George Gershwin dropped out of school and began playing piano professionally at age 15. Within a few years, he was one of the most sought after musicians in America. A composer of jazz, opera, and popular songs for stage and screen, many of his works are now standards. Gershwin died immediately following brain surgery on July 11, 1937.
Gershwin was born Jacob Gershowitz on September 26, 1898, in Brooklyn, New York. The son of Russian-Jewish immigrants, Gershwin began his foray into music at age 11 when his family bought a secondhand piano for Gershwin’s older sibling, Ira.
A natural talent, it was Gershwin who took it up and eventually sought out
mentors who could enhance his abilities. He eventually began studying with the
noted piano teacher Charles Hambitzer, and apparently impressed him; in a
letter to his sister, Hambitzer
wrote, “I have a new pupil who will make his mark if anybody will. The boy
is a genius.”
Throughout his 23-year career, Gershwin would continually seek to expand
the breadth of his influences, studying under an incredibly disparate array of teachers,
including Henry Cowell, Wallingford Riegger, Edward Kilenyi, and Joseph
Schillinger.
Early Career
After dropping out of school at age 15, Gershwin played in several New York
nightclubs and began his stint as a “song-plugger” in New York’s Tin Pan Alley.
After three years of pounding out tunes on the piano for demanding
customers, he had transformed into a highly skilled and dexterous composer. To
earn extra cash, he also worked as a rehearsal pianist for Broadway singers. In
1916, he composed his first published song, “When You Want ‘Em, You Can’t Get
‘Em; When You Have ‘Em, You Don’t Want ‘Em.”
Successes
From 1920 to 1924, Gershwin composed for an annual production put on by
George White. After a show titled “Blue Monday,” the bandleader in the pit,
Paul Whiteman, asked Gershwin to create a jazz number that would heighten the
genre’s respectability.
Legend has it that Gershwin forgot about the request until he read a
newspaper article announcing the fact that Whiteman’s latest concert would
feature a new Gershwin composition. Writing at a manic pace in order to meet
the deadline, Gershwin composed what is perhaps his best-known work, “Rhapsody
in Blue.”
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