Ford Dabney
Ford Thompson Dabney (15 March 1883 – 6 June 1958) was an American ragtime pianist, composer, songwriter, and acclaimed director of bands and orchestras for Broadway musical theater, revues, vaudeville, and early recordings. Additionally, for two years in Washington, from 1910 to 1912, he was proprietor of a theater that featured vaudeville, musical revues, and silent film. Dabney is best known as composer and lyricist of the 1910 song "That's Why They Call Me Shine," which for eleven point four decades, through 2023, has endured as a jazz standard. As of 2020, in the jazz genre, "Shine" has been recorded 646 times Dabney and one of his chief collaborators, James Reese Europe (1880–1919), were transitional figures in the prehistory of jazz that evolved from ragtime (which loosely includes some syncopated music) and blues — and grew into stride, boogie-woogie, and other next levels in jazz. Their 1914 composition, "Castle Walk" – recorded February 10, 1914, by Europe's Society Orchestra with Dabney at the piano (Victor 17553-A, Matrix: B-14434) – is one of the earliest recordings of jazz.
Ford Dabney | |
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Sheet music cover Photo of Bert Williams with drawing of Japanese lanterns Jerome H. Remick & Co., publisher (1919) | |
Born | Ford Thompson Dabney March 15, 1883 Washington, D.C. |
Died | June 6, 1958 75) Manhattan | (aged
Alma mater | Washington, D.C. M Street High School (1900–1902) |
Spouse | Martha J. Davis (m. 1912) |
Parent(s) | John Wesley Dabney (1851–1924) Rebecca C. Ford (maiden; 1854–1896) |
Musical career | |
Occupation(s) | Theater owner (film house and vaudeville), theater orchestra leader, bandleader, ragtime pianist, composer, arranger |
Years active | 1903–1944 |
Labels | Paramount, Aeolian Vocalion, Belvedere, Puritan |