Rating:
Genre:
Vocal Music
Release Date: 01/01/2002
Archeophone presents a third volume of the complete recordings of Afro-American
vaudeville legend
Bert Williams, immaculately remastered and arranged in chronological order. The time line represented here extends from February 13, 1919, to February 24, 1922, eight days before his death in Detroit, which occurred one week short of his 47th birthday. Born in the West Indies and raised near Los Angeles, CA,
Egbert Williams developed a two-man
vaudeville act with Kansas-born comic
George Walker beginning in 1893. Starting up in San Francisco and making their way east through Chicago, the duo of
Williams and
Walker soon enjoyed popular success in New York and London, and were among the first Afro-Americans to make phonograph recordings. After
Walker's premature death from syphilis in 1911,
Williams established himself as a solo act and soon became a mainstay in
the Ziegfeld Follies. By the time the recordings on this compilation were made,
Bert Williams was one of the wealthiest entertainers in all of show business. Note that two very popular musicians accessed
Bert Williams' material years after he had passed;
Phil Harris bolstered his own popularity with songs like
"The Darktown Poker Club" and
Louis Armstrong re-created both of
Williams'
"Elder Eatmore" sermons for
Decca Records on August 11, 1938. The written and photographic documentation provided by
Archeophone is enormously informative; insightful essays, vintage posters, publicity stills, and detailed discography and bibliography listings make this the definitive and indispensable
Bert Williams edition.
W.C. Fields supplied the best of all elegies for this remarkable entertainer: "
Bert Williams was the funniest man I ever saw, and the saddest man I ever knew."
~arwulf arwulf, All Music Guide