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Fats Waller

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American jazz pianist and composer (1904–1943)
"Handful of Keys" redirects here. For other uses, seeHandful of Keys (disambiguation).

Fats Waller
Waller in 1938
Born
Thomas Wright Waller

(1904-05-21)May 21, 1904
New York City, U.S.
DiedDecember 15, 1943(1943-12-15) (aged 39)
Occupations
Years active1918–1943
Spouses
Children3
RelativesDarren Waller (great-grandson)[1]

Thomas Wright "Fats"Waller (May 21, 1904 – December 15, 1943) was an Americanjazz pianist,organist, composer, and singer.[2] His innovations in the Harlemstride style laid much of the basis for modern jazz piano. A widely popular star in the jazz and swing eras, he toured internationally, achieving critical and commercial success in the United States and Europe. His best-known compositions, "Ain't Misbehavin'" and "Honeysuckle Rose", were inducted into theGrammy Hall of Fame in 1984 and 1999, respectively.[3]

Waller copyrighted over 400 songs, many of them co-written with his closest collaborator,Andy Razaf. Razaf described his partner as "the soul of melody... a man who made the piano sing... both big in body and in mind... known for his generosity... a bubbling bundle of joy". It is likely that he composed many more popular songs than he has been credited with. When in financial difficulties, he had a habit of selling songs to other writers and performers who claimed them as their own.[4] He died from pneumonia, aged 39.

Early life

[edit]

Thomas Wright Waller was born in New York City on May 21, 1904, the seventh child of eleven (five of whom survived childhood).[5][a] His parents were Adeline Waller (née Lockett), a musician, and Edward Martin Waller, aBaptistlay preacher andteamster; they originated from ruralVirginia but moved to New York after marrying at the age of 16 in the hope of better employment, housing and education prospects.[6][7][8] Thomas Waller started playing the piano at the age of six, and later played the reed organ at his father's open-air services. He also studied the double bass and violin, paying for music lessons by working in a grocery store.[7][8] From an early age he proved adept atplaying by ear, and was inspired by hearingIgnacy Jan Paderewski perform atCarnegie Hall. The nickname "Fats" dates from around this time, on account of his being overweight.[9]

Waller's mother Adeline developed diabetes, which made her weak; consequently the family moved to an apartment with fewer stairs, in central Harlem. The post-war period saw Harlem become populated with bars and clubs which featured live music, fueling Waller's artistic aspirations.[10] Waller attendedDeWitt Clinton High School for a short period of time,[b] but left to pursue his ambition to become a professional musician.[13] He briefly worked polishing jewel boxes and delivering illicit alcoholic drinks duringprohibition, with the wages allowing him to afford piano lessons,[14] and at the age of 15 he became an organist at theLincoln Theatre,[15] where he earned $23 a week.[16][c] This position allowed him to practice his stagecraft and improvisation.[17]

Edward Waller disapproved of his son's career in music due to his strict religious beliefs, which was a continual source of tension between them. Adeline Waller, who encouraged his aspirations, acted as a mediating influence,[18] but she died on November 10, 1920, from a stroke due to her diabetes.[19] Shortly thereafter Waller moved out to live with a friend, who was acquainted with pianistJames P. Johnson,[20] a leading figure of the burgeoning Harlemstride style.[21] Waller met Johnson at the age of 16,[15] and Johnson began to teach him the piano and introduce him to important figures on the Harlem music scene such asEubie Blake,Willie Gant,Cliff Jackson,Duke Ellington andWillie "the Lion" Smith, bringing him torent parties where they would perform.[22] Johnson continued to be a friend and mentor throughout Waller's life.[15]

From early in his career, Waller displayed an aptitude for risqué patter. A song named "The Boy in a Boat" contributed to his popularity on the rent party circuit, and was a veiled reference toclitoral stimulation. The song was later recorded with different lyrics as "Squeeze Me", but retained "A Boy in a Boat" as a subtitle on the 1926 piano roll publication.[23] Waller also showed an inclination to drink large amounts of alcohol from the age of about 17 or 18, a habit which would last the rest of his life.[24]

Career

[edit]

1920s

[edit]

In 1921 Waller was invited to accompany the vaudeville group Liza and Her Shufflin' Six on a tour of the northeast of the U.S., having impressed Liza with his organ playing at the Lincoln Theatre.[25][26] While in Boston he metCount Basie, who asked for organ lessons – these took place back in New York, in the Lincoln.[27] After his return Waller played his first rent party, having improved dramatically from practice and his lessons with James P. Johnson,[28][29] and he continued to perform at these, as well as undertake short-term contracts at nightclubs and cabarets.[30] Waller's steady job at the Lincoln Theatre transferred to theLafayette Theatre after a change of management.[31]


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Via his friendClarence Williams, aTin Pan Alley music publisher, Waller became involved with the new recording labelOkeh Records. He was originally slated to accompanySara Martin in "Sugar Blues", but failed to attend the recording session; Williams played instead, which launched his performing career.[32] Williams convinced Fred Hager, the head ofartists and repertoire for Okeh, to try Waller again,[33] and his first recordings were "Muscle Shoals Blues" and "Birmingham Blues" in late 1922.[34][d] In December he accompanied Martin in "Mama's Got the Blues" and "Last Go Round Blues".[34] James P. Johnson got Waller work recordingpiano rolls forQRS, the first of which was "Got to Cool My Doggies Now", recorded in March 1923.[36] In the summer of that year Waller began composing original pieces, his first being "Wildcat Blues", with lyrics by Williams. The pair collaborated on over 70 songs during the subsequent five years, including "Squeeze Me".[37]

Waller continued to accompany blues singers in recordings, play rent parties, and perform at nightclubs, gaining exposure.[38] During this period he metAndy Razaf, a lyricist with whom he collaborated extensively, and who encouraged him to sing as well as play the piano.[39] He metJ. C. Johnson in 1923, and began collaborating with him as well.[40] Waller became known for his prolific output of catchy songs, although did not copyright any of them, instead selling them outright to publishers or performing them without getting them published. In 1926 he composed for tworevues withSpencer Williams.[38]

The published sheet music to "Ain't Misbehavin'"

In 1926, Waller began his association with theVictor Talking Machine Company (laterRCA Victor) after being contacted byRalph Peer. On November 17, 1926, he recorded "St. Louis Blues" and his composition "Lenox Avenue Blues", his first solo recordings,[41] and on December 1, 1927, he recorded "Red Hot Dan" withThomas Morris, the first recording of Waller singing.[42][43]

1929 saw the composition of some of Waller's most highly-regarded songs, such as "Ain't Misbehavin'" (for the revueHot Chocolates), "I've Got a Feeling I'm Falling", "Honeysuckle Rose" (for the revueLoad of Coal), and "Black and Blue".[44][45] To avoid having to pay more in child support to Edith, whom he had divorced in 1923, Waller sold the rights for twenty of his songs (including "Ain't Misbehavin'") toIrving Mills for $500. This was a small fraction of their value.[46][47] As a consequence he earned only the musician's share of the royalties from the subsequent recordings.[48]

1930s

[edit]

Waller's radio career began in December 1930, when he featured on a new show forCBS playing the piano and, unusually until this point, singing.[49]Joe Davis, who had become Waller's publisher and manager after the sale of his material to Irving Mills, began to market Waller as a singer as well as a pianist, and he recorded the solo songs "I'm Crazy about My Baby" and "Draggin' My Heart Around" on March 31, 1931.[50]

Waller began to play regularly at theHot Feet Club, where he developed his storytelling asides and style as a raconteur: "the cocked eye brow, the finger punctuating the air for emphasis, and eyes rolling heavenward whenever he said something blue".[51] In the summer of 1931 he visited Paris with Spencer Williams, playing in the city's nightclubs and enjoying the much lower levels of racial discrimination and absence of prohibition.[52] Davis appointed Marty Bloom as Waller's manager after Waller's return,[53] but Bloom resigned the position shortly thereafter and it was taken by Phil Ponce, who was experienced in showbusiness and had established and managed thePonce Sisters.[54]

Ponce decided to focus on Waller's radio career, and secured a two-year contract withWLW in Cincinnati, where he was given his own program, "Fats Waller's Rhythm Club".[55][46] Waller also played for their show "Moon River", but was not credited due to his own show's "raucous and comedic reputation".[56] After the contract ended in late 1933, Waller moved back to New York.[57] A sequence of CBS radio performances in March and April of 1934 provided extensive publicity,[46] and led to his own regular show, "The Rhythm Club", as well as regular appearances on other CBS programs.[58]

This radio success led to RCA Victor offering a recording contract, assuming that the records would at least sell well in the black community, but they unexpectedly proved to have wide appeal, and became bestsellers.[59] Victor arranged for tours for Waller and a group of musicians as the Fats Waller Band in 1935, and while back in New York during breaks between fixtures the group recorded a number of songs, the most popular of which was "I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter".[60] Part of the tour involved promoting the release of the filmHooray for Love, in which Waller had appeared earlier that year, and the success of this publicity activity led to him featuring inKing of Burlesque.[61]

The band continued to tour and record over the next few years, but Waller's drinking became heavier and his behavior more erratic, and interest from promoters declined after a racially-motivated boycott led to poorly-attended events in South Carolina and Florida in 1937.[62]Ed Kirkeby had taken over as manager in 1935 due to Ponce's ill health, and he attempted to revive domestic interest in Waller by arranging a tour of Britain and Scandinavia in 1938, where jazz was increasing in popularity.[63] The tour was a great success, with Waller recording forHMV and appearing on the new medium of television in addition to his live performances, but it was curtailed due to the threat of invasion fromNazi Germany.[64] Waller had been developing his interest in composition and classical music, inspired byGeorge Gershwin'sRhapsody in Blue andConcerto in F. He began to incorporate more classical themes into his music, and took up the violin.[65] While in London he composed theimpressionistLondon Suite, representing different areas of the city he had visited, and this was recorded by HMV.[66]

1940s

[edit]
Poster forStormy Weather (1943)

The tour in Europe revived Waller's career in the US. He was in high demand as an accompanist on recordings, but the Victor contract was exclusive, so he was credited as "Maurice Waller", his son's name. Victor marketed Waller as a comic performer, with songs such as "You Run Your Mouth, I'll Run My Business".[67] In 1941 he recorded fourSoundies – short musical films of "Ain't Misbehavin'", "Honeysuckle Rose", "Your Feet's Too Big", and "The Joint Is Jumpin'".[68] He toured the US, often staging surprise concerts to entertain the troops at the local military post.[69]

Waller's interest in more "serious" music continued, and on January 14, 1942 he staged a concert in Carnegie Hall in an attempt to make audiences take jazz more seriously.[70] The concert was received well by the audience, although at least one critic gave it a mixed review,[71] possibly because Waller had become drunk during the interval.[72]

Irving Mills had become a film producer, and in early 1943 engaged Waller to perform songs including "Ain't Misbehavin'" (which he owned the rights to) inStormy Weather.[73][71] Upon returning to New York, he began to compose for the musicalEarly to Bed, which premiered in Boston on May 24, 1943. It received positive reviews, and was staged at theBroadhurst Theatre onBroadway on June 17.[74] Waller was the first black composer to write a Broadway show for a white cast.[75]

Compositions

[edit]

Waller is believed to have composed many songs in the 1920s and 1930s and sold them for small sums,[4] attributed to another composer and lyricist.[76]

Standards attributed to Waller, sometimes controversially, include "I Can't Give You Anything but Love, Baby". The song was made famous byAdelaide Hall in the Broadway showBlackbirds of 1928.[77] Biographer Barry Singer offered circumstantial evidence that this song was written by Waller and lyricist Andy Razaf and provided a description of the sale given by Waller to theNew York Post in 1929 – he sold the song for $500 to a white songwriter for use in a financially successful show (consistent withJimmy McHugh's contributions toHarry Delmar's Revels, 1927, and then toBlackbirds of 1928).[4] He noted that early handwritten manuscripts in the Dana Library Institute of Jazz Studies of "Spreadin' Rhythm Around" (Jimmy McHugh, 1935) are in Waller's hand.[4][78][page needed] Jazz historian Paul S. Machlin commented that the Singer conjecture has "considerable [historical] justification".[79] According to a biography by Waller's son Maurice, Waller told his son never to play the song within earshot because he had to sell it when he needed money.[80] Maurice Waller wrote that his father objected to hearing "On the Sunny Side of the Street" on the radio.[81]

Personal life

[edit]

In 1920, Waller married Edith Hatch,[82] and the couple moved in with Edith's parents as they were unable to afford their own home. Edith's parents disapproved of Waller's career as a musician, considering it unfit for a newly-married man.[83] They found their own apartment,[84] and Edith gave birth to a son, Thomas Waller Jr., in 1921.[82] She was unhappy being married to a working musician, with its financial insecurity and unsociable hours, and felt that she and their son deserved more of Waller's time and attention.[85] In 1923 they divorced, with an agreement for Waller to pay $35 per week in child support and alimony.[86] Waller persistently failed to pay this, prompting Edith to take him to court several times, and he spent time in jail onWelfare Island.[87] His will left her the minimum amount allowed by law, with the stipulation that this should be reduced to nothing in the event that the law change to permit this between the time of writing and his death.[88]

Waller married Anita Rutherford, whom he knew in childhood and met again while playing at the Lincoln Theatre, in 1926.[89] They had a son, Maurice Thomas Waller, born on September 10, 1927.[90] In 1928, Waller and Rutherford had their second son, Ronald Waller.[28]

In 1938, Waller was one of the first African Americans to purchase a home in the Addisleigh Park section ofSt. Albans, Queens, a New York City community with racially restrictive covenants. After his purchase, and litigation in the New York State courts, many prosperous African Americans followed, including many jazz artists, such asCount Basie,Lena Horne,Ella Fitzgerald, andMilt Hinton.[91]

Death

[edit]

Waller's health began to decline in 1939 or 1940, with heavy alcohol drinking, working late hours, and excessive food consumption being contributing factors (he reportedly weighed about 285 pounds (129 kg) at the time of his death).[92][93] He contractedinfluenza while playing a series of events at the Zanzibar Room inHollywood in October 1943, but disregarded a doctor's recommendation to go to hospital and stop drinking.[94]

Waller died ofpneumonia in the early morning of December 15, 1943, while returning to New York on theSanta Fe Chief, as the train was stopped atKansas City Union Station.[95] His funeral took place atAbyssinian Baptist Church inHarlem, the church his parents had joined after first moving to the city from Virginia. More than 4,200 people were estimated to have attended, which promptedAdam Clayton Powell Jr., who delivered the eulogy, to observe that Waller "always played to a packed house".[96] Afterwards he was cremated, and his ashes were scattered over Harlem from an airplane piloted by aWorld War I andSpanish Civil War pilot known as the "Black Ace".[97]

Influence

[edit]

Waller had many admirers, during and after his heyday. In 1939, while nightclubbing in Harlem, Waller discovered a white stride pianist playing Waller tunes – the youngHarry Gibson. Waller tipped him handsomely and then hired him to be his relief pianist during his own performances.

Waller also had contemporaries in recording studios. Waller recorded for Victor, soDecca Records hired singer-pianistBob Howard for recordings aimed at Waller's audience, andColumbia Records followed suit withPutney Dandridge.

Probably the most talented pianist to keep the music of Waller alive in the years after his death wasRalph Sutton, who focused his career on playing stride piano. Sutton was a great admirer of Waller, saying, "I've never heard a piano man swing any better than Fats – or swing a band better than he could. I never get tired of him. Fats has been with me from the first, and he'll be with me as long as I live."[98]

Actor and bandleaderConrad Janis also did a lot to keep the stride piano music of Waller andJames P. Johnson alive. In 1949, as an 18-year-old, Janis put together a band of aging jazz greats, consisting of James P. Johnson (piano),Henry Goodwin (trumpet),Edmond Hall (clarinet),Pops Foster (bass), andBaby Dodds (drums), with Janis on trombone.[99]

ABroadway musical showcasing Waller tunes entitledAin't Misbehavin' was produced in 1978 and featured Nell Carter, Andre de Shields, Armelia McQueen, Ken Page, and Charlaine Woodard. (The show andNell Carter wonTony Awards.) The show opened at theLongacre Theatre and ran for more than 1600 performances. It was revived on Broadway in 1988 at theAmbassador Theatre with the original Broadway Cast. Performed by five African-American actors, the show included such songs as "Honeysuckle Rose", "This Joint Is Jumpin'", and "Ain't Misbehavin'".

In 1977, British comedian Spike Milligan cited Fats Waller as the jazz musician who"set me off" after hearing You Rascal, You.

In 1981,Thin Lizzy released the albumRenegade, which contained the song "Fats", co-written byPhil Lynott andSnowy White as a tribute to Waller.[100]

Recognition and awards

[edit]
Year InductedTitle
1970Songwriters Hall of Fame
1989Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame
1993Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award
2005Jazz at Lincoln Center:Nesuhi Ertegun Jazz Hall of Fame
2008Gennett Records Walk of Fame

Waller's recordings were inducted into theGrammy Hall of Fame, a specialGrammy Award established in 1973 to honor recordings that are at least 25 years old and that have "qualitative or historical significance."

Grammy Hall of Fame Awards[101]
Year RecordedTitleGenreLabelYear InductedNotes
1929"Ain't Misbehavin'"Jazz (single)Victor1984Listed in the National Recording Registry
by theLibrary of Congress in 2004.
1934"Honeysuckle Rose"Jazz (single)Victor1999

Selected works

[edit]

Recordings

[edit]

Waller features in hundreds of recordings.[102]JSP Records released a complete collection of the known extant recordings:

  • 1922–29 –The Complete Recorded Works Vol. 1: Messin' Around With The Blues (4xCD) (JSP, 2007)
  • 1930–34 –The Complete Recorded Works Vol. 2: A Handful Of Keys (4xCD) (JSP, 2006)
  • 1934–36 –The Complete Recorded Works Vol. 3: Rhythm And Romance (4xCD) (JSP, 2007)
  • 1936–38 –The Complete Recorded Works Vol. 4: New York, Chicago & Hollywood (4xCD) (JSP, 2007)
  • 1938–40 –The Complete Recorded Works Vol. 5: New York, London & Chicago (4xCD) (JSP, 2008)
  • 1940–43 –The Complete Recorded Works Vol. 6: New York, Chicago & Hollywood (4xCD) (JSP, 2008)

Instrumental

[edit]

Piano solo

[edit]

Source:[103]

TitleYear
"Hog Maw Stomp"1924
"Alligator Crawl" (renamed "House Party Stomp")1925
"Old Folks Shuffle"1926
"The Digah's Stomp"1928
"Gladyse"1929
"Valentine Stomp"1929
"Handful of Keys"1930
"Numb Fumblin'"1930
"Viper's Drag"1930
"African Ripples"1931
"Smashing Thirds"1931
"Clothes Line Ballet"1934
"Functionizin'"1935
"Bach Up to Me"1936
"Black Raspberry Jam"1936
"Fractious Fingering"1936
"Lounging at the Waldorf"1936
"Paswonky"1936
"London Suite"1939
"Jitterbug Waltz"1942

Organ solo

[edit]

Source:[103]

TitleYear
"Fats Waller Stomp"1927
"Lenox Avenue Blues"1927
"Messin' Around with the Blues"1927
"Sloppy Water Blues"1927
"Soothin' Syrup Stomp"1927

Songs

[edit]

Source:[103]

TitleYearLyricist(s)Collaborator
"Wild Cat Blues"1923Clarence Williams
"Squeeze Me"1923Andy Razaf
"Anybody Here Want to Try my Cabbage"1924Andy Razaf
"In Harlem's Araby"1924Jo Trent
"Georgia Bo-Bo"1926Jo Trent
"Come On and Stomp, Stomp, Stomp"1927C. Smith,Irving Mills
"I'm Goin' Huntin'"1927J. C. Johnson
"Ain't Misbehavin'"1929Andy Razaf
"My Feelin's are Hurt"1929Andy Razaf
"Blue Turning Grey over You"1929Andy Razaf
"Honeysuckle Rose"1929Andy Razaf
"My Fate is in Your Hands"1929Andy Razaf
"Sweet Savannah Sue"1929Russell Brooks, Andy Razaf
"What Did I Do to Be so Black and Blue"1929Andy RazafRussell Brooks
"Zonky"1929Andy Razaf
"I'm Crazy 'Bout my Baby and My Baby's Crazy 'Bout Me"1931Alex Hill
"How Can You Face Me"1932Andy Razaf
"Keepin' Out of Mischief Now"1932Andy Razaf
"Strange as it Seems"1932Andy Razaf
"Ain't Cha Glad"1933Andy Razaf
You're Breakin' my Heart"1933Spencer Williams
"Stealin' Apples"1936Andy Razaf
"Joint is Jumpin'"1938Andy Razaf
"Spider and the Fly"1938Andy Razaf, J. C. Johnson
"You Can't Have Your Cake and Eat It"1939Spencer Williams
"Old Grand Dad"1940
"All That Meat and no Potatoes"1941Ed Kirkeby
"Slightly Less Than Wonderful"1943George F. Marion

Stage

[edit]

Source:[103]

TitleCityLocationDate
Keep Shufflin'PhiladelphiaGibson's TheatreFebruary 13, 1928
Connie’s Hot ChocolatesNew YorkConnie's InnMay 1929
Fireworks of 1930New YorkLafayette TheatreJune 28, 1930
Hello 1931!New YorkThe Harlem AlhambraDecember 29, 1930
Early to BedBostonShubert TheatreMay 24, 1943

Film

[edit]

Source:[104]

TitleDirectorYear
Hooray for LoveWalter Lang1935
King of BurlesqueSidney Lanfield1936
Soundies shortsWarren Murray1941
Stormy WeatherAndrew L. Stone1943

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Some sources suggest that there were twelve children; the figure of eleven is taken from the account of Waller's son, itself used byShipton (2002).
  2. ^Sources say either one semester[11] or one year.[7][12]
  3. ^Also reported as $32 a week.[7]
  4. ^Sources suggest either October 21 or December 1922.[35]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Black History Moment: Thomas 'Fats' Waller".NFL.com. RetrievedAugust 2, 2025.
  2. ^Taylor, Stephen (2019).Fats Waller on the Air: The Radio Broadcasts and Discography. Scarecrow Press.ISBN 978-0810856561. RetrievedJune 7, 2019 – via Google Books.
  3. ^Tenenholtz, David."Waller, Fats (Thomas Wright)". JAZZ.COM. Archived fromthe original on April 6, 2009. RetrievedJuly 10, 2013.
  4. ^abcdTyle, Chris (2012)."I Can't Give You Anything but Love (1928)". JazzStandards.com. RetrievedApril 4, 2014.
  5. ^Shipton 2002, p. 8.
  6. ^Waller, Maurice; Calabrese, Anthony (2017).Fats Waller. University of Minnesota Press. pp. 1–2.ISBN 978-1452956671.
  7. ^abcd"Thomas Wright Waller".Encyclopedia of World Biography (vol. 16) (2nd ed.). Detroit: Gale. 2004. pp. 81–82.
  8. ^abTaylor, J. R. (May 22, 2024)."Waller, Fats".Grove Music Online.doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.48692.ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0.
  9. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 6–8.
  10. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 11–12.
  11. ^Pelisson, Gerard J.; Garvey III, James A. (2009).The Castle on the Parkway. Scarsdale, New York: The Hutch Press. p. 40.OL 27612694M.
  12. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 13.
  13. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 12–13.
  14. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 13–14.
  15. ^abcIvy, James (2011). "Waller, Fats (1904–1943)". In Price, Emmett G. (ed.).Encyclopedia of African American Music. Santa Barbara: Greenwood. pp. 986–987.
  16. ^Shipton 2002, p. 14.
  17. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 20–21.
  18. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 21–22.
  19. ^Machlin, Paul S. (1985).Stride: The Music of Fats Waller. London: Macmillan Press. p. xii.ISBN 978-1349085675.
  20. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 26–27.
  21. ^Robinson, J. Bradford (2001)."Stride".Grove Music Online.doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.26955.ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0. RetrievedAugust 2, 2025.
  22. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 29–31.
  23. ^Shipton 2002, p. 11.
  24. ^Shipton 2002, p. 12.
  25. ^Machlin 1985, pp. xii–xiii.
  26. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 36.
  27. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 36–37.
  28. ^abMachlin 1985, p. xiii.
  29. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 37–38.
  30. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 39–41.
  31. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 42.
  32. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 42–44.
  33. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 44.
  34. ^abMachlin 1985, p. 122.
  35. ^Shipton 2002, p. 19.
  36. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 45–46.
  37. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 49.
  38. ^abMachlin 1985, pp. 3–4.
  39. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 49–50, 53.
  40. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 58.
  41. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 65–66.
  42. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 73–74.
  43. ^Cunniffe, Thomas (March 5, 2019)."Fats Waller at the Pipe Organ".Jazz History Online. RetrievedAugust 7, 2025.
  44. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 82–84.
  45. ^Machlin 1985, pp. 26–27.
  46. ^abcMachlin 1985, p. xiv.
  47. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 51, 87.
  48. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 87.
  49. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 95.
  50. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 89, 95–96.
  51. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 96.
  52. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 99.
  53. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 101.
  54. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 106.
  55. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 107.
  56. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 108.
  57. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 110.
  58. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 113.
  59. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 111–114.
  60. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 114–118.
  61. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 115–116, 120.
  62. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 124, 129–130.
  63. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 128,131.
  64. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 133-137,139,149.
  65. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 136.
  66. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 138-139.
  67. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 149–150.
  68. ^MacGillivray, Scott andOkuda, Ted,The Soundies Book. New York: iUniverse, 2007, p. 275.ISBN 978-0-595-42060-5
  69. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 154–155.
  70. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 150, 152.
  71. ^abMachlin 1985, p. xv.
  72. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 153.
  73. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 155.
  74. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, pp. 156–157.
  75. ^McWhorter, John (October 14, 2016)."The Fats Waller You've Never Heard".City Journal. RetrievedApril 27, 2020.
  76. ^Waller & Calabrese 2017, p. 264.
  77. ^Williams, Iain Cameron (2002).Underneath a Harlem Moon. Continuum.ISBN 0826458939.
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