W. C. Handy

William Christopher Handy (November 16, 1873 – March 28, 1958) was a composer and musician[1] who referred to himself as the Father of the Blues.[2][3] Handy was one of the most influential songwriters in the United States.[4] One of many musicians who played the distinctively American blues music, Handy did not create the blues genre but was the first to publish music in the blues form, thereby taking the blues from a regional music style (Delta blues) with a limited audience to a new level of popularity.[4]

W. C. Handy
Handy in July 1941, photographed by
Carl Van Vechten
Background information
Birth nameWilliam Christopher Handy
Born(1873-11-16)November 16, 1873
Florence, Alabama, United States
OriginMemphis, Tennessee, United States
DiedMarch 28, 1958(1958-03-28) (aged 84)
New York City
GenresBlues, jazz
Occupation(s)Musician, bandleader, teacher
InstrumentsTrumpet
Years active1893–1948

Handy was an educated musician who used elements of folk music in his compositions. He was scrupulous in documenting the sources of his works, which frequently combined stylistic influences from various performers.[3]

Early life

Handy at age 19

Handy was born in Florence, Alabama, the son of Elizabeth Brewer and Charles Barnard Handy. His father was the pastor of a small church in Guntersville, a small town in northeast central Alabama. Handy wrote in his 1941 autobiography, Father of the Blues, that he was born in a log cabin built by his grandfather William Wise Handy, who became an African Methodist Episcopal minister after the Emancipation Proclamation. The log cabin of Handy's birth has been preserved near downtown Florence.

Handy's father believed that musical instruments were tools of the devil.[5] Without his parents' permission, Handy bought his first guitar, which he had seen in a local shop window and secretly saved for by picking berries and nuts and making lye soap. Upon seeing the guitar, his father asked him, "What possessed you to bring a sinful thing like that into our Christian home?" and ordered him to "take it back where it came from", but he also arranged for his son to take organ lessons.[6] The organ lessons did not last long, but Handy moved on to learn to play the cornet. He joined a local band as a teenager, but he kept this fact a secret from his parents. He purchased a cornet from a fellow band member and spent every free minute practicing it.[6]

While growing up, he apprenticed in carpentry, shoemaking, and plastering. He was deeply religious. His musical style was influenced by the church music he sang and played in his youth and by the sounds of nature. He cited as inspiration the "whippoorwills, bats and hoot owls and their outlandish noises", Cypress Creek washing on the fringes of the woodland, and "the music of every songbird and all the symphonies of their unpremeditated art".[7]

He worked on a "shovel brigade" at the McNabb furnace and described the music made by the workers as they beat shovels, altering the tone while thrusting and withdrawing the metal part against the iron buggies to pass the time while waiting for the overfilled furnace to digest its ore. He called the sound "better to us than the music of a martial drum corps, and our rhythms were far more complicated."[6] He wrote, "Southern Negroes sang about everything...They accompany themselves on anything from which they can extract a musical sound or rhythmical effect." He would later reflect, "In this way, and from these materials, they set the mood for what we now call blues".[6]:74

Career

Handy, ca. 1900, director of the Alabama Agriculture & Mechanical College Band

In September 1892, Handy travelled to Birmingham, Alabama, to take a teaching exam. He passed it easily and gained a teaching job at the Teachers Agriculture and Mechanical College (the current-day Alabama A&M University) in Normal, then an independent community near Huntsville.[8] Learning that it paid poorly, he quit the position and found employment at a pipe works plant in nearby Bessemer.

In his time off from his job, he organized a small string orchestra and taught musicians how to read music. He later organized the Lauzetta Quartet. When the group read about the upcoming World's Fair in Chicago, they decided to attend. To pay their way, they performed odd jobs along the way. They arrived in Chicago only to learn that the World's Fair had been postponed for a year. Next they headed to St. Louis, Missouri, but found no work.[3]

After the quartet disbanded, Handy went to Evansville, Indiana. He played the cornet in the Chicago World's Fair in 1893. In Evansville, he joined a successful band that performed throughout neighboring cities and states. His musical endeavors were varied: he sang first tenor in a minstrel show, worked as a band director, choral director, cornetist, and trumpeter. At the age of 23, he became the bandmaster of Mahara's Colored Minstrels.

In a three-year tour they traveled to Chicago, throughout Texas and Oklahoma to Tennessee, Georgia, and Florida, and on to Cuba, Mexico and Canada.[3] Handy was paid a salary of $6 per week. Returning from Cuba the band traveled north through Alabama, where they stopped to perform in Huntsville. Weary of life on the road, he and his wife, Elizabeth, stayed with relatives in his nearby hometown of Florence.

In 1896, while performing at a barbecue in Henderson, Kentucky, Handy met Elizabeth Price. They married on July 19, 1896. She gave birth to Lucille, the first of their six children, on June 29, 1900, after they had settled in Florence.

Around that time, William Hooper Councill, the president of what had become the Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical College for Negroes (the same college Handy had refused to teach at in 1892 due to low pay), hired Handy to teach music. He became a faculty member in September 1900 and taught through much of 1902. He was disheartened to discover that the college emphasized teaching European music considered to be "classical". He felt he was underpaid and could make more money touring with a minstrel group.

In 1902 Handy traveled throughout Mississippi, listening to various styles of popular black music. The state was mostly rural and music was part of the culture, especially in cotton plantations in the Mississippi Delta. Musicians usually played guitar or banjo or, to a much lesser extent, piano. Handy's remarkable memory enabled him to recall and transcribe the music he heard in his travels.

After a dispute with AAMC President Councill, Handy resigned his teaching position to return to the Mahara Minstrels and tour the Midwest and Pacific Northwest. In 1903 he became the director of a black band organized by the Knights of Pythias in Clarksdale, Mississippi.[3] Handy and his family lived there for six years. In 1903, while waiting for a train in Tutwiler, in the Mississippi Delta, Handy had the following experience:

A lean loose-jointed Negro had commenced plunking a guitar beside me while I slept...As he played, he pressed a knife on the strings of the guitar in a manner popularized by Hawaiian guitarists who used steel bars...The singer repeated the line three times, accompanying himself on the guitar with the weirdest music I had ever heard.[9][10]

About 1905, while playing a dance in Cleveland, Mississippi, Handy was given a note asking for "our native music".[11] He played an old-time Southern melody but was asked if a local colored band could play a few numbers. Three young men with a battered guitar, mandolin, and a worn-out bass walked onto the stage.[12][13] Research by Elliott Hurwitt for the Mississippi Blues Trail identified the leader of the band in Cleveland as Prince McCoy.[14][15]

They struck up one of those over and over strains that seem to have no beginning and certainly no ending at all. The strumming attained a disturbing monotony, but on and on it went, a kind of stuff associated with [sugar] cane rows and levee camps. Thump-thump-thump went their feet on the floor. It was not really annoying or unpleasant. Perhaps "haunting" is the better word.[12][16]

Handy noted square dancing by Mississippi blacks with "one of their own calling the figures, and crooning all of his calls in the key of G."[17] He remembered this when deciding on the key of "Saint Louis Blues". "It was the memory of that old gent who called figures for the Kentucky breakdown—the one who everlastingly pitched his tones in the key of G and moaned the calls like a presiding elder preaching at a revival meeting. Ah, there was my key—I'd do the song in G.[18] In describing "blind singers and footloose bards" around Clarksdale, Handy wrote, "surrounded by crowds of country folks, they would pour their hearts out in song...They earned their living by selling their own songs — "ballets," as they called them — and I'm ready to say in their behalf that seldom did their creations lack imagination.[19]

In 1909 Handy and his band moved to Memphis, Tennessee, where they played in clubs on Beale Street. "The Memphis Blues" was a campaign song written for Edward Crump, a Democrat Memphis mayoral candidate in the 1909 election[20] and political boss. The other candidates also employed Black musicians for their campaigns.[21] Handy later rewrote the tune and changed its name from "Mr. Crump" to "Memphis Blues." The 1912 publication of the sheet music of "The Memphis Blues" introduced his style of 12-bar blues; it was credited as the inspiration for the foxtrot by Vernon and Irene Castle, a New York dance team. Handy sold the rights to the song for $100. By 1914, when he was 40, he had established his musical style, his popularity had greatly increased, and he was a prolific composer. Handy wrote about using folk songs:

The primitive southern Negro, as he sang, was sure to bear down on the third and seventh tone of the scale, slurring between major and minor. Whether in the cotton field of the Delta or on the Levee up St. Louis way, it was always the same. Till then, however, I had never heard this slur used by a more sophisticated Negro, or by any white man. I tried to convey this effect...by introducing flat thirds and sevenths (now called blue notes) into my song, although its prevailing key was major...and I carried this device into my melody as well...This was a distinct departure, but as it turned out, it touched the spot.[22]

The three-line structure I employed in my lyric was suggested by a song I heard Phil Jones sing in Evansville ... While I took the three-line stanza as a model for my lyric, I found its repetition too monotonous...Consequently I adopted the style of making a statement, repeating the statement in the second line, and then telling in the third line why the statement was made.[23]

Regarding the "three-chord basic harmonic structure" of the blues, Handy wrote that the "(tonic, subdominant, dominant seventh) was that already used by Negro roustabouts, honky-tonk piano players, wanderers and others of the underprivileged but undaunted class from Missouri to the Gulf, and had become a common medium through which any such individual might express his personal feeling in a sort of musical soliloquy."[22] He noted, "In the folk blues the singer fills up occasional gaps with words like 'Oh, lawdy' or 'Oh, baby' and the like. This meant that in writing a melody to be sung in the blues manner one would have to provide gaps or waits."[24]

Writing about the first time "Saint Louis Blues" was played, in 1914, Handy said,

The one-step and other dances had been done to the tempo of Memphis Blues. ... When St Louis Blues was written the tango was in vogue. I tricked the dancers by arranging a tango introduction, breaking abruptly into a low-down blues. My eyes swept the floor anxiously, then suddenly I saw lightning strike. The dancers seemed electrified. Something within them came suddenly to life. An instinct that wanted so much to live, to fling its arms to spread joy, took them by the heels.[25]

His published musical works were groundbreaking because of his ethnicity. In 1912, he met Harry Pace at the Solvent Savings Bank in Memphis. Pace was the valedictorian of his graduating class at Atlanta University and a student of W. E. B. Du Bois. By the time of their meeting, Pace had already demonstrated a strong understanding of business. He earned his reputation by saving failing businesses. Handy liked him, and Pace later became the manager of Pace and Handy Sheet Music.

Handy

While in New York City, Handy wrote:

I was under the impression that these Negro musicians would jump at the chance to patronize one of their own publishers. They didn't...The Negro musicians simply played the hits of the day...They followed the parade. Many white bands and orchestra leaders, on the other hand, were on the alert for novelties. They were therefore the ones most ready to introduce our numbers. Negro vaudeville artists...wanted songs that would not conflict with white acts on the bill. The result was that these performers became our most effective pluggers.[26]

In 1917, he and his publishing business moved to New York City, where he had offices in the Gaiety Theatre office building in Times Square.[27] By the end of that year, his most successful songs had been published: "Memphis Blues", "Beale Street Blues", and "Saint Louis Blues". That year the Original Dixieland Jazz Band, a white New Orleans jazz ensemble, had recorded the first jazz record, introducing the style to a wide segment of the American public. Handy had little fondness for jazz, but bands dove into his repertoire with enthusiasm, making many of them jazz standards.

Handy encouraged performers such as Al Bernard, "a young white man" with a "soft Southern accent" who "could sing all my Blues". He sent Bernard to Thomas Edison to be recorded, which resulted in "an impressive series of successes for the young artist, successes in which we proudly shared." Handy also published "Shake Rattle and Roll" and "Saxophone Blues", both written by Bernard. "Two young white ladies from Selma, Alabama (Madelyn Sheppard and Annelu Burns) contributed the songs "Pickaninny Rose" and "O Saroo", with the music published by Handy's company. These numbers, plus our blues, gave us a reputation as publishers of Negro music."[28]

Bronze statue of Handy in Handy Park, Beale Street, Memphis, Tennessee

Expecting to make only "another hundred or so" of "Yellow Dog Blues" (originally entitled "Yellow Dog Rag"),[29] Handy signed a deal with the Victor company. The Joe Smith[30] recording of this song in 1919 became the best-selling recording of Handy's music to date.[31][32]

Handy tried to interest black women singers in his music but was unsuccessful. In 1920 Perry Bradford persuaded Mamie Smith to record two of his non-blues songs ("That Thing Called Love" and "You Can't Keep a Good Man Down") that were published by Handy and accompanied by a white band. When Bradford's "Crazy Blues" became a hit as recorded by Smith, black blues singers became popular. Handy's business began to decrease because of the competition.[33]

In 1920 Pace amicably dissolved his partnership with Handy, with whom he also collaborated as lyricist. Pace formed Pace Phonograph Company and Black Swan Records and many of the employees went with him.[34] Handy continued to operate the publishing company as a family-owned business. He published works of other black composers as well as his own, which included more than 150 sacred compositions and folk song arrangements and about 60 blues compositions. In the 1920s, he founded the Handy Record Company in New York City; while this label released no records, Handy organized recording sessions with it, and some of those recordings were eventually released on Paramount Records and Black Swan Records.[35] So successful was "Saint Louis Blues" that in 1929 he and director Dudley Murphy collaborated on a RCA motion picture of the same name, which was to be shown before the main attraction. Handy suggested blues singer Bessie Smith for the starring role because the song had made her popular. The movie was filmed in June and was shown in movie houses throughout the United States from 1929 to 1932.

In 1926 Handy wrote Blues: An Anthology—Complete Words and Music of 53 Great Songs. It is an early attempt to record, analyze, and describe the blues as an integral part of the South and the history of the United States. To celebrate the publication of the book and to honor Handy, Small's Paradise in Harlem hosted a party, "Handy Night", on Tuesday October 5, which contained the best of jazz and blues selections provided by Adelaide Hall, Lottie Gee, Maude White, and Chic Collins.[36]

In a 1938 radio episode of Ripley's Believe it or not! Handy was described as "the father of jazz as well as the blues." Fellow blues performer Jelly Roll Morton wrote an open letter to Downbeat magazine fuming that he had actually invented jazz. [37]

After the publication of his autobiography, Handy published a book on African-American musicians, Unsung Americans Sung (1944). He wrote three other books: Blues: An Anthology: Complete Words and Music of 53 Great Songs, Book of Negro Spirituals, and Negro Authors and Composers of the United States. He lived on Strivers' Row in Harlem. He became blind after an accidental fall from a subway platform in 1943. After the death of his first wife, he remarried in 1954 when he was 80. His bride was his secretary, Irma Louise Logan, who he frequently said had become his eyes. In 1955, he suffered a stroke, after which he began to use a wheelchair. More than eight hundred attended his 84th birthday party at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel.

On March 28, 1958, Handy died of bronchial pneumonia at Sydenham Hospital in New York City[38] Over 25,000 people attended his funeral in Harlem's Abyssinian Baptist Church. Over 150,000 people gathered in the streets near the church to pay their respects. He was buried in Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx.

Compositions

Handy's music does not always follow the classic 12-bar pattern, often having 8- or 16-bar bridges between 12-bar verses.

  • "Memphis Blues", written 1909, published 1912. Although usually subtitled "Boss Crump", it is a distinct song from Handy's campaign satire, "Boss Crump don't 'low no easy riders around here", which was based on the good-time song "Mamma Don't Allow It."
  • "Yellow Dog Blues" (1912), "Your easy rider's gone where the Southern cross the Yellow Dog." The reference is to the crossing at Moorhead, Mississippi, of the Southern Railway and the local Yazoo and Mississippi Valley Railroad, called the Yellow Dog. By Handy's telling locals assigned the words "Yellow Dog" to the letters Y.D. (for Yazoo Delta) on the freight trains that they saw.[39]
  • "Saint Louis Blues" (1914), "the jazzman's Hamlet."
  • "Loveless Love", based in part on the classic "Careless Love". Possibly the first song to complain of modern synthetics, "with milkless milk and silkless silk, we're growing used to soulless soul."
  • "Aunt Hagar's Blues", the biblical Hagar, handmaiden to Abraham and Sarah, was considered the "mother" of African Americans
  • "Beale Street Blues" (1916), written as a farewell to Beale Street of Memphis, which was named Beale Avenue until the song's popularity caused it to be changed
  • "Long Gone John (from Bowling Green)", about a famous bank robber
  • "Chantez-Les-Bas (Sing 'Em Low)", a tribute to the Creole culture of New Orleans
  • "Atlanta Blues", which includes the song "Make Me a Pallet on your Floor" as its chorus.
  • "Ole Miss Rag" (1917), a ragtime composition, recorded by Handy's Orchestra of Memphis[40]

Awards and honors

  • On May 17, 1969, the United States Postal Service issued a commemorative stamp in his honor.
  • Handy was inducted in the National Academy of Popular Music Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1970.
  • He was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1983.
  • He was inducted into the Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame in 1985, and was a 1993 Inductee into the Alabama Music Hall of Fame, with the Lifework Award for Performing Achievement.
  • He received a Grammy Trustees Award for lifetime achievement in 1993.
  • Citing 2003 as "the centennial anniversary of when W.C. Handy composed the first blues music" the United States Senate in 2002 passed a resolution declaring the year beginning February 1, 2003 as the "Year of the Blues".[41]
  • Handy was honored with two markers on the Mississippi Blues Trail, the "Enlightenment of W.C. Handy" in Clarksdale, Mississippi and a marker at his birthplace in Florence, Alabama.[42][43]
  • Blues Music Award was known as the W. C. Handy Award until the name change in 2006.
  • W. C. Handy Music Festival is held annually in Florence, Alabama.[44]
  • In 2017, his autobiography Father of the Blues was inducted in to the Blues Hall of Fame in the category of Classics of Blues Literature.[45]

Discography

Handy's Orchestra of Memphis

  • The Old Town Pump/Sweet Child Introducing Pallet on the Floor (Columbia #2417) (1917)
  • A Bunch of Blues/Moonlight Blues (Columbia #2418) (1917)
  • Livery Stable Blues/That Jazz Dance Everyone Is Crazy About (Columbia #2419) (1917)
  • The Hooking Cow Blues/Ole Miss Rag (Columbia #2420) (1917)
  • The Snaky Blues/Fuzzy Wuzzy Rag (Columbia #2421) (1917)
  • Preparedness Blues (Columbia) (unreleased) (recorded 9/21/1917)
  • The Coburn Blues (Columbia) (unreleased) (recorded 9/24/1917)
  • Those Draftin' Blues (Columbia) (unreleased) (recorded 9/24/1917)
  • The Storybook Ball (Columbia) (unreleased) (recorded 9/25/1917)
  • Sweet Cookie Mine (Columbia) (unreleased) (recorded 9/25/1917)[46]

Handy's Memphis Blues Band

  • Beale Street Blues/Joe Turner Blues (Lyric #4211) (9/1919) (never released)
  • Hesitating Blues/Yellow Dog Blues (Lyric #4212) (9/1919) (never released)[46]
  • Early Every Morn/Loveless Love (Paramount #12011) (1922)
  • St. Louis Blues/Yellow Dog Blues (Paramount #20098) (1922)
  • St. Louis Blues/Beale Street Blues (Banner #1036) (1922)
  • She's No Mean Job/Muscle Shoals Blues (Banner #1053) (1922)
  • She's A Mean Job/Muscle Shoals Blues (Puritan #11112) (1922)
  • Muscle Shoals Blues/She's a Mean Job (Regal #9313) (1922)
  • St. Louis Blues/Yellow Dog Blues (Black Swan #2053) (1922)
  • Muscle Shoals Blues/She's a Mean Job (Black Swan #2054) (1922)

Handy’s Orchestra

  • Yellow Dog Blues/St. Louis Blues (Puritan #11098) (1922)
  • Louisville Blues/Aunt Hagar's Blues (Okeh #8046) (1923)
  • Panama/Down Hearted Blues (Okeh #8059) (1923)
  • Mama's Got the Blues/My Pillow and Me (Okeh #8066) (1923)
  • Gulf Coast Blues/Farewell Blues (Okeh #4880) (1923)
  • Sundown Blues/Florida Blues (Okeh #4886) (1923)
  • Darktown Reveille/Ole Miss Blues (Okeh #8110) (1923)
  • I Walked All the Way From East St. Louis (Library of Congress) (1938)
  • Your Clothes Look Lonesome Hanging on the Line (Library of Congress) (1938)
  • Got No More Home Than a Dog (Library of Congress) (1938)
  • Joe Turner (Library of Congress) (1938)
  • Careless Love (Library of Congress) (1938)
  • Getting' Up Holler (Library of Congress) (1938)
  • Oh De Kate's Up De River, Stackerlee's in de Ben (Library of Congress) (1938)
  • Roll On, Buddy (Library of Congress) (1938)
  • Olius Brown (Library of Congress) (1938)
  • Sounding the Lead on the Ohio River (Library of Congress) (1938)[46]

Handy's Sacred Singers

  • Aframerican Hymn/Let's Cheer the Weary Traveler (Paramount #12719) (1929)

W. C. Handy's Orchestra

  • Loveless Love/Way Down South Where the Blues Begin (Varsity #8162) (1939)
  • St. Louis Blues/Beale Street Blues (Varsity #8163) (1939)

References

  1. Obituary Variety, April 2, 1958, p. 68.
  2. "On This Day" The New York Times. Retrieved 2015-7-3.
  3. Evans, David (2001). "Handy, W(illiam) C(hristopher)". Grove Music Online. Retrieved September 13, 2019.
  4. Robin Banerji (December 30, 2012). "WC Handy's Memphis Blues: The Song of 1912". BBC News - Magazine. Retrieved May 30, 2018.
  5. Chernow, Fred; Chernow, Carol (1979). Reading Exercises in Black History Vol. 1. Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania: Continental Press. p. 32. ISBN 08454-2107-7.
  6. Handy, William Christoper (1941). Father of the Blues: An Autobiography. New York: Macmillan. p. 140. ISBN 978-0-306-80421-2.
  7. Gaillard, Frye; Lindsay, Jennifer; DeNeefe, Jane (March 2, 2010). Alabama's Civil Rights Trail: An Illustrated Guide to the Cradle of Freedom. University of Alabama Press. pp. 311–. ISBN 978-0-8173-5581-4. Retrieved November 20, 2018.
  8. "Little Known Black History Fact: W.C. Handy". Black America Web. November 16, 2018. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  9. Handy (1941). p. 74.
  10. "Waiting for the Train at Tutwiler", Triple Threat Blues Band, archived 4 June 2011
  11. "Delta Blues Inspires W.C. Handy - Cleveland, Mississippi - Mississippi Historical Markers on Waymarking.com". Waymarking.com. Retrieved January 22, 2018.
  12. Handy, W. C. (1991). Father of the Blues: An Autobiography. Da Capo Press. pp. 76–77. ISBN 978-0-306-80421-2.
  13. Scarborough, Dorothy; Gulledge, Ola Lee (1925). On the Trail of Negro Folk-Songs. Harvard University Press. p. 269. In recounting the same story to Dorothy Scarborough about 1925, Handy remembered a banjo, guitar, and fiddle.
  14. "Prince McCoy", Mississippi Blues Trail. Retrieved 21 May 2019
  15. Gurrow, Adam (Winter 2018). "W. C. Handy and the "birth" of the Blues". Southern Cultures. 24 (4): 42–68 via Project MUSE.
  16. Crawford, Richard (2001). America's Musical Life: A History. New York: W. W. Norton. pp. 536, 537.
  17. Handy (1941). p. 85.
  18. Handy (1941). p. 119.
  19. Handy (1941). p. 87.
  20. "Little Known Black History Fact: W.C. Handy". Black America Web. November 16, 2018. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  21. Johnson, Mark A. (Summer 2014). ""The best notes make the best votes": W. C. Handy, E. H. Crump, and Black music as politics". Southern Cultures. 20 (2): 52–68 via RILM.
  22. Handy (1941). p. 99.
  23. Handy (1941). pp. 142–143.
  24. Handy (1941). p. 120.
  25. Handy (1941). pp. 99–100.
  26. Handy (1941). p. 195.
  27. Bloom, Ken (2003). Broadway: An Encyclopedia. 2nd ed. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-93704-3.
  28. Handy (1941). pp. 196–197.
  29. Wald, Elijah. Escaping the Delta: Standing at the Crossroads of the Blues. HarperCollins. p. 283. ISBN 0-06-052423-5.
  30. "Joseph C. Smith: America's First Famous Dance Band Recording Artist". Phonostalgia.com. Retrieved January 22, 2018.
  31. "Tim Gracyk's Phonographs, Singers, and Old Records -- Joseph C. Smith and His Orchestra". Gracyk.com. Retrieved January 22, 2018.
  32. Handy (1941). p. 198
  33. Handy (1941). pp. 200–202.
  34. Handy (1941). p. 202.
  35. "Handy Record Co.". The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz. St. Martin's Press, 1994, p. 480.
  36. "The Pittsburgh Courier from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania". Newspapers.com. October 16, 1926. p. 10. Retrieved January 22, 2018.
  37. Gussow, Adam (Fall 2002). "Racial Violence, "Primitive" Music, and the Blues Entrepreneur: W. C. Handy's Mississippi Problem". Southern Cultures. 8(3): 56–77 via RILM.
  38. "W. C. Handy, Blues King, Dies at 84". Lewiston Evening Journal. March 28, 1058. p. A1. Retrieved November 21, 2018.
  39. Handy (1991). Father of the Blues: An Autobiography. Arna Wendell Bontemps, ed. Da Capo Press. p. 267. ISBN 978-0-306-80421-2
  40. "Handy's Orchestra Of Memphis". Redhotjazz.com. Retrieved January 22, 2018.
  41. "Year of the Blues 2003". 107th Congress of the United States, Senate Resolution 316. September 5, 2002. Archived from the original on February 7, 2005. Retrieved January 31, 2005.
  42. Marshall, Matt (December 2, 2013). "Mississippi Blues Trail Recognized "Enlightenment of W.C. Handy"". American Blues Scene.
  43. "W.C. Handy Birthplace". Mississippi Blues Trail.
  44. "July 18th – 27th, 2014 – Florence, AL – The Shoals". W.C. Handy Music Festival. Retrieved June 27, 2014.
  45. "Blues Hall of Fame - About/Inductions - Blues Foundation". Blues.org. Retrieved January 21, 2018.
  46. Rust, Brian; Shaw, Malcolm (2002). Jazz and Ragtime Records (1897-1942). Littleton, CO: Mainspring Press. p. 723. ISBN 978-0967181929.

Further reading

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