Market1929 in music
Company Profile

1929 in music

This is a list of notable events in music that took place in the year 1929.

Specific locations
Specific genres
Events
January 1 – Pianist and composer Abram Chasins makes his professional debut playing his own piano concerto with the Philadelphia Orchestra. • January 11Karol Szymanowski's Stabat Mater is premiered. • January 22Gordon Jacob's First String Quartet is premiered by the Spencer Dyke Quartet in London. • February 4 – First recording of George Gershwin's An American in Paris, by Nathaniel Shilkret and the Victor Symphony Orchestra • February 19 – UK première of Béla Bartók's still-unpublished Third String Quartet, by The Hungarian String Quartet at the Wigmore Hall, London. • April 10Nicholas Laucella joins with Giuseppe De Luca, Giulio Setti and the Metropolitan Opera in a recording of I gioielli della Madonna Serenata for RCA Victor. • April 29Sergei Prokofiev's opera The Gambler premiers in Brussels, based on the story of the same name by Fyodor Dostoevsky. • May 17Sergei Prokofiev's Symphony No. 3 is premiered in Paris. • May 21 • Season opening of Sergei Diaghilev's Ballets Russes, in Paris, with the first performances of Igor Stravinsky's Renard and Sergei Prokofiev's Le Fils prodigue. • First recording date for a commercially issued RCA Victor rpm LP: Victor Salon Suite No. 1 arranged and directed by Nathaniel ShilkretMay 22Jimmy Campbell and Reg Connelly establish music publishing house Campbell, Connelly & Co, Ltd. • June 13Eugene Goosens conducts the UK premieres of Igor Stravinsky's Concerto for Piano and Wind Instruments, with the composer as soloist, and of Ottorino Respighi's Feste Romane, at the Queen's Hall, London. • June 14Charley Patton makes the first recording of his career. • June 27 – First London performances of two ballets by Igor Stravinsky, Apollon musagète and Le Baiser de la fée, conducted by the composer at the Kingsway Hall and broadcast on the wireless. • September 11 – Louis Armstrong records his hit song "When You're Smiling". • October 14 – the London Symphony Orchestra opens its winter season, conducted by Alfred Coates, in a programme including Bach's Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor orchestrated by Alexander Goedicke, Respighi's Roman Festivals, Tchaikovsky's First Piano Concerto (with soloist Shura Cherkassky), and Brahms's Fourth Symphony. • December 31Guy Lombardo plays "Auld Lang Syne" for the first time. • December – Release in the United States of short film The Singing Brakeman starring country singer Jimmie Rodgers. • The Musashino Academia Musicae is founded in Tokyo, Japan. • Edison Records closes, ending production of Diamond Discs and Blue Amberols. • Bessie Smith shoots a short film for "St Louis Blues", which would become her only known film appearance. • T-Bone Walker's recording career begins with release of the single 78 "Wichita Falls Blues"/"Trinity River Blues," on Columbia Records. This was made in 1929 under the name Oak Cliff T-Bone. • Memphis Minnie makes the first recordings of her career in 1929 with Columbia Records. These were six shellac record sides recorded with Johnny Shines; the first of which was the song "Bumble Bee". • Amédé Ardoin makes his first zydeco record in Louisiana in 1929; an event often credited as the first recording made by a Creole musician (although one scholar notes that it is possible but not certain that the Creole fiddle player Douglas Bellard made an earlier recording). ==Published popular music==
Published popular music
• "Ain't Misbehavin'" w. Andy Razaf m. Thomas "Fats" Waller & Harry Brooks • "Am I Blue?" w. Grant Clarke m. Harry Akst • "Any Old Time" w.m. Jimmie Rodgers • "Around The Corner" w. Gus Kahn m. Art Kassel • "The Banjo (That Man Joe Plays)" w.m. Cole Porter • "Barnacle Bill The Sailor" w.m. Carson Robison & Frank Luther • "Big City Blues" w. Sidney D. Mitchell m. Archie Gottler & Con Conrad • "Black and Blue" w. Andy Razaf m. Thomas "Fats" Waller • "Blue, Turning Grey Over You" w. Andy Razaf m. Thomas "Fats" Waller • "Broadway Melody" w. Arthur Freed m. Nacio Herb Brown • "Can Broadway Do Without Me?" w.m. Jimmy Durante • "Can't We Be Friends?" w. Paul James m. Kay Swift • "Chant Of The Jungle" w. Arthur Freed m. Nacio Herb Brown. Introduced by Joan Crawford in the film Untamed. • "Corrine, Corrina" w. J. Mayo Williams & Bo Chatman • "Cross Your Fingers" w. Arthur Swanstrom & Benny Davis m. J. Fred Coots • "Cryin' For The Carolines" w. Sam M. Lewis & Joe Young m. Harry Warren • "Daddy Won't You Please Come Home?" w.m. Sam Coslow • "Dear Little Cafe" w.m. Noël Coward • "Deep Night" w. Rudy Vallee m. Charlie Henderson • "Do Something" w. Bud Green m. Sam H. Stept • "Do What You Do" w. Ira Gershwin & Gus Kahn m. George Gershwin • "Don't Ever Leave Me" w. Oscar Hammerstein II m. Jerome Kern • "Dream Lover" w. Clifford Grey m. Victor Schertzinger • "Every Little Moment" w.m. Vivian Ellis • "Feeling Sentimental" w. Ira Gershwin m. George Gershwin • "Find Me A Primitive Man" w.m. Cole Porter • "Gee Baby, Ain't I Good To You?" w. Andy Razaf & Don Redman m. Don Redman • "Great Day!" w. Billy Rose & Edward Eliscu m. Vincent Youmans • "Happy Days Are Here Again" w. Jack Yellen m. Milton Ager • "Have A Little Faith In Me" w. Sam M. Lewis & Joe Young m. Harry Warren • "Here Am I" w. Oscar Hammerstein II m. Jerome Kern • "He's A Good Man To Have Around" w. Jack Yellen m. Milton Ager • "He's So Unusual" w.m. Al Sherman, Al Lewis and Abner Silver • "High And Low" w. Howard Dietz m. Arthur Schwartz • "Honeysuckle Rose" w. Andy Razaf m. Thomas "Fats" Waller • "How Am I To Know?" w. Dorothy Parker m. Jack King • "I Got A Code In My Dose" w.m. Arthur Fields, Fred Hall & Billy Rose • "I Guess I'll Have To Change My Plan" w. Howard Dietz m. Arthur Schwartz. Introduced by Clifton Webb in the revue The Little Show • "I Have To Have You" Leo Robin, Richard A. Whiting • "I Lift Up My Finger" w.m. Leslie Sarony • "I May Be Wrong" w. Harry Ruskin m. Henry Sullivan. Introduced in the revue ''John Murray Anderson's Almanac'' by Trixie Friganza and Jimmie Savo. • "If I Can't Have You" w. Al Bryan m. George W. Meyer • "If I Had A Talking Picture Of You" w. B. G. De Sylva & Lew Brown m. Ray Henderson • "If Love Were All" w.m. Noël Coward • "I'll Always Be In Love With You" w. Herman Ruby, Bud Green, & Sam H. Stept m. Sam H. Stept • "I'll See You Again" w.m. Noël Coward • "I'll Still Go On Wanting You" w.m. Bernie Grossman • "I'm A Dreamer, Aren't We All?" w. B. G. De Sylva & Lew Brown m. Ray Henderson • "I'm A Gigolo" w.m. Cole Porter • "I'm In Seventh Heaven" w.m. Al Jolson, B. G. De Sylva, Lew Brown & Ray Henderson • "I'm Just A Vagabond Lover" w.m. Rudy Vallee & Leon Zimmerman • "I've Got A Feeling I'm Falling" w. Billy Rose m. Fats Waller & Harry Link • "Just You, Just Me" w. Raymond Klages m. Jesse Greer. Introduced in the film Marianne by Lawrence Gray and reprised by Marion Davies and Cliff Edwards. • "Kansas City Kitty" w. Edgar Leslie m. Walter Donaldson • "Lady Divine" w.m. Nathaniel Shilkret and Richard Kountz • "Let Me Sing And I'm Happy" w.m. Irving Berlin • "Little By Little" w.m. Walter O'Keefe & Robert Emmet Dolan. Introduced by Sally O'Neil and Eddie Quillan in the film The Sophomore • "The Little Things You Do" w. Lorenz Hart m. Richard Rodgers • "Liza" w. Gus Kahn & Ira Gershwin m. George Gershwin. Introduced by Nick Lucas in the musical Show Girl • "Looking At You" w.m. Cole Porter. Introduced by Jessie Matthews and Dave Fitzgibbon in the musical Wake Up and Dream • "Louise" w. Leo Robin m. Richard A. Whiting. Introduced by Maurice Chevalier in the film Innocents of Paris • "Lovable And Sweet" w. Sidney Clare m. Oscar Levant. Introduced by Jack Oakie, John Harron and Ned Sparks in the film Street Girl • "Love, Your Magic Spell Is Everywhere" w. Elsie Janis m. Edmund Goulding • "March Of The Grenadiers" w. Clifford Grey m. Victor Schertzinger Introduced by Jeanette MacDonald in the film The Love Parade • "Maybe Who Knows" John Tucker, Joe Schuster, Ruth Etting • "Mean to Me" w. Roy Turk m. Fred E. Ahlert • "The Minor Drag" m. Thomas "Fats" Waller • "Moanin' Low" w. Howard Dietz m. Ralph Rainger. Introduced by Libby Holman in the revue The Little Show • "More Than You Know" w. Edward Eliscu & Billy Rose m. Vincent Youmans. Introduced by Mayo Methot in the musical Great Day • "My Ideal" w. Leo Robin m. Richard A. Whiting & Newell Chase. Introduced by Maurice Chevalier in the film Playboy of Paris • "My Kinda Love" w. Jo Trent m. Louis Alter • "My Love Parade" w. Clifford Grey m. Victor Schertzinger • "My Mother's Eyes" w. L. Wolfe Gilbert m. Abel Baer • "My Sin" w. B. G. De Sylva & Lew Brown m. Ray Henderson • "Painting the Clouds with Sunshine" w. Al Dubin m. Joe Burke. Introduced by Nick Lucas in the film Gold Diggers of Broadway. • "Paris, Stay the Same" w. Clifford Grey m. Victor Schertzinger • "Piccolo Pete" w.m. Phil Baxter • "Puttin' on the Ritz" w.m. Irving Berlin • "Raisin' the Roof" w. Dorothy Fields m. Jimmy McHugh • "Reaching For Someone" w. Edgar Leslie m. Walter Donaldson • "Rock Island Line" w.m. Clarence Wilson (written) • "Rockin' Chair" w.m. Hoagy Carmichael • "Romance" w. Edgar Leslie m. Walter Donaldson • "Satisfied!" w. Irving Caesar m. Cliff Friend • "Serenade of Love" by Irving Caesar • "Seventh Heaven" w. Sidney D. Mitchell m. Lew Pollack • "She's Such A Comfort To Me" w. Douglas Furber, Max Lief, Nathaniel Lief & Donovan Parsons m. Arthur Schwartz • "She's Wonderful" w. Gus Kahn m. Walter Donaldson • "A Ship Without A Sail" w. Lorenz Hart m. Richard Rodgers. Introduced by Jack Whiting in the musical Heads Up!. Performed in the film version by Charles "Buddy" Rogers. • "Should I?" w. Arthur Freed m. Nacio Herb Brown • "Canto Siboney" w. Dolly Morse m. Ernesto Lecuona • "Singin' in the Bathtub" w. Herb Magidson & Ned Washington m. Michael H. Cleary • "Singin' in the Rain" w. Arthur Freed m. Nacio Herb Brown • "So The Bluebirds and the Blackbirds Got Together" w. Billy Moll m. Harry Barris • "Spread A Little Happiness" w.m. Vivian Ellis, Richard Myers & Greatrex Newman • "Star Dust" w. Mitchell Parish m. Hoagy Carmichael Music 1927. • "Sunny Side Up" w. B. G. De Sylva & Lew Brown m. Ray Henderson • "Too Wonderful For Words" w.m. Dave Stamper • "Thank Your Father" w. B. G. De Sylva & Lew Brown m. Ray Henderson • "Thinking of You" w. Bert Kalmar m. Harry Ruby • "True Blue Lou" w.m. Sam Coslow, Leo Robin & Richard A. Whiting • "Turn on the Heat" w. B. G. DeSylva & Lew Brown m. Ray Henderson. Introduced by Sharon Lynn and Frank Richardson in the film Sunny Side Up • "Wait 'Til You See Ma Cherie" w. Leo Robin m. Richard A. Whiting • "Waiting At The End Of The Road" w.m. Irving Berlin • "Wake Up And Dream" w.m. Cole Porter • "Walk Right In" Cannon, Woods, Darling, Suanoe • "Wedding Bells Are Breaking Up That Old Gang Of Mine" w. Irving Kahal & Willie Raskin m. Sammy Fain • "The Wedding Of The Painted Doll" w. Arthur Freed m. Nacio Herb Brown • "Weary River" w. Grant Clarke m. Louis Silvers. Introduced by Johnny Murray in the film Weary River • "What Is This Thing Called Love?" w.m. Cole Porter. Introduced by Elsie Carlisle in the musical Wake Up and Dream • "Why Can't I?" w. Lorenz Hart m. Richard Rodgers • "Why Do You Suppose?" w. Lorenz Hart m. Richard Rodgers • "Why Was I Born?" w. Oscar Hammerstein II m. Jerome Kern • "With A Song in My Heart" w. Lorenz Hart m. Richard Rodgers • "Without A Song" w. Edward Eliscu & Billy Rose m. Vincent Youmans • "You Do Something To Me" w.m. Cole Porter. Introduced by William Gaxton in the musical Fifty Million Frenchmen • "You Were Meant For Me" w. Arthur Freed m. Nacio Herb Brown • "Yours Sincerely" w. Lorenz Hart m. Richard Rodgers • "You've Got That Thing" w.m. Cole Porter • "Zigeuner" w.m. Noël Coward ==Top popular recordings 1929==
Top popular recordings 1929
The following songs achieved the highest positions in Joel Whitburn's Pop Memories 1890-1954 and record sales reported on the "Discography of American Historical Recordings" website during 1929: Numerical rankings are approximate, they are only used as a frame of reference. ===1929 Harlem Hit Parade + Blues=== (created with Popular Music Chart Entries and Blues records) ==Classical music==
Opera
Marc BlitzsteinTriple-Sec (Philadelphia, May 9) • Hans Chemin-PetitDer gefangene Vogel (Duisburg, February 21) • Umberto GiordanoIl re (La Scala, January 12) • Paul HindemithNeues vom Tage (Kroll Opera House, Berlin, June 8) • Sergei ProkofievThe Gambler (La Monnaie, Brussels, April 29) • Arnold SchoenbergVon heute auf morgen (completed January 1, 1929; first performance February 1, 1930) • Tito SchipaLa Principessa Liana (Teatro Adriano, Rome, June 22) • Ralph Vaughan WilliamsSir John in Love (Royal College of Music, London, March 21) ==Film==
Musical theater
Bitter Sweet (Noël Coward) • London production opened at His Majesty's Theatre on July 12 and ran for 673 performances • Broadway production opened at the Ziegfeld Theatre on November 5 and transferred to the Shubert Theatre on February 17, 1930, for a total run of 159 performances • Boom Boom Broadway production opened at the Casino Theatre on January 28 and ran for 72 performances • Dear Love opened at the Palace Theatre on November 14 and ran for 132 performances • Die Dreigroschenoper Vienna production • Fifty Million Frenchmen Broadway production opened at the Lyric Theatre on November 27 and ran for 254 performances • Follow Thru Broadway production opened at the 46th Street Theatre on January 9 and ran for 401 performances • Follow Through London production opened at the Dominion Theatre on October 3 and ran for 148 performances • Heads Up! Broadway production opened at the Alvin Theatre on November 11 and ran for 144 performances • Hold Everything London production opened at the Palace Theatre on June 12 and ran for 173 performances • Hot Chocolates Broadway revue opened at the Hudson Theatre on June 20 and ran for 219 performances • The House That Jack Built London revue opened at the Adelphi Theatre on November 8 and ran for 270 performances • Das Land des Lächelns (Franz Lehár) – Berlin production opened at the Metropol Theater on October 10 • The Little Show Broadway revue opened at the Music Box Theatre on April 30 and ran for 321 performances • Love Lies London production opened at the Gaiety Theatre on March 20 and ran for 347 performances • Mr. Cinders London production opened at the Adelphi Theatre on February 11 and ran for 528 performances • Show Boat (Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II) – Paris production • Spring Is Here (Music: Richard Rodgers Lyrics: Lorenz Hart Book: Owen Davis) Broadway production opened at the Alvin Theatre on March 11 and ran for 104 performances • Toad of Toad Hall London production opened at the Lyric Theatre on December 17 • Top Speed Broadway production opened at Chanin's 46th Street Theatre on December 25 and transferred to the Royale Theatre on March 10, 1930, for a total run of 104 performances • Wake Up and Dream (Music and Lyrics: Cole Porter) • London revue opened at the Pavilion on March 27 and ran for 263 performances • Broadway revue opened at the Selwyn Theatre on December 30 and ran for 136 performances ==Musical films==
[[Musical film]]s
Applause starring Helen Morgan. Directed by Rouben Mamoulian. • The Battle of Paris starring Gertrude Lawrence, Charles Ruggles, Walter Petrie, Gladys DuBois and Arthur Treacher. Directed by Robert Flory. • Broadway starring Glenn Tryon, Merna Kennedy, Evelyn Brent and Otis Harlan. Directed by Paul Fejos. • The Broadway MelodyThe CocoanutsThe Desert Song starring John Boles, Carlotta King, Louise Fazenda and Myrna Loy. Directed by Roy Del Ruth. • Glad Rag DollGlorifying the American Girl starring Mary Eaton and Dan Healy and featuring Eddie Cantor, Helen Morgan and Rudy Vallee. • Gold Diggers of BroadwayHappy Days starring Charles E. Evans and Marjorie White and featuring Janet Gaynor and Charles FarrellHollywood Revue of 1929Honky Tonk starring Sophie TuckerHot for Paris starring Victor McLaglen, Fifi D'Orsay and El Brendel. Directed by Raoul Walsh. • The Love Parade starring Maurice Chevalier, Jeanette MacDonald, Lupino Lane and Lillian RothMarianne starring Marion Davies, Lawrence Gray and Cliff EdwardsOn with the Show! starring Arthur Lake, Betty Compson and Joe E. Brown, and featuring Ethel WatersParis released November 7 starring Irène Bordoni, Jack Buchanan and Zasu Pitts. • Pointed Heels starring William Powell, Helen Kane and Fay Wray. Directed by A. Edward Sutherland. • Rio Rita starring Bebe Daniels and John BolesSally starring Marilyn Miller, Alexander Gray and Joe E. BrownShow BoatSo Long Letty starring Charlotte GreenwoodSong of Love starring Belle Baker, Ralph Graves and Eunice QuedensSunny Side Up starring Janet Gaynor, Charles Farrell and Marjorie WhiteTanned Legs starring Ann Pennington, June Clyde, Arthur Lake, Dorothy Revier and Sally Blane. Directed by Marshall Neilan. • The Vagabond Lover starring Rudy Vallee, Sally Blane and Marie Dressler. Directed by Marshall Neilan. • Why Leave Home? starring Sue Carol, Nick Stuart, Dixie Lee and Ilka Chase. Directed by Raymond Cannon. • Words and Music starring Lois Moran, Helen Twelvetrees and Tom Patricola. Directed by James Tinling. ==Births==
Births
January 3Ernst Mahle, Brazilian composer and conductor • January 6Wilbert Harrison, American singer (died 1994) • January 15Lord Woodbine (Harold Adolphus Phillips), Trinidadian calypsonian (died 2000) • Queen Ida, Louisiana Creole accordionist • January 22Petr Eben, Czech composer (died 2007) • January 25Violeta Hemsy de Gainza, Argentine pianist and music teacher (died 2023) • January 28 – Mr Acker Bilk, English jazz clarinetist (died 2014) • February 4Stanley Drucker, American clarinetist (died 2022) • February 10Jerry Goldsmith, composer for film and television (died 2004) • March 4Bernard Haitink, violinist and conductor (died 2021) • March 8Ardis Krainik, operatic mezzo-soprano and general director of the Lyric Opera of Chicago (died 1997) • March 25Cecil Taylor, free jazz pianist (died 2018) • March 26Charles Dumont, singer-songwriter (died 2024) • April 1Jane Powell, singer and actress (died 2021) • April 5Joe Meek, UK record producer (died 1967) • April 6André Previn, pianist and conductor (died 2019) • April 8Jacques Brel, Belgian singer-songwriter (died 1978) • April 16Roy Hamilton, American singer (died 1969) • April 17James Last, German bandleader (died 2015) • April 29Halina Łukomska, soprano (died 2016) • Peter Sculthorpe, composer (died 2014) • April Stevens, singer (died 2023) • May 1Sonny James, country singer-songwriter (died 2016) • May 2Link Wray, American guitarist (died 2005) • May 3Denise Lor, singer (died 2015) • May 11Fernand Lindsay, Canadian organist and educator (died 2009) • May 16Betty Carter, jazz singer (died 1998) • May 25Beverly Sills, operatic soprano (died 2007) • June 2Jimmy Bryant, singer, arranger and composer (died 2022) • June 6Don Hassler, American saxophonist and composer (died 2013) • June 9Johnny Ace, R&B singer (died 1954) • June 23June Carter Cash, singer-songwriter, wife of Johnny Cash (died 2003) • June 26June Bronhill, operatic soprano (died 2005) • Josima Feldschuh, Polish pianist and composer of Jewish origin (died 1943) • June 27Jarmila Šuláková, folk singer (died 2017) • June 30Othmar Mága, German conductor (died 2020) • July 3Pedro Iturralde, composer (died 2020) • July 9Lee Hazlewood, American singer-songwriter and record producer (died 2007) • Jesse McReynolds, American singer and mandolin player (Jim & Jesse) • July 15Charles Anthony, American tenor (died 2012) • Francis Bebey, Cameroonian-French guitarist (died 2001) • July 18Screamin' Jay Hawkins, singer (died 2000) • August 4Vellore G. Ramabhadran, Mridangam performer from Tamil Nadu, India (died 2012) • August 12Buck Owens, singer and guitarist (died 2006) • August 16Bill Evans, jazz pianist (died 1980) • August 21William Bradley Strickland, composer and music educator (died 1990) • August 24 – William Winfield, doo-wop singer (The Harptones) • September 8Christoph von Dohnányi, conductor (died 2025) • September 13Nicolai Ghiaurov, operatic bass (died 2004) • September 28Lata Mangeshkar, playback singer (died 2022) • October 2Kenneth Leighton, composer (died 1998) • October 12Nappy Brown, blues singer (died 2008) • October 24George Crumb, composer (died 2022) • October 26Neal Matthews Jr., (The Jordanaires) (died 2000) • November 7Benny Andersen, Danish author, poet and pianist (died 2018) • November 8Bert Berns, songwriter record producer (died 1967) • November 10Marilyn Bergman, songwriter (died 2022) • November 11LaVern Baker, R&B singer (died 1997) • November 12Toshiko Akiyoshi, jazz pianist • November 15Joe Hinton, American soul singer (died 1968) • November 18Gianna D'Angelo, American soprano and educator (died 2013) • November 24Eileen Barton, singer (died 2006) • November 26Slavko Avsenik, composer, musician and accordionist (died 2015) • November 28Berry Gordy Jr., record producer, founder of the Tamla Motown label • November 30Dick Clark, host of American Bandstand (died 2012) • December 4Wilhelm Georg Berger, composer (died 1993) • December 6Nikolaus Harnoncourt, conductor (died 2016) • December 23Chet Baker, jazz trumpeter and singer (died 1988) • December 25 • Bill Horton, doo-wop singer (The Silhouettes) (died 1995) • Chris Kenner, R&B singer-songwriter (died 1976) • December 26Régine Zylberberg, discothèque pioneer (died 2022) • December 27Gyula Kovács, Hungarian drummer (died 1992) ==Deaths==
Deaths
January 11Elfrida Andrée, organist, composer and conductor (born 1841) • January 22Adolph Brodsky, violinist (born 1851) • January 24Jacques Bouhy, baritone opera singer (born 1848) • January 30La Goulue, can-can dancer (born 1866) • February 24André Messager, conductor and composer (born 1853) • March 15Pinetop Smith, jazz pianist (born 1904) (shot, during a fight in a dance hall) • April 3Sophus Hagen, composer and music publisher (born 1842) • April 4Édouard Schuré, poet and music critic (born 1841) • April 12Harry Liston, music hall performer and composer (born 1843) • April 15Antonio Smareglia, opera composer (born 1854) • April 30Birger Sjöberg, poet and songwriter (born 1885) • May 17Lilli Lehmann, operatic soprano (born 1848) • June 2Don Murray, jazz clarinettist (born 1894) (car accident) • June 4Harry Frazee, producer of Broadway musicals (born 1881) • July 3Dustin Farnum, singer, dancer and actor (born 1874) • August 3Emile Berliner, inventor of the gramophone (born 1851) • August 19Sergei Diaghilev, ballet impresario (born 1872) • Chris Kelly, jazz musician (born c. 1890) • Meta Seinemeyer, operatic soprano (born 1894) • August 22Lucy Broadwood, folk song collector and researcher (born 1858) • September 4Frederick Freeman Proctor, vaudeville impresario (born 1851) • September 7Frederic Weatherly, songwriter (born 1848) • October 3Jeanne Eagels, Ziegfeld girl and actress (born 1894) • October 6Mikhail Ivanovich Mikhaylov, operatic tenor (born 1858) • October 14Henri Berger, composer and royal bandmaster of Hawaii (born 1844) • October 17Ada Crossley, singer (born 1874) • October 26Swan Hennessy, composer (born 1866) • October 27Alfred Maria Willner, composer and librettist (born 1859) • December 19Blind Lemon Jefferson, blues musician (born 1893) • December 28Hans Kreissig, pianist and conductor (born 1856) • date unknownAntonio Chacón, flamenco singer (born 1869) • Carl Herman Unthan, disabled violinist (born 1848) ==References==
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