recordings 354:on the topic of the Austin High School Gang. 389: 385: 383: 381: 379: 601:Austin Community Academy High School alumni 124: 427:. Addison Wesley Longman, 9th ed., 2005. 376: 266:Learn how and when to remove this message 596:McKenzie and Condon's Chicagoans members 133:, but spent most of his career based in 302:'s Chicagoans on December 9, 1927, for 538: 442: 440: 141:, although gigs sometimes took him to 586:20th-century American male musicians 333:'s sweet dance orchestra during the 204:adding citations to reliable sources 175: 490:. Ucsb.edu. Retrieved 12 March 2021 437: 13: 581:20th-century American saxophonists 14: 612: 523: 425:Jazz Styles: History and Analysis 325:. He also made recordings on the 278:Strongly influenced by cornetist 571:Road incident deaths in Illinois 501:"Frank Teschemacher (1906-1932)" 357: 180: 561:American jazz alto saxophonists 191:needs additional citations for 493: 478: 465: 417: 396:The Guinness Who's Who of Jazz 1: 369: 160:of Chicago, who all attended 591:American male jazz musicians 530:Frank Teschemacher 1906-1932 7: 10: 617: 566:American male saxophonists 556:American jazz clarinetists 290:. He started playing the 171: 76: 66: 56: 41: 28: 21: 125:Early life and education 532:at Red Hot Jazz Archive 62:Chicago, Illinois, U.S. 60:March 1, 1932 (aged 25) 109:, associated with the 16:American jazz musician 131:Kansas City, Missouri 35:Kansas City, Missouri 485:Frank Teschemacher. 473:The Syncopated Times 215:"Frank Teschemacher" 200:improve this article 505:Syncopatedtimes.com 401:Guinness Publishing 364:"Wild" Bill Davison 399:(First ed.). 162:Austin High School 111:"Austin High" gang 96:Frank Teschemacher 23:Frank Teschemacher 423:Gridley, Mark C. 312:Brunswick Records 276: 275: 268: 250: 90: 89: 608: 576:Swing violinists 517: 516: 514: 512: 497: 491: 482: 476: 469: 463: 462: 460: 458: 444: 435: 421: 415: 414: 387: 335:Great Depression 271: 264: 260: 257: 251: 249: 208: 184: 176: 166:New Orleans jazz 115:Jimmy McPartland 19: 18: 616: 615: 611: 610: 609: 607: 606: 605: 536: 535: 526: 521: 520: 510: 508: 507:. 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(1992). 374: 373: 371: 368: 359: 356: 274: 273: 188: 186: 179: 173: 170: 126: 123: 92:Musical artist 91: 88: 87: 85:alto saxophone 78: 74: 73: 68: 64: 63: 58: 54: 53: 43: 39: 38: 32:March 13, 1906 30: 26: 25: 22: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 613: 602: 599: 597: 594: 592: 589: 587: 584: 582: 579: 577: 574: 572: 569: 567: 564: 562: 559: 557: 554: 552: 549: 547: 544: 543: 541: 531: 528: 527: 506: 502: 496: 489: 488: 481: 474: 468: 453: 452:Violafair.com 449: 443: 441: 434: 433:9780131931152 430: 426: 420: 412: 410:0-85112-580-8 406: 402: 398: 397: 392: 386: 384: 382: 380: 375: 367: 365: 358:Personal life 355: 353: 349: 345: 344: 338: 336: 332: 328: 324: 319: 317: 316:Decca Records 313: 307: 305: 301: 296: 293: 289: 285: 281: 270: 267: 259: 248: 245: 241: 238: 234: 231: 227: 224: 220: 217: â€“  216: 212: 211:Find sources: 205: 201: 195: 194: 189:This section 187: 183: 178: 177: 169: 167: 163: 159: 154: 152: 148: 144: 143:New York City 140: 136: 132: 122: 121:and others). 120: 116: 112: 108: 104: 101: 97: 86: 82: 79: 75: 72: 69: 65: 59: 55: 51: 47: 44: 40: 36: 31: 27: 20: 509:. 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Retrieved 451: 424: 419: 394: 391:Colin Larkin 361: 341: 339: 320: 308: 300:Eddie Condon 297: 277: 262: 253: 243: 236: 229: 222: 210: 198:Please help 193:verification 190: 155: 147:U.S. Midwest 128: 113:(along with 95: 94: 551:1932 deaths 546:1906 births 256:August 2023 119:Bud Freeman 107:saxophonist 103:clarinetist 77:Instruments 540:Categories 370:References 331:Jan Garber 226:newspapers 511:August 2, 457:August 2, 348:Ken Burns 327:saxophone 158:West Side 105:and alto- 292:clarinet 139:Illinois 81:Clarinet 50:Illinois 240:scholar 151:Florida 135:Chicago 46:Chicago 431:  407:  295:1932. 284:violin 242:  235:  228:  221:  213:  172:Career 149:, and 145:, the 67:Genres 52:, U.S. 42:Origin 37:, U.S. 288:banjo 247:JSTOR 233:books 513:2021 459:2021 429:ISBN 405:ISBN 343:Jazz 304:Okeh 286:and 219:news 100:jazz 71:Jazz 57:Died 29:Born 352:PBS 350:on 346:by 337:. 202:by 542:: 503:. 450:. 439:^ 378:^ 318:. 168:. 153:. 137:, 117:, 83:, 48:, 515:. 475:. 461:. 413:. 269:) 263:( 258:) 254:( 244:· 237:· 230:· 223:· 196:.

Index

Kansas City, Missouri
Chicago
Illinois
Jazz
Clarinet
alto saxophone
jazz
clarinetist
saxophonist
"Austin High" gang
Jimmy McPartland
Bud Freeman
Kansas City, Missouri
Chicago
Illinois
New York City
U.S. Midwest
Florida
West Side
Austin High School
New Orleans jazz

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