People, Locations, Episodes

Wed, 07.12.1899

Roy Butler, Jazz Saxophonist born

Roy Butler

Roy Butler, a Black jazz musician, was born on this date in 1899.

Roy Grant Butler was born in Richmond, IN, the son of George Butler and Amanda Wylie. During his early years in Columbus, Ohio, he learned how to play the tenor saxophone and began playing music in carnivals, minstrel shows, and small bands. He joined Sammy Stewart's Orchestra and went to Chicago in 1922, playing local clubs. He made his first recordings with this band and began clarinet and oboe lessons. Among his influences were Barney Bigard and Fletcher Henderson.

In 1925, he joined Jimmy Wade's band, founded by jazz violinist Eddie South. Butler was with the band when it went to play the Club Alabam in New York. In 1928, Butler was invited to join Levi Wine's revue, which was touring Europe.  He performed in Berlin, Zurich, and Copenhagen before joining another revue in 1932.  This revue was led by trombonist Herb Flemming, who reorganized the group, which included Butler and called them the International Rhythm Aces.  In 1933, while touring South America with the Aces, Butler made a few recordings on the Brunswick label. Eventually, Butler left in mid-1942 to lead a band in Bombay.

He was invited to play with the Bombay Symphony Orchestra during the war. Butler returned to the United States in 1944 and got a day job. While he worked for 20 years at the U. S. Post Office, he remained active in bands and orchestras.  He further studied the oboe at the American Conservatory of Music in Chicago. He played with the Chicago City Symphony, the Hyde Park Woodwind Quintet, and in the pit of the Schubert Theater for the revival of “No, No, Nanette.”  In 1956, he married Elizabeth P. Mitcham.

The following words were written about Butler in Storyville 71, "Roy epitomizes the steady, absolutely reliable sideman, without whom no orchestra would ever be able to function.”  Roy Butler died on March 28, 1997, in Chicago, Illinois, at 97.

To Become a Musician or Singer

Reference:

National Jazz Archive.org

All Music Guide.com

A Century of Jazz by Roy Carr
Da Capo Press, New York
Copyright 1997
ISBN 0-306-80778-5

New Poem Each Day

Poetry Corner

these hips are big hips they need space to move around in. they don't fit into little petty places. these hips are free hips. they don't like to be... HOMAGE TO MY HIPS by Lucille Clifton
Read More