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- 1924_in_jazz abstract "In 1924 in jazz, the improvised solo had become an integral part of most jazz performances Standards published that year included "Everybody Loves My Baby" and Jelly Roll Morton's "King Porter Stomp". Musicians born in 1924 included the drummer Max Roach and singers Sarah Vaughan and Dinah Washington. In 1924, Leopold Stokowski, the British orchestral conductor of the Philadelphia Orchestra, observed that jazz had "come to stay."".
- 1924_in_jazz thumbnail Wolverine_orchestra_1924.jpg?width=300.
- 1924_in_jazz wikiPageID "28640561".
- 1924_in_jazz wikiPageRevisionID "603890015".
- 1924_in_jazz afteryear "1925".
- 1924_in_jazz caption "The Wolverines with Bix Beiderbecke at Doyle's Academy of Music in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1924.".
- 1924_in_jazz decade "1920.0".
- 1924_in_jazz hasPhotoCollection 1924_in_jazz.
- 1924_in_jazz prioryear "1923".
- 1924_in_jazz standards "1920.0".
- 1924_in_jazz subject Category:1924_in_music.
- 1924_in_jazz subject Category:Years_in_jazz.
- 1924_in_jazz comment "In 1924 in jazz, the improvised solo had become an integral part of most jazz performances Standards published that year included "Everybody Loves My Baby" and Jelly Roll Morton's "King Porter Stomp". Musicians born in 1924 included the drummer Max Roach and singers Sarah Vaughan and Dinah Washington. In 1924, Leopold Stokowski, the British orchestral conductor of the Philadelphia Orchestra, observed that jazz had "come to stay."".
- 1924_in_jazz label "1924 in jazz".
- 1924_in_jazz sameAs Q4561622.
- 1924_in_jazz sameAs Q4561622.
- 1924_in_jazz wasDerivedFrom 1924_in_jazz?oldid=603890015.
- 1924_in_jazz depiction Wolverine_orchestra_1924.jpg.
- 1924_in_jazz isPrimaryTopicOf 1924_in_jazz.