Charley Straight
Charles Theodore "Charley" Straight was an American pianist, bandleader and composer.
Biography
Straight, who was born in Chicago, started his career in 1909 accompanying singer Gene Greene in Vaudeville. In 1916, he began working at the Imperial Piano Roll Company in Chicago, where he recorded dozens of piano rolls. He became a popular bandleader in Chicago during the 1920s. His band, the Charley Straight Orchestra, had a long term engagement at the Rendezvous Café from 1922 to 1925 and recorded for Paramount Records and Brunswick Records in the 1920s.Image:Paramount20291.jpg|thumb|The label of Charley Straight's recording of "Forgetful Blues" for Paramount, made in 1923.|left|153x153pxDuring the 1920s, Straight worked with Roy Bargy on the latter's eight Piano Syncopations. In describing "Rufenreddy", the fifth in the series, the ragtime historian "Perfessor" Bill Edwards stated:Straight died in Chicago on the evening of September 22, 1940, after being struck by a car. At the time, Straight was working as a sanitary inspector for the city of Chicago, and was emerging from a manhole in the street.
Selected compositions
- "Rufenreddy"
- "Knice and Knifty"
- "Playmor"
- "Itsit"
- "Blue Grass Rag"
- "Let's Go"
- "Humpty Dumpty"
- "Hot Hands"
- "Sweet Pickin's"
- "Wild And Wooly"
- "S'more"
- "Nifty Nonsense"
- "Black Jack Rag"
- "Rag-A-Bit"
- "Fastep"
- "Dippy Ditty"
- "Lazy Bones"
- "Out Steppin'"
- "My Baby's Rag"
- "Universal Rag"
- "Mow 'Em Down"
- "Try Me"
- "Red Raven Rag"
- "Mocking Bird Rag"
- "King Of The Bungaloos"
- "I Need Some Pettin`" With Robert A. King