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     "Melba Liston is one of the best jazz musicians, not just one of the 
    best women in jazz." -- Junior Mance
    
     
    Melba Liston Collection  
    1926–1999 
    
    WOMEN
    IN JAZZ SITE CONTENTS
     
      - Toshiko
        Akiyoshi
      
  Geri
        Allen
        - Andrews
          Sisters
          
- Angela
            Andrews
          
 - Lil
            Harden Armstrong
          
 - Dorothy
            Ashby
 
       - Pearl Bailey
 
        - Beverly
          Barkley
        
 - Karen
          Briggs
        
 - Ruth
          Brown
        
 - Diane
          Cameron
        
 - Betty
          Carter
        
 - Joan
          Cartwright
        
 - Kim
          Clarke
        
 - Gloria
          Coleman
        
 - Alice
          Coltrane
        
 - Dorothy
          Donegan
        
 - Ella Fitzgerald
        
 - Rita
          Graham
        
 - Jace
          Harnage
        
 - Billie Holiday
        
 - Bertha
          Hope
        
 - Shirley
          Horn
        
 - Lena
          Horne
        
 - Alberta
          Hunter
        
 - Jus'
          Cynthia
        
 - Sandra
          Kaye
        
 - Emme Kemp
          
          
- Vinnie
            
  Knight
        - Lavelle
        
 - Peggy
          Lee
        
 - Abbey
          Lincoln
        
 - Melba
          Liston
        
 - Gloria
          Lynne
 
        - Tania
          Maria
          
- Marian
            McPartland
          
 - Carmen McRae
          
 - Mabel
            Mercer
          
 - M'zuri
          
 - Sandy
            Patton
          
 - Trudy
            Pitts
          
 - Cheryl
            Porter
 
         - Shirley
          Scott
        
 - Nina Simone
        
 - Bessie
          Smith
        
 - Carol
          Sudhalter
        
 - Sarah Vaughn
        
 - Dinah
          Washington
        
 - Ethel
          Waters
 
          - Mary
            Lou Williams
 
         
    DIVA
    JOAN CARTWRIGHT 
    www.divajc.com 
      
    
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    Melba Liston
     
     was
    born on January 13, 1926, in Kansas 
    City, MO. She 
    
    made a reputation as an important jazz arranger, no small achievement in a 
    field generally dominated by men. Much of her most important work was 
    written for the pianist Randy Weston, with whom she worked for four decades 
    from the early 60s. 
     
    Weston valued Liston's contributions to his recordings and concerts 
    immensely, both for what he described as "the beauty, depth and sensitivity 
    of her arrangements" and for her ability "to adapt to any situation, whether 
    it's a chorus, or strings, or horns, or Africa."  
     
    She added creative layers of harmonic color and texture to Weston's 
    memorable themes, a combination which proved highly effective from his great 
    60s albums like High Life and Uhuru Afrika through to recent recordings like 
    Earth Birth (with Liston's string arrangements) and last year's Khepera. 
     
    She was born Melba Doretta Liston in Kansas City, but moved with her family 
    to Los Angeles in 1937, where she played in a youth bands in high school 
    before beginning her professional career working as a trombonist in a pit 
    band in 1942. She began to write arrangements from that time, and joined the 
    big band led by Gerald Wilson the following year. 
     
    She began to work with the emerging major names of the bebop scene in 
    mid-decade. She recorded with saxophonist Dexter Gordon in 1947, and was the 
    dedicatee of his tune "Mischievous Lady", and joined Dizzy Gillespie's big 
    band in New York for a time, when Wilson disbanded his orchestra on the east 
    coast after a tour. 
     
    She also toured with Billie Holiday in 1949, but decided in the early 50s 
    that the rigors and privations of the touring circuit were not for her. She 
    took a clerical job for some years, and supplemented her income by taking 
    work as an extra in Hollywood, including appearances in The Prodigal and The 
    Ten Commandments. 
     
    Gillespie invited her to re-join his big band when the State Department 
    funded tours to Europe, the Middle East and Latin America in 1956 and 1957, 
    and took what is her best known recorded trombone solo on Gillespie's tune 
    "Cool Breeze" on the album Dizzy Gillespie at Newport, recorded at the 
    Newport Jazz Festival in 1957. 
     
    She formed her own all-women quintet in 1958. She toured Europe with the 
    theatre production Free and Easy in 1959, then worked for a time in the band 
    led by the show's musical director, Quincy Jones. She worked with a variety 
    of leaders in the 60s, including vibraphonist Milt Jackson and saxophonist 
    Johnny Griffin, and began her long association with Weston. In 1973, she 
    began a six-year teaching appointment at the Jamaica School of Music, and 
    formed her own mixed band, Melba Liston and Company, after her return to the 
    USA in 1979. 
     
    She was forced to give up playing in 1985 after a stroke left her partially 
    paralyzed, but she continued to arrange music with Weston, contributing her 
    imaginative, often strikingly dramatic arrangements to a succession of his 
    albums in the 90s. She was afflicted by a further series of strokes in 
    recent years, which eventually proved fatal.  |