Few great jazz musicians enjoyed such a lengthy life and career as
Claude "Fiddler" Williams, who outlasted virtually all his contemporaries and achieved his greatest successes at an advanced age.
Williams began playing guitar at age ten; he was inspired to take up violin after hearing
Joe Venuti play a gig near his Muskogee, OK, home. He played around Oklahoma with bassist
Oscar Pettiford, among others. His first professional experience came in 1927 when he joined Terrence Holder's highly regarded territory band in Oklahoma City.
Williams stayed on after Holder was ousted by his sidemen because of bad management and was replaced by bassist
Andy Kirk. The band became known as the
Clouds of Joy (also the Dark Clouds of Joy, 12 Clouds of Joy, Original 11 Clouds of Joy, etc.) and enjoyed a great deal of success, due in no small part to the performing and composing talents of the young pianist
Mary Lou Williams.
Claude Williams played on the
Kirk band's first recordings, but was forced to leave around 1930 when ill health prevented him from completing a tour.
Williams worked with the bands of Alphonse Trent in 1932,
George E. Lee in 1933, and Chick Stevens in 1934-1935; he also played with
Nat "King" Cole and his brother, bassist Eddie Cole, in Chicago during this period.
Williams played guitar with
Count Basie in 1936 and thus became the first guitarist to record with the band. He was replaced the next year by
Freddie Green. During the late '30s and early '40s,
Williams worked with the Four Shades of Rhythm in Chicago, Cleveland, and Flint, MI. Some of the more notable musicians he worked with during the '50s include pianist
Jay McShann, saxophonist
Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson, and pianist
Hank Jones.
Williams settled in Kansas City once again in 1953. There he spent most of the next 20 years leading his own groups, but not making records. A gig with
McShann in the early '70s led to
Williams' first recordings in nearly three decades and
Williams' second career was born. In the '70s and '80s, he toured with
McShann and worked as a featured soloist at jazz festivals. He played in a Paris production of the musical Black and Blue and a New York date with pianist
Roland Hanna and drummer
Grady Tate. His star rose in the '90s; he was featured on the television program CBS News Sunday Morning and performed at Carnegie Hall and the Lincoln Center in New York. He also played at the first inauguration of President
Bill Clinton, played international festivals, and recorded several highly acclaimed CDs. He was also the first inductee of the Oklahoma Jazz Hall of Fame. Entering his ninth decade,
Williams was still quite active, venerated by jazz musicians and fans alike. The venerable elder statesman of jazz passed away at the age of 96 in April of 2004. ~ Chris Kelsey