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This Week on Riverwalk Jazz: Fats Waller, Composer

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Riverwalk Jazz this week focuses on Fats Waller the composer. Fats wrote over 500 compositions in his short twenty-year career. His friend, the lyricist Andy Razaf said that “music poured out of Fats like water."

The program is distributed in the US by Public Radio International, on Sirius/XM sattelite radio and can be streamed on-demand from the Riverwalk Jazz website.

He called himself “the harmful little armful" but there was nothing little about Fats. His high-voltage personality would stun you, to say nothing of his 285-pound body, draped in carefully-tailored Savile Row suits. He was surprisingly sexy and charming, a fast-talking wit, clowning at the keyboards, “sending up" his audiences and burlesquing himself.

Fats found out early that playing the over-sized buffoon would keep him in the limelight and earning top dollar. His 1930s recordings for the RCA Bluebird label—most of them evoking a rollicking house-party mood and produced off-the-cuff in one take and without rehearsal—sold in the millions.

But musicians and some of his fans knew that underneath all the clowning, Fats Waller possessed an astounding depth in all things musical. Under the guidance of his famous teacher, James P. Johnson, Waller acquired an impeccable and assured piano technique and refined sense of swinging time. Through his friend George Gershwin, he had a rare opportunity to study advanced harmony, counterpoint and composition with Leopold Godowsky.

The music Fats Waller is still known and loved for is full of infectious swinging rhythms and happy, catchy melodies—tunes like “Honeysuckle Rose," “Ain't Misbehavin'" and “Your Feet's Too Big." Lesser-known are his tour-de-force solo piano pieces, some of which, like “Viper's Drag," “Numb Fumblin'" and “Clothesline Ballet" were inspired by the legendary stride piano “cutting contests" often held at Harlem “rent parties."

On top of all his great pianistic accomplishments evident on his many solo recordings, Fats Waller still ranks as one of the greatest composers of the interwar golden age of American Popular Song. Some of his lesser-known songs, written for stage productions, such as “Willow Tree" and “My Fate Is in Your Hands" have a wistful, bittersweet quality.

Fats said, “It is my contention, and always has been, that the thing that makes a tune click is the melody, and give the public four bars of that to dig their teeth into, and you have a killer-diller...It's melody that gives variety to the ear."

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