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Past Awardees
2000 Living Legacy Award Recipient
Shirley Scott (d. 2002)
Known as the "Queen of the Organ," Shirley
Scott began her musical career as a pianist at the
age of six. She later moved on to the trumpet but continued
to play
the piano for neighborhood gigs. While playing jazz
piano in her native Philadelphia, Ms. Scott was encouraged
to try
the organ. She had the great fortune to meet and study
with Jimmy Smith and is considered his best known protégé.
Well
known for her command of the Hammond B-3, Ms. Scott's
popularity surged in the late fifties during her
collaboration with the great tenor saxophonist Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis.
In the sixties, Ms. Scott briefly formed her own trio
and hired the late tenor saxophonist Stanley Turrentine.
Ms.
Scott and Mr. Turrentine were married in 1961 and their
personal and professional relationship lasted almost
ten years.
In addition to Mr. Davis and Mr. Turrentine,
Ms. Scott recorded with jazz greats Harold Vick, Dexter
Gordon, Coleman
Hawkins, Oliver Nelson, and David "Fathead" Newman,
to name only a few. During her career, Ms. Scott released
over 100 recordings on Prestige, Impulse, Blue Note,
Atlantic, and numerous other labels.
In 1992, Ms. Scott
was named musical director for Bill Cosby's television
series, "You
Bet Your Life."
Dedicated to education, Ms. Scott earned
a Bachelor's degree from Cheyney University in Pennsylvania
while working
on two Master's degrees. She subsequently served as
a full-time Assistant Professor at Cheyney. She was
a well known jazz
educator and encouraged her students to consider careers
in jazz. Additionally, she received two Fellowships
from the National Endowment for the Arts.
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