翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Cabanis's bunting
・ Cabanis's greenbul
・ Cabanis's spinetail
・ Cabanis's tanager
・ Cabaniss Field
・ Cabaniss Formation
・ Cabanne's Trading Post
・ Cabannes
・ Cabannes (crater)
・ Cabannes, Bouches-du-Rhône
・ Cabannina
・ Cabano
・ Cabano Formation
・ Cabanon de vacances
・ Cab Gallery
Cab Kaye
・ CAB Madeira
・ CAB Minicab
・ Cab No. 13
・ Cab Number 13
・ Cab over
・ Cab rank
・ Cab Secure Radio
・ Cab signalling
・ CAB Supercab
・ Cab unit
・ Cab-Bike
・ Cab-rank rule
・ CAB39
・ CAB39L


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Cab Kaye : ウィキペディア英語版
Cab Kaye

Nii-lante Augustus Kwamlah Quaye, better known as Cab Kaye (3 September 1921, London – 13 March 2000, Amsterdam), was an English jazz singer, pianist, band leader, entertainer, drummer, guitarist and songwriter of Ghanaian and Dutch descent. He was influenced by Billie Holiday and often with a graceful rhythmic style. He combined blues, bebop, stride and scat with the music of his African and Ghanaian musical heritage.
==Youth==
Cab Kaye, also known as Cab Quay, Cab Quaye and Kwamlah Quaye, was born on St. Giles High Street in Camden, London to a musical family. His Ghanaian great-grandfather was an asafo warrior drummer and his grandfather, Henry Quaye, was an organist for the Methodist Mission church in the former Gold Coast, now called Ghana. Cab's mother, Doris Balderson, sang in English music halls and his father, Caleb Jonas Quaye (born 1895 in Accra, Ghana), performed under the name Ernest Mope Desmond as musician, band leader, pianist and percussionist. With his blues piano style, Caleb Jonas Quaye became popular around 1920 in London and Brighton with his band "The Five Musical Dragons" in Murray's Club with, among others, Arthur Briggs, Sidney Bechet and George "Bobo" Hines.
When Cab Kaye was only four months old, his father was killed in a railway accident in Blisworth, Northamptonshire, on 27 January 1922, on his way to perform in a concert.〔(UK train accidents in which passengers were killed 1825–1924 )〕 Cab, his mother and his sister Norma moved to Portsmouth, where a life insurance policy provided temporary financial support.〔(Obituary Cab Kaye, Jazzhouse, 26 February 2008. )〕 Between the ages of nine and twelve he spent three years in hospital while a tumour in his neck was irradiated. British radiation therapy was still in its infancy, and Kaye's treatment was experimental. A permanent scar remained on the left side of his neck.
His first instruments were timpani, introduced to him by a Canadian soldier who taught him how to and use the mallets. At fourteen, Kaye began to visit nightclubs where coloured musicians were welcome, for example the "Shim Sham" and "The Nest"; he eventually won first prize in a song contest, a tour with the Billy Cotton band. During this tour, he met the African-American trombonist and tap dancer Ellis Jackson. Jackson convinced Cotton to engage Cab as an assistant, and as a singer in his band. Originally engaged as a tap dancer with Billy Cotton's show band in 1936, Cab recorded his first song "Shoe Shine Boy" under the name Cab Quay.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Cab Kaye」の詳細全文を読む



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