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William Cole (musician) (1909–1997), English conductor and organist Bill Cole (musician) (born 1937), jazz musician, jazz and African American scholar Bill Cole (television journalist and producer) (1922–2006), foreign correspondent for CBS News and public television producer
William Charles Cole LVO, DMus, FSA, FRAM, FRCM, FRCO (9 October 1909 in Camberwell, London – 9 May 1997) was an English conductor, composer and organist. Cole went to Saint Olave's Grammar School , where he in fact almost lost his scholarship there because 'his music was getting in the way of his studies'.
English: Burial plot of William Cole and family. This is an image of a place or building that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places in the United States of America . Its reference number is 82004573 .
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William Shadrack Cole is an American jazz musician, ethnomusicologist, professor of music, professor of African-American studies, and author. [3] As All About Jazz jazz journalist Dan McClenaghan put it, "Cole – a rare breed of jazz artist who has focused his efforts on uniting Eastern sounds with the American art form – is a musical seeker who has, over the better part of four decades ...
A judge told the parents of 27-year-old Ellen Greenberg, a Philadelphia teacher found dead with 20 stab wounds in 2011, that the city's declaration of suicide was "puzzling."
"Oh, Didn't He Ramble" is a New Orleans jazz standard, copyrighted in 1902 by J. Rosamond Johnson, James Weldon Johnson, and Bob Cole. It is frequently used at the end of jazz funerals. Several sources trace its origins to the English folk song "The Derby Ram" .