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Barnett, a sousaphone player, was the first black member of the once all-white Seattle Musicians Union, Local 76 and was instrumental in the merger between the black and white musicians' locals into the Musician's Association of Seattle 76-493. [4]
Musicians' Association of Seattle Records. Archived September 23, 2015, at the Wayback Machine 1905–2010. 5.52 cubic feet (7 boxes). David Keller manuscript of The Blue Note: Seattle's Black Musician's Union, A Pictorial History. Archived April 2, 2015, at the Wayback Machine 2000. .21 cubic ft (1 box) Novak, Matt (February 10, 2012).
Armbruster is a musician and songwriter with two albums: Spookyjuice (2012) and One Good Ride(2019), under the name EINAR. He and his wife Cedar live in Seattle. He is a member of the Musicians' Union of Seattle Local 76-493. [1]
This List of musicians from Seattle recognizes artists who are either from, or significantly associated with, the city. This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness.
Music patriarch Frank D. Waldron was an early member of the just formed black musicians' union, AFM Local 458. African Americans challenged and changed the Jazz culture within Seattle with great force.
David Eugene Lewis (1938 – March 13, 1998) was an American rock and rhythm & blues (R&B) keyboardist, organist, and vocalist based in Seattle, Washington, US. Peter Blecha accounts his Dave Lewis Combo as "Seattle's first significant African American 1950s rock and roll band" [2] and Lewis himself as "the singularly most significant figure on the Pacific Northwest's nascent rhythm & blues ...
The Crocodile (formerly the Crocodile Cafe, and sometimes called The Croc) is a music club at 2505 1st Avenue at Wall Street in the Belltown neighborhood of Seattle, Washington, United States. Opened by Stephanie Dorgan as the "Crocodile Cafe" on April 30, 1991, it quickly became a fixture of the city's music scene.
Still, Seattle was becoming a city, and union organizing arrived first in the form of a skilled craft union. In 1882, Seattle printers formed the Seattle Typographical Union Local 202. Dockworkers followed in 1886, cigarmakers in 1887, tailors in 1889, and both brewers and musicians in 1890. Even the newsboys unionized in 1892, followed by more ...