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Jazz at Lincoln Center
inducteesclass of 2004Sidney Bechet
Ella Fitzgerald

"If the musicians like what I do," Ella Fitzgerald once said, "then I feel I'm really singing." She was really singing all her life.

Discovered at sixteen after winning an amateur night contest at the Apollo Theater in Harlem, she first won fame in the late 1930s, performing ebullient novelty tunes with the hard-swinging Chick Webb Orchestra. During the 1940s, she recorded with every kind of backup group and established herself as a master of scat singing, incorporating the fresh harmonies and rhythms of bebop into wordless acrobatic performances that astonished audiences and musicians alike. Then, in the 1950s, she recorded definitive versions of standards by America's greatest songwriters from Cole Porter to Duke Ellington.

Through it all, she never lost the girlish joy evident on her earliest records, never seemed to sing out of tune, and never failed to swing. Musicians were awed by her musicianship. For her, "music is everything," her sometime accompanist Jimmy Rowles said. "When she walks down the street, she trails notes." View press release for more information.