Belanger Park River Rouge
ON THIS DATE IN DETROIT HISTORY - DOWNTOWN PONTIAC »



Results 1 to 2 of 2
  1. #1

    Default Detroit native Herb Jeffries dies at 100 [[actor, singer)

    Kudos to Mr. Jeffries I wonder does the Charles H. Wright Museum know about this? Also, Detroit City Council should give him a posthumous shout-out..

    http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/27/ar...-100.html?_r=0

    an excerpt:
    Herb Jeffries, who sang with Duke Ellington and starred in early black westerns as a singing cowboy known as “the Bronze Buckaroo” — a nickname that evoked his malleable racial identity — died on Sunday in West Hills, Calif. He was believed to be 100.

    The cause was heart failure, said Raymond Strait, a writer who had worked on Mr. Jeffries’s autobiography with him.
    Mr. Jeffries used to say: “I’m a chameleon.” The label applied on many levels.
    Over the course of his century, he changed his name, altered his age, married five women and stretched his vocal range from near falsetto to something closer to a Bing Crosby baritone. He shifted from jazz to country and back again, and from concert stages to movie theaters to television sets and back again.
    He sang with Earl Hines and his orchestra in the early 1930s. He starred in “Harlem on the Prairie,” a black western released in 1937, and its several sequels. By 1940, he was singing with the Ellington orchestra and soon had a hit single, “Flamingo,” released in 1941, which sold more than 14 million copies. [[His name had been Herbert Jeffrey, but the credits on the record mistakenly called him Jeffries, so he renamed himself to match the typo.)

  2. #2

    Default

    What an amazing career and life he had.

    Here is his biggest hit song, with the Ellington band:



    He lived so long that he outlived almost everyone who remembered the prime of his career. I was talking to my father, who is in his late 80s, earlier today about Herb Jeffries and Dad remembered seeing him on a show in the 40s after he'd left the Ellington band.

    But Herb apparently kept performing well into his 90s. Here he is in one of a set of interviews that were taped for the occasion of his 100th birthday late last year. In this one you can hear him sing part of the theme for Ellington's "Jump for Joy"


Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Instagram
BEST ONLINE FORUM FOR
DETROIT-BASED DISCUSSION
DetroitYES Awarded BEST OF DETROIT 2015 - Detroit MetroTimes - Best Online Forum for Detroit-based Discussion 2015

ENJOY DETROITYES?


AND HAVE ADS REMOVED DETAILS »





Welcome to DetroitYES! Kindly Consider Turning Off Your Ad BlockingX
DetroitYES! is a free service that relies on revenue from ad display [regrettably] and donations. We notice that you are using an ad-blocking program that prevents us from earning revenue during your visit.
Ads are REMOVED for Members who donate to DetroitYES! [You must be logged in for ads to disappear]
DONATE HERE »
And have Ads removed.