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Encyclopedia > William McKinney

William McKinney (17 September 1895 - 14 October 1969) was an American jazz drummer who led a series of musical groups, most notably McKinney's Cotton Pickers.


William "Bill" McKinney was born in Cynthiana, Kentucky. He worked as a drummer in a circus band, then after serving in the United States Army in World War I settled in Springfield, Ohio where he took over leadership of the Synco Jazz Band. After hiring drummer Cuba Austin, McKinney worked as leader and business manager. After touring the U.S. Midwest, they got a residency at the Arcadia Ballroom in Detroit, Michigan in 1926. In Detroit they were heard by bandleader and music promoter Jean Goldkette, who arranged a more lucrative home base for the band in Detroit's Greystone Hotel Ballroom. The band was renamed "McKinney's Cotton Pickers" (see also).


After the band broke up in 1934 during the Great Depression, McKinney for a time led and played with a dance band in Boston, From 1937 on McKinney managed a Detroit Cafe with a dance floor and live bands who McKinney booked; he also booked bands for other locations on the side.


Bill McKinney retired in the 1950s and spent his last years in his childhood hometown of Cynthiana.


Further Reading

  • McKinney's Music by John Chilton, 1978

  Results from FactBites:
 
Classifying Protestant Denominations (5075 words)
McCutcheon, Allan L. 1984 "Denominations and religious intermarriage: trends among white americans in the twentieth century," Paper presented to the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion.
McIntoch, William Alex, Letitia T. Alston, and Jon P. Alston, 1979 "The differential impact of religious preferences and church attendance on attitudes towards abortion." Review of Religious Research 20: 195-213.
Roof, Wade Clark and William McKinney 1985 "Denominational America and the new religious pluralism," Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 480: 24-38.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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