Walter Melrose

{{Short description|American music publisher (1889–1973)}}

{{more citations needed|date=September 2011}}

{{Infobox person

| name = Walter Melrose

| image =

| caption =

| birth_name = Walter Melrose

| birth_date = {{Birth date|1889|10|26}}

| birth_place = Sumner, Illinois, United States

| death_date = {{Death date and age|1973|5|30|1889|10|26}}

| death_place = Lake Barrington, Illinois, United States

| occupation = Music publisher and lyricist

| education =

| spouse =

| parents =

| relatives = Lester Melrose (brother)

}}

Walter Melrose (October 26, 1889 – May 30, 1973) was an American music publisher and lyricist in the 1920s and 1930s.

Background

He was born in Sumner, Illinois, and was the brother of Lester Melrose, with whom he established a music store in Chicago.Jelly's Blues: The Life, Music, and Redemption of Jelly Roll Morton, Howard Reich and William Gaines This became successful after the Tivoli Theatre opened in the same street, greatly increasing the amount of passing trade. Melrose branched into music publishing when Jelly Roll Morton turned up in his store, and hits such as Wolverine Blues and King Porter Stomp became highly successful for the company. In 1926 he arranged a series of recordings for Victor Records by Morton's Red Hot Peppers, which have come to be regarded as landmarks of early jazz. He later parted company with Morton acrimoniously, and stopped paying him royalties for his compositions.

Major publications

He and his brother published the jazz standard "Tin Roof Blues" composed by the New Orleans Rhythm Kings in 1923. He also wrote the lyrics to that song.

Melrose added lyrics to many existing jazz compositions that his company published, such as "Copenhagen". He established one of the major publishing companies with his brother, known as Melrose Brothers Music: The House That Blues Built.

Other publications

Melrose Music also published Glenn Miller's 125 Jazz Breaks for Trombone, Louis Armstrong's 125 Jazz Breaks for Cornet, and Benny Goodman's 24 Hot Breaks for Clarinet in 1928.

References

{{Reflist}}

{{Authority control}}

Walter Melrose had contributed to many songs and lyrics and has a broad discography after he died. Walter Melrose died in May of 1973, in Lake Barington, Illinois. Officially, he was a music publisher but did receive credits for several songs with the original Dixieland jazz band, including the songs "High Society" and "Tin Roof Blues". Both were hits in the late 1950s.

{{cite web|title=Radio Swiss Jazz - Music database - Musician|url=http://www.radioswissjazz.ch/en/music-database/musician/135496f4c3648b6b3f93f985528f6ac5e4d3b/discography|website=Radio Swiss Jazz|language=en}}

The Music Goes Round And Round

Eigenvertrieb / DSCMusic 2014001

Martinique

2007

Martinique

Earworks.ch

Piano Solo. Plays Blues And Ballads

2005

Piano Solo. Plays Blues And Ballads

Jazz Connaisseur / JCCD 9107-2

Buona Sera New Orleans

2002

Buona Sera New Orleans

Eigenvertrieb / TBH 602

For Louis

2000

For Louis

Concord / CCD-4879-2

Jazz Club Trio - Plus

1995

Jazz Club Trio - Plus

Elite Special / TCD 7935

Mo' Cream From The Crop

1994

Mo' Cream From The Crop

Sony Music Entertainment Switzerland GmbH / CK 66628

Nothing But The Blues

1994

{{DEFAULTSORT:Melrose, Walter}}

Category:Businesspeople from Chicago

Category:American lyricists

Category:1889 births

Category:1973 deaths

Category:People from Sumner, Illinois

Category:American music publishers (people)

Category:20th-century American businesspeople