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Known to her fans simply as Ella, Ella Fitzgerald
was one of the single most influential American singers of the twentieth
century. Through the course of her more than sixty-year-long career,
Fitzgerald made hundreds of recordings and won no less than fourteen
Grammy awards. Her simple and direct singing style was popular with
audiences all over the world, and Fitzgerald is often credited with
gaining countless new fans for jazz music with her performances and
recordings of standards from the 1930s and 1940s.
Though she was born in Newport News, Virginia, Fitzgeralds family
moved to New York when she was a child and it was there that she began
her career. In 1935, when she was sixteen, Fitzgerald won a talent contest
at Harlems famous Apollo Theater. She gained the attention of
New York jazz musicians in the audience, including bandleader Chick
Webb. He invited Fitzgerald to audition with his band when they played
a show in New Haven, Connecticut. She sang with Webbs band as
the featured singer for several years and, when he died in 1939, she
took over as bandleader.
After years of performing and recording, Fitzgerald made her famous
songbook recordings. These albums remain among the most
influential popular records in American music. Accompanied by the best
orchestras of the period, Fitzgerald sang many of the great compositions
of George and Ira Gershwin, Cole Porter, Duke Ellington, Richard Rodgers
and Lorenzo Hart, Irving Berlin, Johnny Mercer, and others. These records
earned Fitzgerald a larger popular audience and, as they are regularly
reissued, they continue to win new fans for her music.
Fitzgerald was known for her clarity of voice and her perfect pitch.
According to many, it was perfect pitch that enabled her to successfully
perform the scat singingthe singing of nonsense words
and syllables to embellish a melodyfor which she became famous.
Fitzgerald was also known as a singer who could convey rhythm as well
as meaning through song lyrics. She generally preferred to sing more
upbeat songs, and this preference suited her performance style. Her
audiences were charmed by her tendency to forget song lyrics and replace
them with made up, comic substitutions.
In contrast to the high life of many of her fellow singers, Fitzgerald
was deeply shy and she lived a quiet life. She was plagued by self-doubt,
and in spite of her great achievements, she never took her success for
granted. As she aged, her voice lost some of its former clarity and
resonance; nevertheless, Fitzgerald continued to tour until poor health
prevented her from performing. A few years before her death in the 1990s,
Fitzgerald had both legs amputated below the knee as a result of complications
from diabetes.
Often called The First Lady of Song, Ella Fitzgerald performed and recorded
with the finest jazz performers of all time, including Benny Goodman,
Count Bassie, Dizzy Gillespie, and Teddy Wilson. Many of her most famous
recordings, including Lady Be Good, How High the Moon,
and A Tisket A Tasket, remain popular today, decades after
she first recorded them. She was the recipient of many awards, honorary
degrees, and the National Medal of Arts. The Ella Fitzgerald School
of the Performing Arts at the University of Maryland was named in honor
of her tremendous contribution to American popular music.
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