This article needs additional citations for
verification. (September 2021) |
Donald "The Lamb" Lambert (February 12, 1904 [1] – May 8, 1962) [2] was an American jazz stride pianist born in Princeton, New Jersey, United States, perhaps best known for playing in Harlem night clubs throughout the 1920s. [2] Lambert was taught piano by his mother but never learned to read music. [1] With his particularly rapid left hand striding technique, he was a formidable opponent in cutting contests. On one occasion, Lambert challenged Art Tatum at a jazz concert where other famous players were present.
Lambert's discography is sparse: the only commercial recordings under his name were four titles made for RCA's Bluebird label in 1941, [3] in which he interpreted classical themes: Richard Wagner's Pilgrim's Chorus from Tannhäuser, " Anitra's Dance" by Edvard Grieg, [4] Gaetano Donizetti's Sextet from Lucia di Lammermoor, and Jules Massenet's Élégie. However, several compilations were released in the 1980s containing live recordings dating from 1959–62. [3] Lambert appeared at the 1960 Newport Jazz Festival, alongside Eubie Blake and Willie "The Lion" Smith and was said[ by whom?] to have outplayed both of them.
His nicknames included the "Jersey Rocket", "The Lamb", "Muffin", and "The Lamb of God". [1]
6. Riccardo Scivales (1990). Harlem Stride Piano Solos. Ekay Music. ISBN 0-943748-43-7.
7. * Riccardo Scivales: Jazz Piano: The Left Hand (Bedford Hills, New York: Ekay Music, 2005). A method covering practically all the left-hand techniques (Lambert's too) used in jazz piano (and also a study of the history of the left hand in jazz piano), with hundreds of musical examples.