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Lu Watters

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Lu Watters
Birth nameLucius Carl Watters
Born(1911-12-19)December 19, 1911
Santa Cruz, California, U.S.
DiedNovember 5, 1989(1989-11-05) (aged 77)
Santa Rosa, California, U.S.
GenresJazz, dixieland
OccupationMusician
InstrumentTrumpet
Years active1920s–1950
Musical artist

Lucius Carl Watters (December 19, 1911 – November 5, 1989) was a trumpeter and bandleader of the Yerba Buena Jazz Band. Jazz critic Leonard Feather said, “The Yerba Buena band was perhaps the most vital factor in the reawakening of public interest in traditional jazz on the west coast.”

Career

Watters was born in Santa Cruz, California, United States, on December 19,1911 and raised in Rio Vista, California. At St. Joseph's military academy in Sacramento, California he belonged to the drum and bugle corps, where he was chosen "most promising bugler." In 1925, he moved with his family to San Francisco, where he started a jazz band. He taught himself how to arrange music and played trumpet on a cruise ship. He studied music at the University of San Francisco with help from a scholarship, but he dropped out of school to pursue a career.

During the 1930s, he went on tour across America with the Carol Lofner big band. While in New Orleans, he became interested in traditional jazz. Back in California, he assembled jam sessions with Bill Dart, Clancy Hayes, Bob Helm, Dick Lammi, Turk Murphy, and Wally Rose. In 1938, he formed a band that included Hayes, Helm, Squire Gersh, Bob Scobey, and Russell Bennett. The band found steady work at Sweet's Ballroom in Oakland, slipping in pieces of traditional New Orleans jazz into the repertoire until Watters was fired.

In 1939, he established the Yerba Buena Jazz Band to revive the New Orleans jazz style of King Oliver. (Yerba Buena was the first name of San Francisco.) He brought in pianist Forrest Browne, who taught the band music by Jelly Roll Morton.

Watters wrote music and arrangements to add to the traditional repertoire. The band performed at the Dawn Club in San Francisco, where it "began a phenomenally successful career as America’s first real revivalist band." It went on hiatus in 1942 when Watters entered the U.S. Navy but reunited at the Dawn Club after World War II. After the Dawn closed in 1947, the band started the club Hambone Kelly's in El Cerrito, California. In 1949 the band performed with visiting musicians Kid Ory, James P. Johnson, and Mutt Carey. After Hambone Kelly's closed, the band broke up in 1950.

In 1950, the band lost two key players, Bob Scobey and Turk Murphy, who had gone on their own. Watters ended the Yerba Vista Jazz Band. The Rough Guide concludes: “(they) had gone about as far as they could go: the revival had been launched worldwide and they had broadcast and recorded regularly for ten years.”

Watters left music and became a carpenter, cook, and a student of geology. In 1963, he came out of retirement to perform with Murphy at an anti-nuclear protest in California to prevent a nuclear plant from being constructed at Bodega Bay. He recorded an album for Fantasy with Rose, Helm, Bob Mielke, and Barbara Dane called Blues Over Botega. It included the title track and another song named for the San Andreas Fault, which was consistent with his interest in geology.

In 1961, a mineral from California was named wattersite in his honor.

After this brief return to music, he retired again and in 1959 he was a chef at an institution in Cotati, California.

Lu Watters died on November 5, 1989 in Santa Rosa, California.

Personnel

References

  1. Colin Larkin, ed. (1992). The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music (First ed.). Guinness Publishing. p. 2639. ISBN 0-85112-939-0.
  2. Leonard Feather, The Encyclopedia of Jazz, Da Capo:Horizon Press, 1960, p. 455.
  3. Ian Carr, Digby Fairweather and Brian Priestly, "Lu Watters", Jazz-The Rough Guide, Rough Guides Ltd.,London, 1995, p. 676
  4. ^ Tallmadge, William H.; Kernfeld, Barry (2002). Kernfeld, Barry (ed.). The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz. Vol. 3 (2 ed.). New York: Grove's Dictionaries. pp. 892–893. ISBN 1-56159-284-6.
  5. Rough Guide
  6. ^ Kelsey, Chris. "Lu Watters". AllMusic. Retrieved 6 July 2019.
  7. Rough Guide
  8. Rough Guide
  9. Blues Over Bodega. Retrieved December 23, 2018.
  10. Roberts, Andrew C.; Bonadri, Maurizio; Erd, Richard C.; Criddle, Alan J.; Le Page, Yvon (1991). "Wattersite Hg+14Hg+2Cr+6O6 a new mineral from the Clear Creek claim San Benito Country, California" (PDF). The Mineralogical Record. 22: 269–272. Retrieved 29 April 2017.
  11. Feather

External links

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