July 13, 1966 Gerald Edward Levert, singer, songwriter, and producer, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania but raised in Cleveland, Ohio. While in high school, Levert formed the group LeVert in 1984. Four of the group’s seven albums, “I Get Her” (1985), “Bloodline” (1986), “The Big Throwdown” (1987), and “Just Coolin’” (1988), went platinum. In 1991, […]
July 13th in African American History – Gerald Edward Levert
Tags: Grammy Award, producer, R&B, singer, songwriter
July 12th in African American History – Bennett Lester “Benny” Carter
Tags: arranger, composer, Grammy Award, Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, National Endowment for the Arts, National Medal of Arts
July 12, 2003 Bennett Lester “Benny” Carter, jazz musician, composer, arranger and bandleader, died. Carter was born August 8, 1907 in New York City. Largely self-taught, by the age of 15 Carter was sitting in with some of New York’s top bands. In 1929, Carter formed this first big band and from 1931 to 1932 […]
July 11th in African American History – Mattiwilda Dobbs
July 11, 1925 Mattiwilda Dobbs, coloratura soprano and one of the first black singers to enjoy a major international career in opera, was born in Atlanta, Georgia. Dobbs began piano lessons at the age of seven and sang in the church choir. She graduated from Spelman College in 1946 with a degree in music and […]
July 11th in African American History – Walter Hawkins
Tags: gospel music, Grammy Award, singer
July 11, 2010 Walter Hawkins, gospel music singer, died. Hawkins was born May 18, 1949 in Oakland, California. He began his career as a member of his brother’s chorale, The Edwin Hawkins Singers. They produced “Oh Happy Day” (1967) which was one of the first gospel songs to cross over and become a mainstream hit. […]
July 7th in African American History – Theodore “Fats” Navarro
Tags: Down Beat Jazz Hall of Fame, jazz
July 7, 1950 Theodore “Fats” Navarro, jazz trumpeter, died. Navarro was born September 24, 1923 in Key West, Florida. He began playing the piano at the age of six and the trumpet at 13. In 1946, Navarro moved to New York City and his career took off. He played in the bands of Billy Eckstine, […]
July 6th in African American History – Curtis James Jackson, III (50 Cent)
Tags: Grammy Award
July 6, 1975 Curtis James Jackson, III (50 Cent), rapper and actor, was born in Queens, New York. Jackson’s first official appearance was on a song titled “React” with the group Onyx in 1998. In 2000, he released the album, “Power of the Dollar.” Jackson’s breakthrough occurred with the 2003 release of the album “Get […]
July 6th in African American History – Harvey Fuqua
Tags: Motown Records, R&B, record producer, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, singer, songwriter
July 6, 2010 Harvey Fuqua, singer, songwriter, record producer, and executive, died. Fuqua was born July 27, 1929 in Louisville, Kentucky. In 1951, he formed a vocal group called the Crazy Sounds. Later they moved to Cleveland, Ohio and were renamed The Moonglows. The group recorded their first single in 1953 and their 1954 single […]
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Previous Days in African American History
Other African American History Posts
- Edward Lee Morgan – February 19th in African American History
- February 17th in African American History – Huey Percy Newton
- December 22nd in African American History – Jean-Michael Basquiat
- May 29th in African American History – Maurice Rupert Bishop
- March 8th in African American History – William Clarence “Billy” Eckstine
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