|
SAM DeVINCENT COLLECTION OF ILLUSTRATED AMERICAN
SHEET MUSIC, ca. 1790 - 1987
#300
Series 3: AFRICAN-AMERICAN MUSIC, ca. 1828-1980
by: Karen Linn, 1989
Finding Aid to Jazz Sheet Music and Ephemera
Researchers of jazz music using the DeVincent Collection will find
the materials they seek in several different categories; there is no one
file for jazz. This finding aid is intended to help you, the jazz
researcher, to locate what you want and also to tell you something about
the kinds of materials that are in the collection.
Sam DeVincent did not group together his jazz music as he did his
ragtime music. He did group together songs about jazz--these are in the
African-American Music Series, subseries 3.7. Rather, Mr. DeVincent
organized most of the jazz music by the name of performer, composer, or
band. He then placed many jazz musicians with similar performers who
generally are not included in the jazz category. For example, the
Boswell Sisters, accepted as a jazz singing group, are placed with other
sister vocal haromony groups who are not jazz singers. We have chosen to
maintain the basic organization of Sam DeVincent and not to go through
the collection pulling out those musicians that we consider to fit the
term "jazz." However, a search by name of musician is easily
done in the series 3 register index and the index to the container list
for the entire collection.
A note about the organization of the collection. The DeVincent
collection is only partially processed. The Archives Center received the
collection in 795 cartons. The container list and index detail the
organization of topics in these boxes. They are open to researchers and
many people have successfully found what they wanted using the index to
the container list. Section by section, the Archives staff will be going
through the collection, organizing series, rehousing the material in
acid-free containers and writing descriptions and indexes for the
series. At the time of this writing, three series have been completed.
The third, African-American Music, has material of interest to the jazz
scholar. Other jazz items remain in the unprocessed part of the
collection, but in the future they too will be rehoused. When they are
moved, they will be indexed in a new series description.
The collection's jazz holdings consist mostly of sheet music and
ephemera. Almost all of the sheet music is simplified piano or
piano/vocal arrangements. There are no jazz orchestrations in the
DeVincent collection; however there is a handful of ragtime and society
orchestra arrangements. There is very little music for instruments other
than the piano. In addition to the sheet music, there are music folios,
including many piano folios with more complex jazz arrangements. These
can be found in series 3, African-American Music, by name of pianist
(for example, Theodore "Teddy" Wilson). In the unprocessed
part of the collection, search the index by name of the jazz pianist, or
try "piano." and "novelty piano." There is a large
holding of novelty piano solos and folios and some works that lay
between novelty and jazz may be found here.
For some, the ephemera files may be the most valuable portion of the
collection. Because Mr. DeVincent worked at a radio station, he
received, and kept, a great deal of promotional material and UPI news
service printouts. He also clipped articles from newspapers and
magazines. The ephemera from the fully processed section of the
collection is kept in separate boxes labled with the same series and
subseries number as the sheet music folders. The ephemera from the
unprocessed section of the collection remains in the cartons with the
music.
The DeVincent collection is strong on the big bands of the 1930s and
1940s. In addition to the jazz bands of musicians like Benny Goodman,
popular dance band leaders such as Guy Lombardo and Wayne King are
included to create a wide-angle view of the big band era. For early
jazz, again check indexes by name and also see subseries 3.7 in the
African-American Music Series. There is almost nothing in the collection
on post-World War II jazz idioms.
* *
Below is a list of jazz musicians whose work has been placed in
series 3, African-American Music. Check the index of the register to
Series 3 for the exact location of their materials. Those musicians with
separate ephemera folders are noted; ephemera on other musicians is in
the miscellaneous folder.
Armstrong, Lillian Hardin, ca. 3 items
Armstrong, Louis, 62 items, ephemera folder with 24 items
Austin, Lovie, 3 items
Basie, William ("Count"), 5 items
Calloway, Cabell ("Cab"), 27 items
Cole, Nat ("King"), 57 items
Ellington, Edward Kennedy ("Duke"), 72 items, ephemera
folder with 49 items
Ellington, Mercer, ca. 3 items
Europe, James Reese, 9 items
Fitzgerald, Ella, 8 items
Fuller, Earl, 1 item
Hampton, Lionel, 3 items
Handy, W. C., 77 items, ephemera folder with 8 items
Heywood, Edward ("Eddie"), 1 item
Hines, Earl, 5 items
Hunter, Alberta, ca. 3 items
Johnson, James Price, 27 items
Jordan, Louis, 6 items
Morton, Ferdinand ("Jelly Roll"), 13 items
Piron, Armand John, 2 items
Rainey, Gertrude Pridgett ("Ma"), 1 item
Rushing, Jimmy, 1 item
Smith, Bessie, ca. 3 items
Strayhorn, William ("Billy"), ca. 3 items
Sweatman, Wilber C., 9 items
Tatum, Arthur ("Art"), 1 item
Tyers, William H., 11 items
Waller, Thomas ("Fats"), 85 items
Waters, Ethel, ca. 6 items
Williams, Clarence, ca. 55 items
Wilson, Theodore ("Teddy"), 2 items
* *
Other jazz materials remain in the unprocessed part of the collection
and it should be noted that the index to the container list is not as
complete as the index to the registers. Additional material may be found
with some educated guessing. Below is a list of musicians whose material
is in the unprocessed part of the collection. The list includes those
musicians who appear in The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz. In addition to
these individuals, there are 13 boxes of miscellaneous dance and swing
bands of the 1920s to the 1940s and one box of miscellaneous female big
band singers and leaders. See the index to the container list for
specific locations of materials.
In the unprocessed part of the collection, the material is placed in
large cartons. Most of the cartons have 3 or 4 inner boxes and often
some loose material. To give you an idea of the amount of material for
each individual, the following list includes the number of inner boxes
(averaging 3 inches deep) and folders (from just a few to approximately
40 items in a folder) that their material occupies. These boxes and
folders contain sheet music, folios, and ephemera.
Bailey, Mildred, 1 box
Bellson, Louis, 1 folder
Boswell Sisters, 2 folders, some just of Connie Boswell
Brewer, Teresa, 1 box
Carmichael, Hoagy, 3 boxes, 4.2 in the Composers Series
Clooney, Rosemary, 1 box
Crosby, Bing, 16 boxes, 2 folders
Dorsey, Jimmy, 1 box
Dorsey, Tommy, 1 box
Ford, Mary, 2 boxes with Les Paul
Goodman, Benny, 1 box
Herman, Woody, 1 box, 1 folder
Hunt, Pee Wee, 1 box
Jones, Isham, 2 boxes
Kenton, Stan, 1 folder
Krupa, Gene, 1 folder
Lang, Eddie, 1 box
Lee, Peggy, 2 boxes
Lewis, Ted, 1 box
Miller, Glenn, 1 box
Nichols, Red, 1 folder
Paul, Les, 2 boxes with Mary Ford
Reser, Harry, 1 folder
Rich, Buddy, 1 folder
Sanders, Joe (Coon-Sanders Orchestra), 1 box, 1 folder
Sinatra, Frank, 4 boxes
Torme, Mel, 1 box
Venuti, Joe, 1 box
Whiteman, Paul, 1 box
TOP
GO TO TOPICAL INDEX
|