DOROTHY DONEGAN (The greatest pianist you never heard) Jazz History #27

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  • Опубликовано: 11 янв 2025

Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @robertlopez8288
    @robertlopez8288 Год назад +1621

    I was Dorothy's piano tuner in the 1990's in Los Angeles. She told me she would practice 8 hours per day. I'd never seen a piano with more wear and tear. She was amazing and a kind and gentle soul.

    • @mortalclown3812
      @mortalclown3812 Год назад +59

      Rest in paradise, Dorothy.

    • @amusicment4829
      @amusicment4829 Год назад +19

      !!❤

    • @fifthbusiness1678
      @fifthbusiness1678 Год назад +11

      I’m sorry, but that is very hard to believe. RUclips.

    • @mxfxdlg
      @mxfxdlg Год назад +14

      This may sound like an odd question but I am being sincere. Do you remember the brand of piano she had?

    • @ljiljanabrkic-tasic7448
      @ljiljanabrkic-tasic7448 Год назад +9

      ⁠how beautiful and fresh sound

  • @LovelyNYC7
    @LovelyNYC7 Год назад +372

    Dorthy Donegan was my friend! I met her when I was just 21 years old. I was a radio personality for KGFJ radio in LA. She was a guest on my syndicated show “Darcel in Hollywood!” I kept in touch with her and when I moved to NYC to go on the air at WWRL, Dorthy was playing in the Lounge in a hotel in Mid-town Manhattan (I believe it was the Sheraton.) I am also a singer & she invited me to sit in with her & sing! I sang, “A Song for You.” I remember her with fondness! She was very kind to me & gave me some solid advice regarding the music industry. It was a joy finding this video here on RUclips! A side note; I was born & raised in Buffalo, NY. My mother was a fabulous cook & had a greasy-spoon restaurant before I came along. Her claim to fame (she would tell me when I was just a kid) “ Cab Calloway used to love my food !” I’m sure he probably played at the “Colored Musician’s Club!” I’ve moved back home to Buffalo and live near this historic club! I sang there myself in 2018!

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +19

      Glad this video brought back lovely memories--thanks for sharing!

    • @tonymckinney1355
      @tonymckinney1355 Год назад +5

      Cab was born in Rochester NY pretty close to Buffalo.

    • @theresa9055
      @theresa9055 Год назад +8

      Wonderful experience! Thanks for sharing!

    • @geekcollage
      @geekcollage Год назад +2

      That is so awesome! Do you still perform?

    • @paulflute
      @paulflute Год назад +2

      brillaint background to a great vid.. thank you

  • @7stringjazz1
    @7stringjazz1 Год назад +504

    Damn. yet another hidden figure in American history. Thx for unloading. She deserves a wider appreciation.

  • @bettyriley7295
    @bettyriley7295 Год назад +323

    There are a few jazz greats on the piano that stand above all the rest. Dorothy is among them. She is without a doubt one of the greatest jazz pianists that ever lived.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +15

      Thus the title. Thanks for the comment!

    • @goodchessactor
      @goodchessactor Год назад +2

      Towards the end of the video she pulls a Maurice Rocco!

    • @CHIEF_420
      @CHIEF_420 Год назад +1

      🇺🇲⌚️

  • @FreshAirRules
    @FreshAirRules Год назад +474

    Well THAT was a treasure. I have never heard Boogie Woogie played with such playful authority and creativity. This was a revelation. And to think, because of her background billions of people never had a chance to hear her utter mastery of the keyboard Because of the cowardice of producers afraid to break out of their expected mold. When we suppress talent we all lose.

  • @robertlopez8288
    @robertlopez8288 Год назад +234

    I was lucky enough to see Dorothy play at the Catalina Bar and Grill as a trio. After a particularly blistering performance (wish I could remember the song), a band member spoke to her and pointed to a dark corner in the back of the club. Next thing you know she’s saying, “Harry Connick Jr, is that you in the back? Get up here and play something.” Harry replied, “No way, I’m not following that!” They went back and forth in a good natured way and he finally relented, went up and played some solid jazz piano. But he knew, just like we all did, he was way out of his league.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +18

      Her appearance on Marion McPartland's show gives some idea of what it's like to go toe to toe with her.

    • @VangelVe
      @VangelVe Год назад +20

      Oscar Peterson said that he was in awe of her abilities.

    • @ScandiSweets
      @ScandiSweets Год назад +10

      @robertlopez8288 I love stories like this! Thanks for sharing.

    • @csmith7404
      @csmith7404 Год назад +7

      Love that story!

    • @BarkerT
      @BarkerT Год назад +4

      Brings a tear to my eye to hear that story. The student always knows who the master is, even when that person may be in decline. Which she obviously wasn't!

  • @lagunagreg4019
    @lagunagreg4019 Год назад +129

    You hardly ever, ever hear a jazz player play with this excellent level of evenness in both sound and rhythm. Wonderful control!

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +9

      Many, many, many hours of practice went into that.

    • @lagunagreg4019
      @lagunagreg4019 Год назад +1

      @@chasesanborn - just like everybody

  • @dancewomyn1
    @dancewomyn1 Год назад +17

    Man that woman could play!! The piano is like a limb for her, it's part of her!

  • @MatthewDLDavidson
    @MatthewDLDavidson 2 года назад +239

    Thanks for introducing me to this extraordinarily talented pianist. Never heard of her before. How sad she isn’t better known.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  2 года назад +7

      I knew a lot of people would have that reaction.

    • @tomkelly4336
      @tomkelly4336 2 года назад +9

      @@chasesanborn, I was lucky enough to see her twice when she came to Boston Ma. D.D. had a big heart and allowed this person from the audience to sing with her, unfortunately for Dorothy, the disparity between the two was readily apparent. Donegan however played as hard as any pianist I have seen, including O.P.

    • @roberthelms1737
      @roberthelms1737 2 года назад +2

      @@tomkelly4336 That's where I first saw her. I knew I had to hear her again and did.

    • @tomkelly4336
      @tomkelly4336 2 года назад +4

      @@roberthelms1737 I am glad you did, I went back the second night to hear her again. D.D. was a monster of a pianist!

  • @MyMagic111
    @MyMagic111 Год назад +184

    I saw Dorothy Donnegan perform at The Jazz Club in Gastown in Vancouver, BC Canada. Watching her play, sometimes her hands moved so fast over the keys, you could not see them. She was such an exciting performer and a classy lady.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +16

      You are lucky!

    • @stuffnuns
      @stuffnuns Год назад +12

      you’re one lucky person to have seen her play. Wow.

    • @seanthompson244
      @seanthompson244 Год назад +8

      Holy crap!!!!!!!

    • @robertakerman3570
      @robertakerman3570 Год назад +6

      @@chasesanborn If My Child aspired to piano; I wouldn't let them see this until they learned some. Too much to handle.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +6

      That's one way to put it. :)

  • @Downecker
    @Downecker Год назад +6

    Dorothy and Mary Lou Williams knock me right out ! Phenomenal 😅😊

  • @stuffnuns
    @stuffnuns Год назад +138

    I have been a music fan all my life, and a fan of the 30’s jazz. How come I haven’t heard of her until now? I just love her humor, her mastery of the instrument and her unique beauty.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +13

      The title speaks to your point. It's never too late to discover something or someone new!

    • @mxfxdlg
      @mxfxdlg Год назад +20

      I concur. I tell you, between racism and sexism, it’s a bloody wonder we’re still a nation. This fantastic artists name should be just as common as Ella, Dizzy, Basie and Elvis. Unfortunately, small bigoted men have robbed so many of us regular folks of opportunities and life experiences for far too long. What a precious national treasure many of us missed out on.

    • @cnrspiller3549
      @cnrspiller3549 Год назад +5

      ​@@mxfxdlg I dunno. You'd need some stats to back that up. African Americans have long been over represented in jazz, probably because of a differing cultural inclination towards the genre that would be difficult to unpack. Look at how few black country singers there were/are. Is that racism or differing cultural inclinations?
      As for being held back for being a woman, you would have to account for the likelier explanation that fewer women became so proficient in the art as men - possibly because men always have more to prove. This is because a man with skills becomes significantly more eligible, whereas, when it comes to dating, a woman with skills is just an intimidating woman with skills. Harsh, but true.
      Where the stats would help is to tell us the proportion of highly talented male jazz pianists who remained unsung compared to the proportion of talented female jazz pianists who, like Dorothy, remained unsung.
      Tbh, we have little chance of ever knowing the truth of those hidden statistics.
      Imo, from watching her delightful 1996 performance, she probably did inject too much quirkiness for producers to know what to do with her.
      I loved her performance though - utterly joyous. She seems like a most interesting soul.

    • @DanSharpIBD
      @DanSharpIBD Год назад +18

      ​@@cnrspiller3549What an inane comment. You should have stopped at "I dunno".

    • @cnrspiller3549
      @cnrspiller3549 Год назад +3

      @@DanSharpIBD funny. Your arguments are lacking in substance, however.
      What exactly is wrong with my reasoning?

  • @helloween76
    @helloween76 Год назад +42

    WHY does nobody speak about this woman!?!? omg... she's out of this world!! I love it. Pure pure energy and talent

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +3

      At least this video has sparked a comment or two...

    • @deb7518
      @deb7518 Год назад +1

      DAY-UMMM!!! How have I never heard of this woman before???!!

  • @kennethburruss4488
    @kennethburruss4488 Год назад +87

    So many skilled, talented and gifted musician from this Era that never got their proper recognition. She was AMAZING! Makes me proud of African Heritage 💚🖤❤.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +4

      Duly so.

    • @ezekielbrockmann114
      @ezekielbrockmann114 Год назад +2

      I thought she was American.

    • @emilerose1424
      @emilerose1424 Год назад

      @@ezekielbrockmann114 Dorothy Donegan was African American.

    • @lenicano8610
      @lenicano8610 4 месяца назад

      regrettably there were so many amazingly talented musicians around in the 20s, 30s and 40 etc, but there wasn't any big international platforms like youtube etc...to reach world wide public.. fortunately some did make it to recording studios and I'm sure there's still lots of gems hidden away which will surface one day

  • @trainliker100
    @trainliker100 Год назад +116

    My mother was a professional pianist who also played solo performances at Orchestra Hall in Chicago. She was white, but being a woman was enough to limit where her career could go. She played at a very, very high level, though. For a short time during the 1940's somebody put together an "All Women Piano Orchestra" with about a dozen pianists and my mother was the lead. It wasn't financially successful and didn't last long. But one of the other pianists was Catherine Bielefeldt who would be a lifelong friend. "Cathy" also became the first female manager at Steinway Hall in New York. And that was definitely breaing a barrier at the time. Anyway, orchestras back in the day were almost always all male except for the harpist seemed to always be female.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +17

      It was (and still is, hopefully to a lesser degree) an uphill climb for women in jazz or classical.

    • @davidkemp3154
      @davidkemp3154 Год назад

      Man slammer. Men worked for a living caught buffalo died in wars & ships in war. Since women ,& their black pimps got control 30 % wild bees extinct.Ocesn temp in Keys FL today was 101°. 20° above normal. Biden, Pelosi, women & blacks have just all the future fish dinners for now extincted humanity they are so stupid. I play jazz as well.

    • @alger8181
      @alger8181 Год назад

      Funny how all the great men are so worried about these "weak" women usurping their place and power, innit?

    • @micahanderson8903
      @micahanderson8903 Год назад +1

      No offense.... But an all piano orchestra.... Just not a great idea... Maybe today with electric keyboards to give timbre and articulation contrasts... But that would just be hard to hear with all pianos.

    • @trainliker100
      @trainliker100 Год назад +3

      @@micahanderson8903 It depends greatly on the arrangements and the dynamics of how it is played. Especially if some of the pianos are used for doubling. Your argument "hard to hear" could be similarly applied to a large chorale with 50 or 100 voices. Most are aware of music for two pianos, but there is also music written for three, four, five, and even six pianos as it is. Musically, the "orchestra" was apparently well received. It just wasn't financially viable.

  • @gilbertdare5921
    @gilbertdare5921 Год назад +4

    There are some people that should live forever!

  • @josephbarbera9220
    @josephbarbera9220 Год назад +42

    She’s brilliant. The critics were clearly envious of her!

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +5

      So should we all be.

    • @emilerose1424
      @emilerose1424 Год назад

      @@chasesanborn Haha! Amen. Thank you for preparing this informative history lesson which is, for me, a first intro to the delightful Ms. Donegan. Even as some state leaders seek to teach us less, thank you for trusting us enough to teach us MORE!

  • @AliasJimWirth
    @AliasJimWirth Год назад +25

    I do not have words. All I can do is give a thumbs to these comments here before me. Thank you for sharing the talent of this precious woman. What a gift she was given.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +1

      And a thumbs up to you for adding your voice!

  • @virino2586
    @virino2586 Год назад +17

    I was 18 or 19 in 1969 or thereabouts when I heard her play a smokin' boogie woogie on local public radio ahead of an announcement that she was playing at a local espresso joint. And I could take public transportation to go hear her! Live! High point of my young wet-behind-the-ears life!

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +3

      What a great experience and memory!

  • @angelapleasants8285
    @angelapleasants8285 Год назад +59

    Wow, I am completely blown away by this! 😳😳😳
    I had never heard of Dorothy Donegan before. She was a tremendous talent!!!
    It's a shame that she didn't receive more recognition during her lifetime. Now that I know about this incredibly talented lady, I certainly won't forget that she made a remarkable impact in history.
    Thank you so much for sharing. May she rest in peace and in power!
    ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @freddiemiranda5366
    @freddiemiranda5366 Год назад +67

    This lady definitely had some chops she made the piano 🎹 cry and sing at the same time thank you Dorothy Donegan God bless 🙏.

  • @phil4977
    @phil4977 Год назад +62

    I discovered her a few years ago by accident. Dorothy was wonderful. Completely unique and so underrated. Can only imagine that seeing her live would have been a very entertaining experience.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +2

      A number of people in the comments had that experience.

  • @strooomon
    @strooomon Год назад +17

    Saw her at jazz night at The Four Queens. She needed to be helped on stage but man oh man, when she sat and played, she could run a four minute mile. EPIC.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +3

      Love it.

    • @hugomolinaOG
      @hugomolinaOG Год назад +1

      Wow it sounds like an amazing experience. It reminded me when i saw Barry Harris in Madrid and the same happened. Had to be carried to the stage but when he started playing i was baffled. Such a privilege to see these legends live.

    • @strooomon
      @strooomon Год назад +1

      @hugomolinaOG it was beyond amazing. Jazz night at the Four Queens was hosted by Alan Grant, a legend in NYC jazz radio. Every Monday night, an amazing act played 3 sets, all of them legends, some well known, most not. Corky Hale was so good we stayed all night. Yes, I had never heard of her either. DD was the most shocking. The struggle to get on stage followed by the power of her playing, was simply epic. Corporate America got rid of jazz night and eventually the free lounge acts. The once great city has turned to Corporate shot. At least I have musical memories. Yes, 30 years later, I remember like it was yesterday

  • @attic1project776
    @attic1project776 Год назад +9

    I watched Ken Burns Jazz documentary during Covid. I don’t recall Dorothy Donegan is mentioned. What a gem slipped through the net!😮

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +1

      Any jazz history series, including the one on this channel has to overlook many important artists. Dorothy Donegan didn't change the face of jazz the way most of the other artists I showcase did, but she is certainly talent deserving wider recognition, and ironically this video has been watched more than any other, many times over. So at least around here, she has gotten her due!

    • @jonnelson6446
      @jonnelson6446 9 месяцев назад +1

      She's also not mentioned in Leonard Feather's Encyclopedia of Jazz (1960), supposedly the definitive book on jazz history up to that point. Feather also forgot Stump Evans, Bill Johnson, Bill Rank, Jimmy Palau, Steve Brown, Charlie Green, Ed Cuffee, Jimmy O'Bryant, Joe Robichaux, Greeley Walton, Johnny Russell, Henry Ragas and numerous other luminaries.

  • @michaelalberson126
    @michaelalberson126 Год назад +31

    How could a super talented pianist like this not have been incredibly famous the best I have ever heard.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +9

      Unfortunately it is not an uncommon situation, especially for women in jazz.

  • @remember92456
    @remember92456 Год назад +40

    I had albums of hers as a kid, growing up in a jazz household. So glad she’s getting long overdue recognition

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +3

      Any kid who had her albums in their household was a lucky kid.

  • @Truthasvictim
    @Truthasvictim Год назад +21

    I'm bowing to you Chase in appreciation of exposing me to Dorthoy someone who, criminally, at the very least, I've never heard of. But I am on humble knees before this total musical genius. The way she can morph from one style to another seamlessly, with dexterity and technique the equal of anyone I can think of, all while throwing sly humour and the showmanship factor in, is sublime. Once again, the stupidity of sexism and racism rears its ugly head, all while Dorothy rises above those things showing what having a regal spirit is all about.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +2

      I agree with all of that except for the need to bow to me! :) Kidding--I'm happy to spread the word.

  • @jgowin66
    @jgowin66 Год назад +40

    Dorothy was so magnificent, from the 1940's to the '90's. She had an abundance of personality and style to go with all that talent. I wish I had known more about her when she was still with us.

  • @IamP3ngu1n
    @IamP3ngu1n Год назад +20

    Dorothy Donegan and Hazel Scott ...would have been unreal ! Thanks for the post !

  • @kwgm8578
    @kwgm8578 Год назад +23

    A genius, a comedienne, and a hell of a piano player. Dorothy Donegan also made many films. God bless her.

  • @harbottle99
    @harbottle99 Год назад +29

    What an amazing pianist and what a stylish lady.

  • @kirkhale5661
    @kirkhale5661 Год назад +6

    My Lord!! Unfreaking believeable. What a show woman!

  • @ericj9793
    @ericj9793 Год назад +37

    Thank you for letting her excellent music speak for itself.

  • @jetphone1974
    @jetphone1974 Год назад +35

    What a remarkable musician. Talent in every cell. Simply stunning.

  • @chuckschillingvideos
    @chuckschillingvideos Год назад +20

    She played with every bit as much energy, dynamics and aggression as any man. Simply amazing.

  • @andrewrothman7805
    @andrewrothman7805 Год назад +17

    Saw her live twice. She was something else. I remember she opened with a Chopin etude.

  • @kerry-ch2zi
    @kerry-ch2zi Год назад +4

    Wow. One fine example of girls beating boys at boy's games. A firecracker to the end. What a musical mind!

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +1

      Clearly music is not a boy's game, but I understand your point.

  • @RedcoatsReturn
    @RedcoatsReturn Год назад +9

    😲 A genius on the keys…no notes…all that music in her head…😊👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏😊Thank you for educating me 😉👍👍

  • @salsanjazz4388
    @salsanjazz4388 Год назад +11

    I saw her many many years ago in New Orleans in a small lounge in a hotel. We spent some time with her chatting, eating, taking about music. She was a very sweet person. We were about 18 or 19 years old at the time. Fresh out of high school on our way to study music in college in New Orleans.

  • @Spud_E_Buddy
    @Spud_E_Buddy Год назад +7

    Wow. All I can say is wow. Thank you 🙏

  • @CandiceJoergan
    @CandiceJoergan Год назад +7

    Not only was she outstandingly talented, she also was incredibly beautiful as well. Wow.

  • @bench7434
    @bench7434 Год назад +6

    I love that era, fats Waller the swing , the smoke, the wardrobe, the women’s style.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад

      Happy to dispense with the smoke, but otherwise...

  • @antoinettesingh9755
    @antoinettesingh9755 Год назад +14

    I saw her in Chicago and she literally got inside this upright piano and played the heck out of it. I was absolutely amazed. A performance I’ll always remember. 🎹🎶🎼🎶

  • @wizardoffrobozz
    @wizardoffrobozz Год назад +6

    Dorothy plays with her entire body and commands undivided attention.

  • @johnmitchelljr
    @johnmitchelljr Год назад +21

    Magical fingers with a musical heart to match. Humor in music, what a concept. Her showmanship matches her talent. She had everything to become a household musical name. For all she gave I hope she had a good life. Such a great video. Thanks for sharing this treasure.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +2

      I'm glad to be able to share the wealth!

  • @peterhenman2662
    @peterhenman2662 Год назад +15

    Saw her at the Nice Jazz Festival in 1974. Unforgettable.

  • @mzbea4996
    @mzbea4996 Год назад +20

    I saw her live many times in her older years She was amazing still.

  • @airmanchairman
    @airmanchairman Год назад +29

    Utterly astounding personality, ability & performance - one of the all-time greatest, no doubt‼️

  • @Johnnyk999
    @Johnnyk999 Год назад +24

    What an absolutely incredible talent she was! After some 50 yrs of listening to jazz, I just discovered her here on YT about a year ago. Bless her soul!

  • @dianecourtney2724
    @dianecourtney2724 Год назад +6

    OMG I could cry bc I’m just seeing her. Where Have I been 😔

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад

      Wherever you were, you had lots of company.

  • @Afro3461
    @Afro3461 Год назад +9

    Wow! Why wasn’t this fabulous woman virtuoso piano jazz player not recognised and far better known during her career? Thanks for making this video and bringing her to the attention of a new and appreciative audience!

  • @TheDavidlloydjones
    @TheDavidlloydjones Год назад +4

    She has a variety of little wicked grins that keep sneaking in on her face from time to time.
    Great fun!

  • @ms.tlotus9179
    @ms.tlotus9179 Год назад +17

    Wow....a true Virtuoso!!!! Dorothy is amazing!!!!!

  • @DennisBLee
    @DennisBLee 2 года назад +13

    Holy shit, this woman was a phenom!

  • @TheGreatPizzaMasterpiece
    @TheGreatPizzaMasterpiece Год назад +5

    The elbow key got me. You win, you win. Cheers. 🇺🇸

  • @jonesstanleyw
    @jonesstanleyw Год назад +7

    Truly a musical treasure…. RIP Dorothy Donegan.

  • @rayrayray4116
    @rayrayray4116 2 года назад +13

    Genius. As good as it gets
    Listen to her all day long!

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  2 года назад +1

      Indeed!

    • @rayrayray4116
      @rayrayray4116 2 года назад +3

      There is something in her playing that speaks to me.
      I wish I could tell you what it is. I’ve seen many great musicians, live. Spent many a night in Greenwich Village, NYC yet her playing ……. Wish I could have met her, been in her presence. Just cool.

  • @stephaniehigginsgarrett5998
    @stephaniehigginsgarrett5998 Год назад +5

    She was so talented, definitely unsung. Thank’s for bring her to the spotlight.

  • @tonybabb3525
    @tonybabb3525 Год назад +5

    Sheesh! She was GREAT!!! Why had I never heard of her in my six decades?

  • @plrndl
    @plrndl Год назад +22

    I discovered her via the Clint Eastwood section of "Martin Scorsese Presents The Blues". That one discovery easily justified the price of the entire 7-DVD set.

  • @thomasprice1320
    @thomasprice1320 Год назад +8

    WOW,WOW,WOW!!!! What a great pianist. I'm floored by this performance. She does it with ease, like T'aint nothin to it. Awesome don't even describe her talent. Love this lady!!!

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +1

      That's the way it's supposed to sound, but t'ain't easy to achieve it.

  • @rafanifischer3152
    @rafanifischer3152 11 месяцев назад +2

    When she stood up I thought she was going to pull a Maurice Rocco on me, but I guess it's backwards, Maurice Rocco pulled a Dorothy Donegan! Such talent, such skill, amazing performer. She didn't just play the piano, she knew the piano. The piano was just an extension of her body and soul. Thanks for the upload.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  11 месяцев назад

      Happy to oblige!

    • @sunnyseacat6857
      @sunnyseacat6857 7 месяцев назад

      or Jerry Lee Lewis....off the charts energy...

  • @jysurferman
    @jysurferman Год назад +15

    Thanks for introduce her and her works…. The video performance is unbelieveable. so much energy

  • @rogerzimmerman9362
    @rogerzimmerman9362 3 месяца назад +1

    I give ten thumbs up to Dorothy Donegan, which is easy to do because when I play the piano I'm all thumbs.

  • @wolfgangzettl3448
    @wolfgangzettl3448 Год назад +12

    Thank you so much for showing this wonderful pianist !!! I really didn't know her until now ...

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +1

      A lot of people are just discovering her. You are in good company!

  • @robbes7rh
    @robbes7rh Год назад +7

    She played with rhythmic vitality, a rich musical imagination, and a tremendous facility for the keyboard. She had lost none of her musical vitality by 1996, Watching her play drove the last sexest cobwebs out of my head for good. She plays as well as any of the stride champions including Tatum. You were correct, I hadn't heard of her - but i have now.

  • @jddavisnyc
    @jddavisnyc 8 месяцев назад +3

    She was amazing on the keys! I just learned about her today and she certainly had a gift.

  • @williesjohnson2673
    @williesjohnson2673 Год назад +2

    you're right, i never heard of her and I've heard of a lot of jazz/classical pianist! fabulous player and you damn skippy I went directly to spotify and "re"-discovered her! seriously, thanks an awful lot for the introduction

  • @soundtracks6656
    @soundtracks6656 Год назад +10

    She once described herself with the words “I’m wild but I’m polished,” and truer words were never spoken.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +2

      Freedom stemming from discipline.

    • @Jamestown-y9j
      @Jamestown-y9j Год назад +1

      Controlled Wildness

    • @AmritAcoustics
      @AmritAcoustics Год назад +1

      The universal key to music, life, and the rest. @@chasesanborn

  • @markhathaway9456
    @markhathaway9456 День назад +1

    Wow, what a great dual-piano piece. They had so much energy.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  День назад

      One better if they're going to build you a rotating piano!

  • @haydenwayne3710
    @haydenwayne3710 Год назад +8

    She was a monster at the instrument!!! I definitely hear the Tatum influence.

  • @batlin
    @batlin Год назад +4

    Her playing in that 1996 concert is just astonishingly creative and musical. Amazing performance.

  • @ragauerk9310
    @ragauerk9310 Год назад +4

    Glad she respected her talent and lived her dream. Our loss, and deservedly so. She's amazing.

  • @marianlevy9232
    @marianlevy9232 Год назад +18

    Incredible playing.. she should be more well known -definitely one of the greats 🎹❤️😊

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +4

      Hopefully this video advances that cause.

  • @axolotl8694
    @axolotl8694 Год назад +5

    these icons and geniuses can settle to the bottom of media coverage and public consciousness. thank you for being a force to bubble them back up.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +2

      I'm glad to have the opportunity, and thankful to the RUclips algorithm which is currently putting this video in front of large numbers of viewers.

  • @joshc441
    @joshc441 Год назад +9

    She was amazing. I’m so shocked I’ve never heard of her.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +2

      As you can see, you are in good company.

    • @joshc441
      @joshc441 Год назад +1

      @@chasesanborn I’m a studying her music after this video.

  • @jm9dx
    @jm9dx Год назад +4

    Omg, just listened to Dorothy Donegan…why didn’t the world know about her?? What an INCREDIBLE talent. Thank you Dorothy for sharing your gift with us!!!!

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +1

      As you'll see in the comments, yours is a common sentiment.

  • @lawrencetaylor4101
    @lawrencetaylor4101 2 года назад +15

    Wow, merci for this. What a great talent.

  • @wylenore
    @wylenore 2 месяца назад +1

    WOW! What amazing person and pianist. I am glad that her fingers didn't get arthritis or anything. She could make that piano do anything! Thanks for preserving her music.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  2 месяца назад

      When Oscar Peterson developed arthritis it was quipped that a one-handed Oscar plays better than most with two. The same might have applied to Dorothy Donegan!

  • @Yeolita
    @Yeolita Год назад +6

    Whoa,whoa, Woooooow!!!! Dorothy was a maverick 😍🤩the dancing people show how I felt with her uplifting and quick vibes! Trailblazers are few and usually are only applauded until the masses can fully grip their splendidness, their overqualification, their step into new directions, directions others will eventually recognize and follow the excellence that these trailblazers created. She never gave in to what others wanted her to 🎉🏆🎈be I bow and give a standing ovation, BRAVO BRAVO!!

  • @stavrosk.2868
    @stavrosk.2868 Год назад +7

    When you think you know a lot you find out you know very little. Donagan really was one of the best.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +1

      There is always something or someone to discover.

  • @JohnHH59
    @JohnHH59 6 месяцев назад +3

    Wonderful talent! This lady should have been a household name!!!

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  6 месяцев назад +1

      I'm doing my small part.

  • @peggysutton6542
    @peggysutton6542 Год назад +3

    I discovered her in the mid 70's and went to see her every chance I got !!! She was everything!!! RIP

  • @306champion
    @306champion Год назад +3

    WOW, Dot, you rock. You got me movin like I haven't in a long time.

  • @bobblues1158
    @bobblues1158 Год назад +8

    I´ve been hip to her forever! I grew up playing with women from 10 years old in school band. I knew right away-they had the best time-and were faster in every way. Quicker to make MUSIC. I grew up respecting women players! " Excess of Personality" Is what makes every musician popular. Either with the the folk or with other musicians. Thanks Chase!!

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +1

      That puts you in an exclusive class!

  • @Bailey2006a
    @Bailey2006a Год назад +7

    I’m a huge fan of Hazel Scott. Unhappily, I never heard of this genius performer. Both of these women were masters of their instrument . Thank you for posting…invaluable info.

  • @emigran7472
    @emigran7472 11 месяцев назад +3

    I am totally gobsmacked never knew her but wow what a treasure thank you thank you thank you

  • @SergeCeyral
    @SergeCeyral Год назад +4

    I had the immense privilege to hear Mrs. Donegan live, 40yrs ago, in a private show in France. She totally floored the audience by her incredible talent (and simplicity and constant humor, as well!). She was like a F5 tornado in the barn. Thx so much to the Hot Club de Champagne (and his hereditary and stainless president Jean-Pierre Chouleur) for that unique evening.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +1

      Thanks for relating that--you are lucky to have had that experience.

    • @SergeCeyral
      @SergeCeyral Год назад

      ​@@chasesanbornI experienced some rare and fine concerts (Lonnie Brooks in a bar ; Bob Brozman in a very small venue; Illinois Jacquet’s Big Band in a 200 seat theater; Dwight Yoakam in a small rural French village fair...). But that D.D. show (in a 80 seat private home attic !) was an incredible "smack in the face" evening... She took any request and replied : do you want it "à la Ellington" or "à la Pete Johnson" ? Blistering

  • @RonHarrisMe
    @RonHarrisMe Год назад +4

    When I see talent like that... and the perfect music, I see 10's of thousands of hours of practice to get that good. Just amazing.

  • @robertbright2057
    @robertbright2057 Год назад +8

    I remember hearing about her and her music when I was a kid my Grandmother was a fan of hers. Ms.Dorothy Donegan was one of the absolute greatest pianist ever 🎼🎹🎼

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +1

      Your grandmother knew a thing or two.

  • @bruceb5481
    @bruceb5481 Год назад +2

    Side splitting humor delivered eloquently without saying a word. Extraordinary.

  • @suchisthismystery2814
    @suchisthismystery2814 Год назад +4

    The great blind, syncopated jazz pianist Sam Bennie born in London 1918 was an extraordinarily gifted musician.
    In 1925, when Sam was aged just 7, he caught meningitis and became totally blind. Immediately thereafter he began to show an aptitude for music. Being given only a week to live by his doctors, he begged his father for a mouth-organ. He recovered from the meningitis that caused his blindness, went to the School for the Blind at Swiss Cottage, and there learned the organ, piano, and piano accordion. He then graduated to the Royal Normal College at Norwood.
    Sam first broadcast for the BBC in April, 1938, with the Band Waggoners, and appeared at the microphone on a number of occasions thereafter, including broadcasts in 'Monday Night at Seven', when he played his own composition 'Am I for You?', and again in 'Monday Night at Seven' in 'Youth Takes a Bow'. Sam also appeared with Reginald Foort and Esther Coleman. Sam ran and conducted his own band of twelve musicians, and wrote and composed his own signature tune, 'I bring you music'.
    In his early twenties, Sam won the final of the England and Scotland amateur pianoforte-playing contest over 520 rivals.
    He unbelievably raised 5 children, single handedly in the 1960's/70's, before his sudden death in 1971 aged just 53.
    He is my father.

    • @chasesanborn
      @chasesanborn  Год назад +1

      Thanks for sharing the knowledge of your dad.

    • @dumfriesspearhead7398
      @dumfriesspearhead7398 Год назад +1

      There's a documentary in here.

    • @suchisthismystery2814
      @suchisthismystery2814 Год назад

      @@dumfriesspearhead7398 I think you might be right! He also came from an extremely working class family. His life story was quite extraordinary.

  • @singtatsucgc3247
    @singtatsucgc3247 2 года назад +10

    Staggering pianistic virtuosity

  • @larryk.watson2778
    @larryk.watson2778 Год назад +2

    I’m a pianist and organist.. wowwwwwwwwwwww I could listen to this all night!!!

  • @marksutton5540
    @marksutton5540 Год назад +3

    Amazing is an under statement! Why am I allowed to live in the same universe as she.

  • @MrLewis-lk8us
    @MrLewis-lk8us Год назад +2

    Holy Smokes she’s freaking amazing. Complete Freedom and control

  • @dookoonu2741
    @dookoonu2741 Год назад +5

    She is such a sensation! Thanks for bringing her to our attention!

  • @lindawillis6363
    @lindawillis6363 Год назад +2

    WOW! She has inspired me to practice more.

  • @josssolimov7010
    @josssolimov7010 2 года назад +9

    i can only imagine what it was like to hear this live

  • @laman8914
    @laman8914 Год назад +2

    Thank for sharing African creative cultural heritage. This is how we should keep our values alive.