Singleton PalmerPopular St. Louis jazz musician and band leaderBirth: November 13, 1912 Death: March 8, 1993 Birthplace: St. Louis, Missouri Date of Interview: August 9, 1981 Interviewer: Dan Havens |
Singleton Palmer began playing trumpet in the late 1930's at Sumner High School. He soon began to play the tuba. Then, in the 1930's, he learned to play string bass. Mr. Palmer went on to perform with the Oliver Cobb Orchestra, Erskine Tate's Orchestra, Fate Marable, Dewey Jackson, and the George Hudson Orchestra. He left St. Louis in 1947 to play string bass for Count Basie's band. He returned in 1950 and started his own band, the Dixieland Six, a group that he would lead for more than forty years. This popular group performed regularly at the Opera House in Gaslight Square and on the Robert E. Lee and Goldenrod showboats.
This is the table of contents for the interview of Singleton Palmer. It is part of the National Ragtime and Jazz Archive which is located in Lovejoy Library at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville.
For a complete contents list of all musician interviews for the oral history project, please click on this link: Oral History and Research Materials.
If interested in reviewing these materials from the National Ragtime and Jazz Archive, please contact Therese Dickman, Fine Arts Librarian.
Tape # Side |
Time |
Subject |
1 a |
001-033 |
Biographical - name, family
|
1 a |
034-068 |
trumpet lessons, tuba lessons, reasons for change
|
1 a |
069-111 |
Mose Wiley's Band, personnel
|
1 a |
112-130 |
tunes played, reading charts
|
1 a |
131-151 |
pay received, types of jobs, towns played in
|
1 a |
152-174 |
taxi dances
|
1 a |
175-221 |
Best bands in St. Louis - mid - 20's
|
1 a |
222-256 |
music lessons
|
1 a |
257-278 |
marching bands, parades in St. Louis
|
1 a |
279-310 |
parents, becoming career musician, style of playing
|
1 a |
311-362 |
Oliver Cobb Band, personnel, places played, pay
|
1 a |
363-375 |
playing Coliseum with Louis Armstrong in St. Louis
|
1 a |
376-432 |
Eddie Johnson's Crackerjacks, personnel, pay places
|
1 a |
433-490 |
Travel as Erskine Tate Band, switch to bass viol
|
1 a |
491-526 |
Hawaiian Club excursion to Chicago, contact with Erskine Tate, travel
|
1 a |
527-549 |
Plantation Club, 1933, personnel, hours, pay
|
1 a |
550-569 |
Walter "Crack" Stanley, sets of music, shows at club
|
1 a |
570-579 |
Joe "Ziggy" Johnson, Plantation Club
|
1 a |
580-594 |
Erskine Tate - Travel
|
1 a |
595-622 |
String bass, Truck Parham
|
1 a |
623-630 |
types of crowds
|
1 a |
631-653 |
arranging for band, Tab Smith
|
1 a |
654-667 |
marriage
|
1 a |
668-737 |
Fats Waller fronts band, tour, Waller's style |
1 b |
004-027 |
Cincinnati; Crystal Ballroom
|
1 b |
028-039 |
Chicago excursion
|
1 b |
040-051 |
Joined Dewey Jackson's band, 1937
|
1 b |
052-069 |
Playing on the boat with Eddie Johnson; Idlewild
|
1 b |
070-102 |
Dewey Jackson Band personnel
|
1 b |
103-114 |
Streckfuss Boat "St. Paul" with Jackson
|
1 b |
115-143 |
Change from Johnson to Jackson
|
1 b |
144-187 |
Changes in Jackson band; big band on the "St. Paul"
|
1 b |
188-263 |
Tunes played; sets; types of crowds
|
1 b |
264-302 |
Unions in St. Louis; subsidiary 197
|
1 b |
303-332 |
Fate Marable Band; personnel
|
1 b |
333-345 |
Pay scales - black and white
|
1 b |
346-379 |
After - hours clubs
|
1 b |
380-424 |
Out-of-town bands in St. Louis; jamming
|
1 b |
425-440 |
Best white bands and musicians
|
1 b |
441-467 |
Black vaudeville; out-of-town musicians
|
1 b |
468-529 |
George Hudson Band; personnel; arrangements
|
1 b |
530-615 |
Travel with Hudson Band; eastern theater circuit; "Round the Horn; Duke Ellington sits in; Savoy Theater
|
1 b |
616-633 |
Castle Farms, Cincinnati; Eddie Johnson
|
1 b |
634-733 |
Joining Count Basie Band 1947; personnel
|
1 b |
734-743 |
Pay with Basie |
2 a |
008-119 |
Basie Band; theater dates; artists played with
|
2 a |
120-147 |
Universal Dance Hall; resignation from Basie Band
|
2 a |
148-164 |
Palmer's daughter
|
2 a |
165-220 |
Working with Basie Band; tunes; Fats Waller; Freddy Greene
|
2 a |
221-256 |
Recording with band
|
2 a |
257-350 |
Anecdotes from Basie band; recording
|
2 a |
351-363 |
Jimmy Rushing; other musicians in band
|
2 a |
364-384 |
Paul Gonsalves
|
2 a |
385-402 |
Coleman Hawkins; "Body and Soul"
|
2 a |
403-442 |
Cities where Basie Band played
|
2 a |
443-452 |
Return to St. Louis; Scullins Steel job
|
2 a |
453-482 |
Regal Theater, Chicago; Hudson Band during War
|
2 a |
483-512 |
First version of Dixieland Six; May 1950; personnel
|
2 a |
513-533 |
Universal Dance Hall; personnel; Sunday sessions
|
2 a |
534-560 |
Formation of Dixieland Six; Forest Park Hotel sudden dismissal - no " Mixed Bands"
|
2 a |
561-574 |
First recording with own band
|
2 a |
575-584 |
Jobs after Forest Park Hotel; Top Hat Club; Windemere Club; The Spa
|
2 a |
585-598 |
Dewey Jackson leaves band; Vertna Saunders comes on
|
2 a |
599-630 |
Palladium Lounge; East St. Louis
|
2 a |
631-676 |
Racial prejudice; integration; effects of
|
2 a |
677-697 |
Success of Palmer's Band
|
2 a |
698-714 |
Gaslight Square; Opera House 1958; Saunders leaves, Bill Martin takes place
|
2 a |
715-743 |
Personnel changes - Al Guichard, Norman Mason, Dave Harris, Kimball Dial |
2 b |
007-105 |
Clarinet players with band
|
2 b |
106-143 |
Other musicians with Palmer's band
|
2 b |
144-173 |
Materials, tunes
|
2 b |
174-190 |
Recording
|
2 b |
191-231 |
Best unit of band - Bill Martin, Leon King, Norman Mason, Ben Thigpen
|
2 b |
232-258 |
Changes Palmer would make in his life
|
2 b |
259-314 |
Gaslight Square - demise of; other bands playing there
|
2 b |
315-325 |
Phyllis Diller Show
|
2 b |
326-349 |
Delmar Blvd. clubs in 1950's; musicians heard there
|
2 b |
350-394 |
Television work
|
2 b |
395-436 |
St. Louis Jazz Club; Ragtime Festival - lack of local musicians
|
2 b |
437-457 |
Other jobs held
|
2 b |
458-491 |
Claude Abney; Changes in life; music style
|
2 b |
492-542 |
Tuba Symposium, Bloomington, Ind.
|
2 b |
543-577 |
Influences on playing; other musicians
|
2 b |
578-614 |
Own style of playing; what makes a jazz musician
|
2 b |
615-703 |
Milt Hinton; other bass players and young bass men
|
2 b |
704-731 |
Influences on musicians
|
2 b |
732-745 |
Best bands ever heard - Basie, Ellington |
E-mail comments and inquiries about the National Ragtime and Jazz Archive to Therese Dickman at tdickma@siue.edu or call 618-650-2695.