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International Sweethearts of Rhythm

International Sweethearts of Rhythm - band/ensemble

This was the first racially integrated women's band and it lasted for over a decade, playing to primarily black audiences in theaters and ballrooms across the country. At the Howard Theater in Washington, D.C., the band set a new box office record of 35,000 patrons in one week of 1941.

The band was founded in 1937 at the Piney Woods Country Life School for poor and orphaned black children in Mississippi. The intent was for the group to be a profit-making enterprise to support the school. However, by 1941 the Sweethearts severed their ties with the school, moved to Virginia and recruited some seasoned professionals. One of these new members was Anna Mae Winburn. Anna Mae had been singing with and directing a professional male orchestra; however, many of the musicians were lost to the draft because of World War II.

The Sweethearts were a group of women trying to make a place in a world ruled by gender and racial prejudice. In those times, it was easier for women to play together in a racially integrated band than to perform as musicians in a band that included men. They had a relaxed way of approaching the music-their beat was different from more uptight white rhythm bands.

In order to obtain this unique rhythm, many of the all white male bands of the time used black arrangers for their music, but would not include black musicians in their performances. "Being a mixed group with different nationalities (which eventually included Mexican, White and Asian women), well, we didn't have the exposure that [other groups] had," recalls Anna Mae, "We were exposed a lot to the black people."

The Sweethearts did not book many engagements in the Deep South because they were an integrated group. The group had three or four white women who traveled with them. These ladies would paint their faces dark so the police wouldn't come and take them off the band stand or arrest them. . The Sweethearts were often labeled a novelty band (much to their dislike) because women were not expected to go into that sort of business. The ladies considered themselves equal to, if not better than most male musicians. Some well-known musicians did appreciate the Sweethearts' talent. Eddie Durham of the Count Basie band coached them, and Louis Armstrong also took a personal interest. According to Anna Mae, "They would come and stand in the wings of the Apollo Theater and listen to the band. And I could see them back there smiling when the girls would take off on their instruments." Eventually, Armstrong would even attempt to steal trumpet player Tiny Davis away from the Sweethearts by offering her about 10 times her current salary. However, Tiny did not go.

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Film Review

The Girls in the Band

Read "The Girls in the Band" reviewed by Richard J Salvucci


The Girls in the Band Collective Eye (Educational version) 2011 That there are problems of race and gender in the history of American jazz comes as no surprise. Music, and popular music (as swing was in the 1930s and 1940s), is a part of everyday life. Why should jazz be any different? Yet the issues manifest themselves in many different ways. In all my time listening to swing bands as a kid, and you could ...

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73

Radio

Riverwalk Jazz Salutes The International Sweethearts of Rhythm

Riverwalk Jazz Salutes The International Sweethearts of Rhythm

Source: Don Mopsick

In honor of National Women's History Month, Riverwalk Jazz this week presents a salute to the International Sweethearts of Rhythm, the first racially-integrated “all-girl" jazz band in the country, featuring interviews with two surviving members of the band—trombonist Helen Jones Wood; and alto saxophonist Roz Cron. The radio series is carried nationally by Public Radio International and XM/Sirius satellite radio as well as streamed on-demand from the Riverwalk Jazz website. Named by Down Beat magazine as America's #1 All-Girl Orchestra ...

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