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Tadd Dameron

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Tadd Dameron

Birth
Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, USA
Death
8 Mar 1965 (aged 48)
New York, USA
Burial
Hartsdale, Westchester County, New York, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Jazz Musician. A native of Cleveland, Ohio.

Tadd Dameron was born Tadley Ewing Peake, the son of Isaiah and Ruth Peake. When his mother later married Adolphus Dameron, Tadd and his brother, Caesar, legally changed their names to Dameron. Caesar was a jazz pianist, bandleader, arranger, and composer who worked in Chicago and New York City. Inspired to follow a career as a jazz musician by his brother Caesar, a saxophone player. Caesar was brought his younger brother along with him to a Cleveland night club and asked if Tadd could sit in. Although they band members had known he had been studying piano, he played things many of the older professionals were not used to hearing. When he was 21, Tadd tried arranging for a big band, one formed in Cleveland by James Jeter and Hayes Pillars. He said it was "'I Let a Song Go Out of My Heart' and everything was wrong with it. He went on to play with Freddie Webster, Zack Whyte, and Blanche Calloway in the late 1930s. Originally, he spelled his name "Tad" until a numerologist told him that the addition of a second "d" would bring him luck.

During World War II he was a factory worker. He arranged for Vido Musso and Harlan Leonard, making his debut as a pianist with Babs Gonzales' Three Bips & A Bop. He wrote arrangements for Georgie Auld, Jimmie Lunceford and Sarah Vaughan. He composed Soulphony for Dizzie Gillepsie's Carnegie Hall Concert in 1948. He led his own trio at the Royal Roost in New York City with Allen Eager and Fatz Navarro. In 1949, he appeared as co-leader with Miles Davis at the Paris Jazz Festival. He arranged for Ted Heath in Great Britain. He was with Bull Moose Jackson in the United States (1951-1952) then led his own band (1953-1958).

His career was plagued by his addiction to narcotics. He was arrested for possession of narcotics and sentenced to the Federal Prison at Lexington, Kentucky (1958-1960). In the early 1960s' he arranged for Milt Jackson, Benny Goodman, "Blue" Mitchell and Sonny Stitt.

According to biographer Ian MacDonald, Tadd had no children although one story reported that he had three. Another story claimed that he had been a pre-med student at Oberlin College. Tadd had told people he had gone to North Africa in the late 1940's but MacDonald found that he had never left the United States at that point. He suffered from cancer and had several heart attacks before he died at the age of 48 of cancer in 1965. Adolphus died 14 September 1939 in Cleveland. Ruth appeared in the 1940 directory as "Wid Adolphus." She appeared in the city directory until 1960. She eventually worked with and lived with Caesar. She died in 1970. Caesar lived in Cleveland where he operated a restaurant, Dameron's Hut on Cedar Avenue. At one time he had establishments at two locations. He died in 1977. Isaiah Peake last appeared in the Cleveland city directory in 1929.

Several of his compositions have become jazz standards: The Squirrel, Dameronia, Tadd Walk, Lady Bird, Jahbero, Symponette, The Chase, The Scene is Clean....
Jazz Musician. A native of Cleveland, Ohio.

Tadd Dameron was born Tadley Ewing Peake, the son of Isaiah and Ruth Peake. When his mother later married Adolphus Dameron, Tadd and his brother, Caesar, legally changed their names to Dameron. Caesar was a jazz pianist, bandleader, arranger, and composer who worked in Chicago and New York City. Inspired to follow a career as a jazz musician by his brother Caesar, a saxophone player. Caesar was brought his younger brother along with him to a Cleveland night club and asked if Tadd could sit in. Although they band members had known he had been studying piano, he played things many of the older professionals were not used to hearing. When he was 21, Tadd tried arranging for a big band, one formed in Cleveland by James Jeter and Hayes Pillars. He said it was "'I Let a Song Go Out of My Heart' and everything was wrong with it. He went on to play with Freddie Webster, Zack Whyte, and Blanche Calloway in the late 1930s. Originally, he spelled his name "Tad" until a numerologist told him that the addition of a second "d" would bring him luck.

During World War II he was a factory worker. He arranged for Vido Musso and Harlan Leonard, making his debut as a pianist with Babs Gonzales' Three Bips & A Bop. He wrote arrangements for Georgie Auld, Jimmie Lunceford and Sarah Vaughan. He composed Soulphony for Dizzie Gillepsie's Carnegie Hall Concert in 1948. He led his own trio at the Royal Roost in New York City with Allen Eager and Fatz Navarro. In 1949, he appeared as co-leader with Miles Davis at the Paris Jazz Festival. He arranged for Ted Heath in Great Britain. He was with Bull Moose Jackson in the United States (1951-1952) then led his own band (1953-1958).

His career was plagued by his addiction to narcotics. He was arrested for possession of narcotics and sentenced to the Federal Prison at Lexington, Kentucky (1958-1960). In the early 1960s' he arranged for Milt Jackson, Benny Goodman, "Blue" Mitchell and Sonny Stitt.

According to biographer Ian MacDonald, Tadd had no children although one story reported that he had three. Another story claimed that he had been a pre-med student at Oberlin College. Tadd had told people he had gone to North Africa in the late 1940's but MacDonald found that he had never left the United States at that point. He suffered from cancer and had several heart attacks before he died at the age of 48 of cancer in 1965. Adolphus died 14 September 1939 in Cleveland. Ruth appeared in the 1940 directory as "Wid Adolphus." She appeared in the city directory until 1960. She eventually worked with and lived with Caesar. She died in 1970. Caesar lived in Cleveland where he operated a restaurant, Dameron's Hut on Cedar Avenue. At one time he had establishments at two locations. He died in 1977. Isaiah Peake last appeared in the Cleveland city directory in 1929.

Several of his compositions have become jazz standards: The Squirrel, Dameronia, Tadd Walk, Lady Bird, Jahbero, Symponette, The Chase, The Scene is Clean....

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  • Created by: The Silent Forgotten
  • Added: May 29, 2007
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/19609300/tadd-dameron: accessed ), memorial page for Tadd Dameron (21 Feb 1917–8 Mar 1965), Find a Grave Memorial ID 19609300, citing Ferncliff Cemetery and Mausoleum, Hartsdale, Westchester County, New York, USA; Burial Details Unknown; Maintained by The Silent Forgotten (contributor 46537737).