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Religious Expressions Among Jazz Musicians

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religions

Article
Performing, Representing, and Archiving Belief:
Religious Expressions among Jazz Musicians
Vaughn A. Booker
Department of Religion, Princeton University, 1879 Hall, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA; vbooker@princeton.edu

Academic Editors: Douglas James Davies and Michael J. Thate


Received: 30 March 2016; Accepted: 12 August 2016; Published: 19 August 2016

Abstract: The archives of African American jazz musicians demonstrate rich sites for studying
expressions of religious belief and daily religious practice in public and private arenas, in professional
and personal capacities. Highlighting print material from the archives of Edward Kennedy “Duke”
Ellington (1899–1974) and Mary Lou Williams (1910–1981), this article examines the ways that these
musicians worked to articulate their beliefs in print and to make meaning of their routine practices.
Ellington and Williams produced written records of their aspirations for non-clerical religious
authority and leadership, novel notions of religious community, and conceptions of quotidian writing
tasks as practices with devotional value in the middle decades of the twentieth century. In preparation
for his Sacred Concert tours of American and Western European religious congregations, Ellington
theologized about the nature of God and the proper language to address God through private hotel
stationery. Following her conversion to Roman Catholicism, Williams managed a Harlem thrift shop
and worked to create the Bel Canto Foundation for musicians struggling with substance abuse and
unemployment. This study of the religious subjectivity of African Americans with status as race
representatives employs archival historical methods in the effort to vividly approximate complex
religious interiority.

Keywords: African American religious history; Religion in America; jazz; Duke Ellington;
Mary Lou Williams

1. Introduction: Records of Religious Rigor


This article focuses on two African American pianists and composers in the jazz tradition,
Edward Kennedy “Duke” Ellington and Mary Lou Williams, who fashioned public personae as
race representatives and who had significant religious statements to say—or express—in the late 1950s
and 1960s. These musicians operated within a jazz profession that underwent a decades-long transition
in social perception from its association with a vicious urban nightlife that corrupted black youth to
its treatment as a virtuosic art form conducive to progressive race representation [1]. Key to these
famous musicians’ self-awareness as race representatives is the preservation of their documents in
national and university archives, with Ellington’s materials at the Smithsonian and Williams’s records
at Rutgers University’s Institute of Jazz Studies [2]. Both Ellington and Williams produced sacred jazz
music through album recordings and religious concerts, and their archives often reflected the detailed
thought processes and business organization to manage and produce these professional endeavors.
This article locates religious practice and the articulation of belief in these musicians’ archives.
This work originates from a broader project that explores religious practice at the intersection of
public racial identity (race representation) and personal articulations of religious identity (expressions

Religions 2016, 7, 108; doi:10.3390/rel7080108 www.mdpi.com/journal/religions


Religions 2016, 7, 108 2 of 18

of belief) in twentieth-century African American religious history.1 The contemplative private practices
of Ellington and Williams shaped and refined the linguistic and performative choices these individuals
made to present their religious identities to various publics. However, the presentation of such choices
became public via historical bodies situated within cultural and national contexts and affiliations.
Raced, gendered, classed, and aged religious subjects employ choices of language and expression in
their presentations of self, and these choices also inherently constitute representations of other subjects
with whom they claim association or with whom other publics identify them. For African Americans
in the mid-twentieth century, public religious expression always entailed race representation [3].
Duke Ellington’s archive of undated hotel stationery expressed his belief in God, his frustrations
with language to refer to God, and his appeal to the very act of believing. This hotel stationery,
in conversation with his religious literature and ministerial friends, serves as an unexamined arena
of his personal religious exploration, reflection, and contention in the process of crafting music to
make public expressions of belief. Ellington’s ultimate aspiration was to use his preferred language of
music to express wordlessly the proper reverence for God; in the process, however, he wrote lyrics
attempting to accurately convey his assessment that existing language was inadequate to capture
what it meant to believe in and to speak of God. Ultimately, the concepts of God and of love became
synonymous for Ellington, articulated most vocally in his final Sacred Concert. The primary context
for examining Ellington’s expressions of belief and conceptions of God is the composition of specific
songs for performance in his Three Sacred Concerts, premiering in 1965, 1968, and 1973—which also
served to revitalize Ellington’s career as he entered his seventies.
Additionally, my study of Mary Lou Williams through her Bel Canto Foundation archive
articulates personal and communal meaning in what appeared to be her professional failure. To render
Williams’s rigorous daily activity visible through an exploration of her business archive is to contest
the portrait of her work from 1958 to about 1966 as insufficient, amateurish folly and an eccentric
preoccupation which distracted Williams from her more laudable musical pursuits. Williams’s daily
labor was a manifestation of her personal conception of a divine call, and with this material, I also reveal
how Williams practiced and articulated her personal beliefs—making one African American/Catholic
convert/jazzwoman’s meticulous labor visible while also making her business records legible as a
form of print culture which documented her religious work. Through an attempt to restructure a
community of African American jazz artists and their supporters, Williams pursued charitable social
work as the institutionalization of personal accountability. She attempted to institutionalize personal
habits of supporting others in order to aid musicians who experienced many of the frustrations
with their profession that she knew well. This was a translation of personal practices, prior to her
Catholic conversion, into the language of charitable organizations, following her Catholic conversion,
as recognized by the governmental bureaucracy. Such a charitable strategy was not unfamiliar to many
Christian denominations in the United States, and in Williams’s personal case, the production of “good
sounds” was her ultimate goal for rehabilitated, creative African American jazz musicians.

1 With this larger project, I claim that black jazz musicians emerged as “race professionals” because of an African American
middle-class Protestantism in the first half of the twentieth century that modeled religious and racial representations of
African Americans as professional duties. The emergence of jazz presented a leisure culture that religious African American
middle-class professional men and women decried, while black Protestant middle-class youth who enjoyed this culture
emerged from it as the black jazz professionals and aficionados in the black press who shaped the music they loved into an
art form they deemed an appropriate, alternative vehicle for race representation. Accompanying that race representation in
(un)intentional forms were various expressions of prominent African American religious belief and practices in the early
twentieth century, evident through three major themes: irreverent performances of African American religious leadership
and expressive acts of worship; a sacralization of “Africa” in narratives of African American history; and with celebrated
jazz musicians who committed to black Protestants’ social and political activism against Jim Crow through the desegregation
of performing venues, financial support of civil rights activism, and intentional crossover racial appeal.
Religions 2016, 7, 108 3 of 18

2. “An Eligible light of Semantics that’s Right for the One God Divine”
Duke Ellington grew up in Washington, D.C.’s black middle class at the turn of the twentieth
century, and his mother took him to at least two churches every Sunday (Nineteenth Street Baptist
and John Wesley A. M. E. Zion, his father’s family church) ([4], pp. 12–15). The young Ellington
was educated in an environment that saw the staging of historical plays and pageants by civic
groups, schools, and churches to instill race pride for Africa’s descendants. Ellington the composer
“musicalized” African American history, and the first two decades of his career saw conscious attempts
to assert an appreciation for blackness in songs like “Black and Tan Fantasy” (1927), “Symphony in
Black” (1934), “Black Butterfly” (1936), “Black Beauty” (1938), and in Black, Brown and Beige (1943),
Ellington’s extended symphonic “tone parallel to the history of the Negro in America” [5]. As he
prepared his musical compositions for his first Sacred Concert in 1965, Ellington wrote in a rough
copy of his program text, “In the beginning, we only existed in the mind of GOD, and so GOD,
very graciously, shared with us a life of our own” [6]. These hotel stationery notes reveal that while
traveling, Ellington made constant attempts to characterize God in his own language, and he debated
the precise language others employed to capture the nature of God for his songs. In one private hotel
moment, Ellington expressed a definition of God through personal experience with the natural world:
“I Can Hear GOD Anytime/I Can Feel GOD in the Sun Rise/the Smell & the Taste/of the Wind & the
Sea/MAKES ME See GOD When I Close My Eyes” [7]. At other times, Ellington turned to religious
literature to encounter other conceptions of God within Christian traditions. Some of this literature he
acquired from his fans and friends in positions of religious leadership, and he sustained an engagement
with it in the process of composing his three Sacred Concerts.
Ellington read Destined for Greatness, a booklet by Life Messengers, “an evangelical non-profit
organization” based in Seattle, Washington. Life Messengers was a publishing ministry founded in
1944 by Ray W. Johnson and his wife, Vera. Johnson, a graduate of the Moody Bible Institute, was
also the publisher of The Last Days Bible, which focused on premillennial evangelical concepts of the
impending apocalypse [8]. Destined for Greatness is an apologetic narrative tract, with “Dr. Fronkby”
at the center of the encounter over proof of God’s existence and the literal reliability of the Bible.
Dr. Fronkby is a scientist who is convinced of God’s existence and biblical infallibility, and he engages
a group of students who challenge his rationale behind evangelical Christian commitment versus
modern science’s presumed opposition to it. Dr. Fronkby fielded students’ various questions: John
asked, “...[I]f there is a God and He created everything, who made God?” followed by “‘But why
didn’t God reveal something about how He came to be?’ John persisted. ‘If He does exist why hasn’t
He explained His existence? Maybe I could believe if He would explain His own beginning’” [bold in
original]. In his booklet, Ellington drew a question mark and circled it next to this passage. In response
to Steve, who asked Dr. Fronkby, “But why is God so secretive about His beginnings?” Ellington
wrote “HOW DARE WE” at the page bottom, and at the top of the next page he wrote “WE DON’T
UNDERSTAND ALL THINGS ON EARTH—TANGIBLE.” In his response to this series of questioning,
Dr. Fronkby speaks of God’s beginning, “What He has chosen not to reveal is none of our business.”
Here, Ellington bracketed this sentence and wrote “GOD” on top of “He,” placing this sentence, which
he considered a compelling response, in his preferred theological language ([9], pp. 12–14). Similarly,
Susan’s question to Dr. Fronkby about the concept of the Trinity and God permitting Jesus Christ’s
substitutionary atonement (“[W]hy didn’t He show His great love for us by coming Himself instead
of sending His Son to suffer? Why didn’t He suffer for us instead?”) irked Ellington, as evidenced
by the addition of a question mark to the paragraph and the writing of “STUPID” after Susan’s
question ([9], p. 22).
Precise language to address directly (and speak about) God was a paramount concern for Ellington,
as expressed in his hotel stationery. An Ellington stationery writing at the Hilton in Jacksonville, Florida
adds texture to his expressed frustrations with the exchange between the fictional Dr. Fronkby and
the students:
Religions 2016, 7, 108 4 of 18

What Made You Think ˆ (That) You Can Use the Word HIM
Why Do You Refer to the Almighty as HE
When You Pray ˆ (First Person) How Dare You Address the LORD as YOU
Him, You & He
Are Correct When Addressing Me [10].

Addressing an unspecified believing subject, Ellington adopted privately a tone of frustration with
the commonplace usage of masculine pronouns and titles to refer to God. Ellington even attempted to
craft lyrics for a tune, titled “There is No Pronoun Good Enough for GOD,” which expressed his belief
that regal addresses like “His or Her Majesty” and “Your Highness” for royals or “Your Honor” for a
judge fall short of adequacy when speaking to the divine [11]. A Washington, D.C. reflection expressed
his lament over the absence of sufficiently exclusive language: “With So Many ˆ (Educated[,] Brilliant)
People (Scholars) With Such Highly Developed Vocabularies—In So Many, Many ˆ(Sophisticated)
Languages & Not One, Who Think[?] of a Worthy Pronoun.” When referring to God, the archaic “thou”
and capitalized masculine pronouns were apparently insufficient for Ellington. And he ended this
note by declaring, “GOD is Beyond Gender” [12].
To consider the supreme deity “Beyond Gender” was, at base, a clear statement relegating
gendered language to the created, material world. However, this particular phrasing is likely significant
in Ellington’s language, given his history of considering others “beyond” standard classification. For
other artists, to be “Beyond Category” in the jazz world was to bear Ellington’s highest praise.
Fellow musicians Mary Lou Williams and Ella Fitzgerald received this veneration, with the latter
artist receiving a musical tribute when Ellington and Billy Strayhorn composed “Portrait of Ella
Fitzgerald” with a third movement titled, “Beyond Category.” It is likely, therefore, that this assertion of
a genderless deity is simultaneously Ellington’s assertion of God’s superiority to gendered descriptions
and an expression of high religious praise.
The evidence of this descriptive theological assertiveness would not appear as a direct message
in any of the songs from Ellington’s three Sacred Concerts. However, Ellington created a symphonic
composition, titled “New World A-Comin’,” inspired by Roi Ottley’s Peabody award-winning 1943
book on African American society, New World A-Coming: Inside Black America. Ellington’s “New World
A-Comin’,” with the composer’s spoken-word introduction in the 1970 orchestral album recording,
envisioned a future where “there will be no war, no greed, no categorization, no nonbelievers, where
love is unconditional, and there is no pronoun good enough for God” [13]. Ellington included his solo
piano performance of “New World A-Comin’” in his First Sacred Concert tour.
The composer pursued the use of terminology to address and describe God that could not apply
to any other subject or concept. This must have been a constant thought process for Ellington while
traveling, for his poetic reflection in San Antonio, Texas describes his pursuit of such elusive language:

My Dear GOD I’ve Been Searching


Searching For the Word or the Phrase
that Cannot Be Use[d] [for?] any Purpose
& Has Not Been Used Through All the Universal Days

My Dear GOD I’ve Been looking,


Listening, looking & Trying to Find
An Eligible light of Semantics
that’s Right For the One God Divine

When Speaking to or Of My Dear GOD


There’s Not One Pronoun
that Hasn’t Been Used for Others
& Not One That Hasn’t Been Used I’ve Found No Not One I’ve Found [14].
Religions 2016, 7, 108 5 of 18

With music, Ellington was able to find or create a particular phrase, theme, or melody to express
a particular concept, mood, person, or group of people. However, he appeared unsatisfied with
an inability to do likewise with existing language about the divine. Additional hotel stationery
reflections in Greensboro, North Carolina and Baltimore, Maryland indicate that Ellington momentarily
considered the exclusive use of the first person pronoun by God—and God alone—acceptable. He
declared “The Only Pronoun Good Enough for God is ‘I’ When used in the FIRST PERSON” at one
moment, and he also wrote, “There is only ˆ(the) ONE Pronoun/good Enough For GOD/& It Can
only Be Use[d] By the ONE/GOD—I AM” [15]. Relegating the address of God to God’s self may have
served to convey the essential ineffability Ellington felt in his reverence for the divine. The practice
of generating such written statements about God may have even served as acts of private worship
for Ellington. However, this work would not suffice for Ellington’s attempt to capture the worshipful
rhetoric of believers in the God of the Hebrew Bible for the songs he was composing. The Baltimore
reflection in which Ellington refers to God as “the ONE” reveals an attempt to employ a numerical
pronoun to address the Almighty, and a reflection in Honolulu, Hawaii reveals Ellington’s seemingly
meditative attempts to spell out this form of reverence through repetition of the title “the One” [16].
Ellington had used “the One” to refer to God in a composition predating his three Sacred Concerts.
In 1963, he composed a stage play, My People, what he deemed a “social significance” work intended
for a children’s audience during the height of the Civil Rights Movement—reminiscent of the pageants
from Ellington’s childhood like W. E. B. Du Bois’s The Star of Ethiopia. This play was broadcast so
that black children, the larger white American viewership, and a wider European audience would
know that “there are Negro doctors, lawyers, businessmen, nurses, teachers, telephone operators,
policemen, and housewives,” and that they are worthy of admiration ([17], pp. 393, 395). One of the
particularly religious compositions for this broadcast was titled, “Ain’t But the One,” performed by
Ellington’s orchestra and featuring the lead vocals of Jimmy McPhail and the backing vocals of the
Irving Bunton Singers. Employing the familiar “call and response” singing method of black gospel
music, “Ain’t But The One” reflected Ellington’s strident monotheism through a recording of God’s
activity as chronicled primarily in the Hebrew Bible, invoking events that would have been familiar to
any African Americans attached to the tradition of music derived from African American spirituals.
But the lyrics for “Ain’t But the One” made use of implied pronouns (and interrogative pronouns)
when describing God, effectively serving Ellington’s linguistic contention by evading their usage
altogether. McPhail and the Irving Bunton Singers alternated choruses of “Ain’t but the One (just
One)” when describing the “one good Lord above” or the “one great God of love.” McPhail spoke
of a God who “made a serpent wiggle from a walking stick/made a snake out of a cane,” and he
asked “who set the stars (sun and the moon)?” and “who knows the judgment (just who)?” without
the use of “He” [18]. Ellington later incorporated “Ain’t But the One” into his first Sacred Concert,
thereby conveying to religious audiences nationwide his appraisal of the African American Christian
musical tradition while subtly omitting the use of the masculine pronoun most Christians associated
with God.2

2 For the televised We Love You Madly Tribute to an ailing Duke Ellington in 1973, Ray Charles and Aretha Franklin re-imagined
Ellington’s “Ain’t But the One” by setting his lyrics to the basic structure of their song, “Spirit in the Dark.” The song
includes not only an organ, electric guitar, and a mass gospel choir behind Charles and Franklin, intimately familiar with
the idioms of modern gospel music, but it also contains a “praise break” showcasing these two musicians’ improvisational
spirit. In a sense, this reworking of the song affirms the theological content of Ellington’s lyrics as sufficiently representative
of African American Christianity. However, the Franklin and Charles version uses the pronoun “He” when referring to
God. Coupled with their musical arrangement, which supplants Ellington’s as a more authentic representation of modern
gospel music that is conducive to Pentecostal worship practices, Charles and Franklin translate Ellington’s message into the
words and sounds most familiar to the black Christian communities with which they were well acquainted. These changes
also simply signal generational and religious differences between musicians—Ellington had not been a church-attending
religious person, and his Washington, DC black Baptist and Methodist upbringing in the black middle class bore mainly the
strong influence of African American spirituals, not gospel music.
Religions 2016, 7, 108 6 of 18

Besides use of “the One,” Ellington composed “Supreme Being” for his Second Sacred Concert, an
epic song similar to the first Sacred Concert’s “In the Beginning, God” in its focus on the Hebrew Bible’s
Genesis creation narrative, but relying primarily on the choir and soloists’ spoken word following an
arranged instrumental opening:
Supreme Being!
Supreme Being
There is a Supreme Being
There is one, only one, one Supreme Being
Out of lightning, thunder, chaos and confusion
The Supreme Being organized and created
Created and organized heaven and earth
[...]
Supreme Being.
The immortal creator and ruler of the universe, eternal and all-powerful
Supreme Being
Called God! [19].
To speak repeatedly of one “Supreme Being” allowed Ellington to marshal many familiar religious
descriptors for this divine concept, contemplating this being and its attributes for over four minutes,
before the chorus reveals (by building to an exclamation) that it is also “called God!” But this prose also
allowed Ellington to signify that the capitalized word “God” that many English-speaking monotheists
use to refer to this “Supreme Being” inevitably fell short of fully capturing the divine object of reverence.
In this instance, more words rather than fewer were necessary for Ellington to represent to the listener
the particular, epic biography of this entity of utmost existence.
Why wasn’t “Jesus” a sufficient noun? Language about Jehovah, Yahweh, the Holy Ghost (or
Spirit) is absent from Ellington’s hotel stationery reflections. Similarly, Jesus’s name appears once
in this collection.3 According to Ellington biographer Harvey Cohen, a 1958 interview revealed that
Ellington regularly wore a gold cross under his shirt but also that he “almost never spoke about
Jesus Christ directly, either in conversation or in the lyrics for his sacred compositions” ([17], p. 448).
In Ellington’s first Sacred Concert, the gospel singer Esther Marrow stated in “The Lord’s Prayer” that
she was “beggin you, Jesus, to give me more grace/I need your power to help me to run this race”
before improvising on the New Testament “Our Father”/model prayer. It is possible that Ellington
granted Marrow the improvisational freedom to use her preferred divine language; nevertheless, the
almost total absence of the name Jesus or the title Christ from Ellington’s compositions is significant.
Two exceptions are possible allusions to Jesus in “Ain’t But the One” and “Tell Me It’s the Truth.”
In “Ain’t But the One,” Jimmy McPhail’s line “Made the cripple walk and the blind man see” refers to
two acts of Jesus that the New Testament gospels provide, although this lyrical presentation also allows
for attribution of the healings to the power of God. “Tell Me It’s the Truth” references “the Gospel
truth,” because “the truth is the light and the light is right”—and to Marrow’s “right?” Ellington
answered, “right” [20]. However, Marrow appears to sing “Tell me it’s a truth” in the Grace Cathedral
premiere and on the album version, despite the album version’s song title and versions by other Sacred
Concert singers since.4 Through the song, the singer appears in need of assurance that something is

3 One undated piece of hotel stationery (without a location) reveals Ellington similarly thought about how to properly address
Jesus Christ as God’s son: “People Who Have the Honor to Be Presented to a prince or Princess—[the] Son or Daughter—of
a King is addressed ˆ(or referred to) as your ˆ (or His) Highness—Not He or She/But Not Jesus Christ—& Jesus is the
Son of GOD/Why is Proper Protocol ˆ NOT Provided [to?] the Son of GOD—Jesus Christ—” Although Ellington’s desire
for exclusive language to appropriately address the “Son of GOD” may reveal a significant place for Jesus in Ellington’s
theology, it does not indicate conclusively that he held God and Jesus (alongside the Holy Spirit) as equal deities, or that the
“Son of GOD” was also “God the Son.”
4 This appears to also be the case for Duke Ellington’s recorded concert at Fountain Street Church in Grand Rapids, Michigan
on 17 April 1966.
Religions 2016, 7, 108 7 of 18

either true or “the truth,” and the allusion to Jesus as either the biblical “truth” or “light” is possible
but unclear with this song. In both cases, Ellington elected to avoid direct mentions of Jesus or Christ.
A rhyming reflection that Ellington wrote on hotel stationery in Houston, Texas serves as his
attempt at a proverb, imitating a Shakespearean line from The Merchant of Venice: “It’s a Wise Man Who
Knows His Father/It’s a Wise Man Who Knows His Son/It’s a Wise Man Who Knows that GOD/&
that GOD is the One and Only One” [21]. A Christianity Today profile of Ellington possibly shed light
on these theological absences:

His Washington, D.C. boyhood was filled with sermons and Sunday school, but Ellington
has rarely attended services during his career and never joined a church. At 23, with a
jazz career beginning to bloom, “I began to read the Bible for myself, to see what there
was. I have my own idea, and I think it makes sense.” This idea strays from the orthodox
belief on the Trinity, but he is conservative about the Bible itself. “I believe the whole story,”
he said. “I am always in a position to have it out with people who say the Bible contradicts
itself. I’m not a formal Bible student, but I can correct people on things like that.” [22].

While the profile offered no specific stances Ellington many have had regarding the idea of God
existing simultaneously in three persons, it conveyed the musician’s confidence in his own ability to
comprehend, interpret, and defend Hebrew and Christian scriptures without conventional clerical
guidance. The article glossed the prospect of Ellington’s unitarian personal theology (perhaps this
explains his frustration with the fictional student questioning Dr. Fronkby about God suffering in
Jesus’s crucifixion?) in order to focus on his affirmation of the existence of God. Christianity Today’s
mission was to promote a more conservative evangelical Christian voice in print magazine culture
than the mainline Protestant magazine, The Christian Century.
Ellington’s sacred music represented an attempt to craft new religious sounds, and his presence
in various churches and synagogues indicated the prospect of interracial fellowship and the creativity
it was able to produce if more Americans committed to integration and welcomed African Americans
into their religious spaces. His Sacred Concerts proclaimed belief, albeit a general belief in a supreme
deity, and the defense of believing was sufficient for those religious participants like Ellington who
elected to operate within an interfaith world. However, the lyrics of his compositions never expressed
the particular belief in Jesus’s resurrection, atonement, or divinity.
As a public representative of receptivity to religious belief, Ellington became a repository or vessel
for other religious leaders’ more pronounced and firm religious commitments, and they sent him
religious materials as gifts in order to persuade him to join their religious communities. For Ellington to
express divine belief without adhering to any particular Christian denomination meant that others were
willing to send him scriptures and religious literature to compel him in particular theological directions.
Ellington’s apparent openness left him vulnerable to accusations by his critics of insincere piety and
superficial belief. But such openness also made him likely to forge new religious relationships that
became friendly correspondences, some of which fed into the Sacred Concerts. Ellington’s collection of
religious literature reveals that a profession of religious commitment in twentieth-century America did
not seal the individual off from the reality of competing religious commitments, which may even have
appeared as the well-intentioned proselytizing of others who admired the popular jazz musician and
sought to welcome him into their particular fellowships. Nevertheless, Ellington received these gifts as
clergy encouraging him to create sacred music “not as a matter of career, but in response to a growing
understanding of my own vocation” [23]. In general, for Ellington to proclaim divine ineffability in
public songs and private writings was both a product and practice of his personal religious wrestling,
contemplation, and devotion.
Endowed with the trust of many ministers and religious institutions to present a statement of faith,
Ellington made use of these public settings to serve as an African American representative of religious
fidelity who was privately in the constant process of working out the nature of that belief. Although
granted a unique opportunity, Ellington’s wrestling reflects the individual lives of many religious
Religions 2016, 7, 108 8 of 18

adherents and troubles the assumption that an individual’s commitment to religious institutions,
assent to doctrinal statements, or participation in religious rituals implies a shared, uncomplicated
understanding of those spaces, languages, actions, or objects of reverence. The following section on
Mary Lou Williams explores another jazz musician’s sense of personal religious calling that resulted
in her diligent, detailed, daily work to forge a position of unconventional religious leadership and
race representation.

3. Personal Mission, Professional Accountability


Mary Lou Williams was born with a “veil” and had visions as a child, and she likely had a
family of religious people around her who encouraged a notion of her wielding spiritual gifts. But
Williams did not explore “conventional” religious traditions until after the death of jazz saxophonist
and composer Charlie Parker from years of hard substance abuse. Williams engaged in prayer and
“ascetic” practices like fasting and abstaining from purchasing luxuries. This followed an intense
period of continued visions and accompanied close friendships with jazz trumpeter John Birks “Dizzy”
Gillespie and his wife Lorraine, a Catholic convert. Lorraine encouraged Williams’s exploration of
Catholicism, while Gillespie encouraged her to return to performing music. She viewed her music,
and the music industry itself, as antithetical to her religious mission before meeting a black Catholic
friar, Mario Hancock, who encouraged her to compose religious reflections as part of her calling.
The 1960s and 1970s saw Williams composing many religious works. The Roman Catholic reforms
of Vatican II afforded her a vehicle to promote the concept of “sacred jazz” by providing music “for
the disturbed soul.” Her music for Catholic liturgy contained gospel influences, and Williams, as a
champion of jazz education, sought to make clear to others the roots of authentic American music in
spirituals and the blues. Black Christ of the Andes celebrated the seventeenth-century Afro-Peruvian
Catholic Saint Martin de Porres, “Dirge Blues” was a memorial to President Kennedy (the first Catholic
U.S. president), and concerts like Praise the Lord in Many Voices, Mass for Lenten Season, and Mass for
Peace saw Williams and her music circulating throughout Catholic churches in an attempt to get a
male-dominated and formerly segregated religious institution to take seriously her musical talents,
religious sincerity, and the general presence of black Catholics. In the early 1970s, Williams articulated
the sacred origins of jazz through a particular African American heritage:

Through our suffering God took pity on us and created the world’s greatest true art: the
“Negro Spirituals” and from the Spirituals: Jazz was born in all its creative and progressive
forms...Jazz is also a healer of the mind and soul. God reaches others through it to bring
peace and happiness to those who know how to listen to it. [24]

Williams reiterated her belief about jazz music’s divine origins in a 1978 interview, adding the
notion that performing and listening to the music had spiritually therapeutic benefits: “God did blacks
a favor by creating jazz especially for them. God helps people through jazz; people have been healed
through it. It has happened to me” ([25], p. 36).
Williams articulated her new religious calling following the death Charlie Parker, her friend
whose musical creativity in forging “bebop” (along with trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie and pianist Earl
Rudolph “Bud” Powell) she encouraged. Having returned to the United States from Europe in 1954,
and familiar with Parker’s heroin addiction, Williams received word in 1955 about Parker’s declining
state from her brother, Jerry, who spotted him leaving Harlem Hospital. Since she often cared for
musicians in her Hamilton Terrace apartment, Williams relayed to Parker through Jerry that he should
“come by the house” ([26], p. 144; [27], p. 67). Unfortunately, Parker died a few days later. According
to Williams biographer Tammy Kernodle, this loss made her despondent about the state of the jazz
community and its music, given its demonstrated inability to provide care and safety nets for others:

[Charlie Parker’s] death symbolized for Mary everything she thought had gone wrong with
the jazz scene and the larger black community. Personal accountability and responsibility
to the community had been replaced by an attitude focused on the individual and on
Religions 2016, 7, 108 9 of 18

personal advancement. Apparently no one had considered intervening with Parker; those
around him simply distanced themselves when his behavior became too much to bear.
Some fed his chemical demons in order to anesthetize or control him. ([28], pp. 167–77)

Unrealized creativity for jazz musicians, and the material insecurities it produced, became
Williams’s chief concerns, which she sought to remedy through religious care. Following Charlie
Parker’s death, Williams served as a co-chairperson of the Charlie Parker Foundation, established to
support the late musician’s children. A memorial concert for Parker, featuring Williams, Gillespie,
and others, raised $10,000. This success inspired in Williams a desire to establish an organization
for struggling musicians and children, which she named the Bel Canto Foundation ([28], p. 177,
and [29], p. 245).
To raise funds for the foundation, Williams opened a thrift shop to sell second-hand goods
(including luxury items) to New York City’s low-income patrons. As she reflected, the thrift shop came
to occupy a place in Williams’s daily routine, at first alongside nursing musicians in her home and
attending Catholic worship services:

I’d meet the musicians and like if anybody was hung up I’d take them into church and
I’d teach them to pray, how to do the rosary beads. I used to sit in the Lady of Lourdes.
I’d go to the mass in the morning, 7 o’clock mass, and sit through all the masses. I’d get
out about 9 or 10. I’d come home and fix lunch for all the poor people I had in the house I
was feeding. I’d go right back and meditate a couple hours and then I’d come home. I was
from the house to the store to the church. ([26], p. 156)

Eventually, Williams ceased housing musicians in her apartment to focus her efforts more fully
on fundraising for her foundation and managing the store (although she continued to provide their
convalescence elsewhere) ([26], p. 160; [27], pp. 78–80).5 In part, this Bel Canto Foundation story
illuminates an African American woman managing a business, attentive to her income and influence.
But the Bel Canto Foundation story has also been about failure, born of Williams’s insufficient income
and experience. Criticisms of Williams’s efforts to establish the Bel Canto Foundation regarded the
thrift shop she managed as “more a place to socialize than to do business.” Williams biographer Linda
Dahl even quoted the jazz musician’s friend and later manager, Father Peter O’Brien, who stated,
“She was not tough enough to run a business” ([29], p. 294). Dahl characterizes her donation standards
and practices as unfeasible and unwise: “All an applicant had to do was give his name and address
to receive a small check from Mary. This of course could not, and did not, last long” ([29], p. 265).
Ultimately, this critical voice stemmed from the negative reflections of Williams’s friends and fellow
jazz musicians, who watched Williams care for other musicians with extreme devotion but found
her religious exhortations off-putting ([29], p. 255). The value of revisiting Williams’s Bel Canto
Foundation archive is to reassess her management, fundraising, and store operation as daily religious
labor that ensured her care—and creation of community—for many struggling jazz musicians.
With the legal assistance of Herbert Bliss, Williams incorporated the Bel Canto
Foundation ([28], p. 190). The Bel Canto Foundation, Inc.’s charter stated the following primary
purpose: “To voluntarily assist in relief of every kind and nature to those persons suffering from
or exposed to alcohol or drugs in any degree, but primarily to musicians whose health or work is
affected by alcohol or drugs” [30]. As of 8 August 1958, Mary Lou Williams had established a Bel Canto
bank account. The total deposits to the account were $851.75 by 28 August. She counted personal

5 In 1964, Williams revealed, “I put the worst cases in a room down the hall from my place I rent cheap from a neighbor.
They stay a couple of weeks, and I talk to them and pray with them and help them get a job. But I can be very hard in my
charity, and sometimes I tell them, ‘You’ve got to be a man. Stand up and go downtown and get a job. No use lying around
Harlem and feeling sorry for yourself.’ Sometimes they come back in worse shape and ask for money, and sometimes they
get on their feet. One boy I’ve been helping has a job at Gimbels, and he’s doing just fine. I’ve also sent musicians to the
Graymoor Monastery, near Garrison. Brother Mario [Hancock] there has been a lot of help to me.”
Religions 2016, 7, 108 10 of 18

withdrawals from this account as loans to herself [31]. A 23 September 1958 bank deposit statement
recorded that the Carnegie concert raised $2,922.75, excluding sizable and minor donations totaling
$690.00 from jazz pianist Erroll Garner, Dave Brubeck (who could not attend but contributed $10) [32],
the noted jazz patroness Baronness Pannonica de Koenigswarter, Evie Ellington, and various judges
and doctors whom Williams knew [33]. This total existed against a cost to Williams of $3,211.42 for
promoting and holding the concert, a sign for several of her invested friends that the foundation effort
was a wash and should not proceed further ([28], p. 266). Williams intended to record a live album of
the Carnegie Hall concert, with all proceeds benefiting her foundation. At her request, Bliss contacted
the American Federation of Musicians for permission to record the volunteer musicians. However,
Bliss received the response that “unless the performing musicians are paid recording wage scales,”
the union could not grant recording permission [34]. The unintended consequence of the musicians’
charitable gesture, in foregoing payment for the concert, was that the profession’s established labor
practices prevented a potentially lucrative source of revenue (and avenue for broader publicity) for
Williams’s foundation. Nevertheless, Williams continued to navigate America’s charitable landscape
through publicity and fundraising letters [35].
Over the next few years, Williams sent fundraising letters as she devised new efforts to foster
a sense of accountability between musicians and audiences. She organized rummage sales, offering
“New Items from Saks Fifth Ave” including “children’s clothes, shoes, dresses, books, house ware,
dishes, antiques, men’s clothes, original paintings, [and] lamps.” She advertised the location of her
rummage sales at 310 and 318 East 29th street in New York City, with weekly operational hours
from “10[a.m.]-till” [36]. Advertisements for the rummage sales appear to be hand-drawn leaflets
Williams likely distributed throughout her neighborhood. Despite the Carnegie concert’s publicity,
Williams was perhaps the only person truly convinced of her ability to establish the foundation. But the
rummage sales served as a charitable concept that Williams maintained into the 1960s. Successful
folks, musicians and otherwise, enjoyed an excess of material goods with which they could easily part.
And even though all of these items were perishable in the long run, wealthier individuals had the
means to buy sturdier, more durable goods that would be of great use, even through second-hand
ownership. Williams and her successful friends donated their own luxury clothes, household items,
and antiques in the ongoing effort to raise money for the Bel Canto Foundation. The rummage sale
fostered the (re)circulation of material goods—within a local community, between two financially
disparate socioeconomic classes, and for cheaper than original costs. This stood as an alternative to the
conventional circulation of economic resources between these two classes, such as money dispensed
through an hourly wage employment system. For her ultimate goal of benefiting jazz musicians on
the social margins, Williams came to rely on a charitable commercial practice that linked the most
marginalized of New York City’s working class with its successful elites whose friendship, favor, and
admiration she had earned over several years.
In 1959, Williams chose 308 East 29th Street as the location of a thrift shop to continue her practice
of selling donated goods from musicians, socialites, and others, to fundraise for her foundation. In the
long effort to realize her dream—to support musicians by holding others accountable for their care,
Williams encountered the reality that in American society, the institutionalization of care required
its own measures of accountability with which Williams had to become familiar. There were three
related aspects of Williams’s accountability: her personal bookkeeping, the maintenance of federal
and state licenses to operate as a tax-free charity in the city, and establishing and maintaining her
professional trustworthiness to (re)negotiate contracts and terms with her creditors. Official legal forms,
bureaucratic liaisons, and constant personal correspondences served as the modes to institutionalize
trust and credibility through accountability and transparency. To maintain her thrift shop in its more
unprofitable moments, Williams also became responsible for drafting requests to revise payment terms
and explaining insufficient funds for overdue bills, justifying her store’s viability in order to renew
licenses. Additionally, alongside continued appeals for funds and advertisements, she was responsible
for diligent accounting of daily expenses.
Religions 2016, 7, 108 11 of 18

On Williams’s individual part, her detailed expense books recorded the donations, sales, and
personal finances she put into the thrift shop. Regular expenses in 1959 and 1960 included travel
(train cost, cab and bus fare, tolls, parking tickets), transportation of materials (shipping, car rental),
meals (for herself, relatives, and others), repairs (for the shop, the shop’s car), shop maintenance
(hardware, personal care products, cleaning supplies, office furniture and supplies), care for donated
clothes (hangers, dry-cleaning), publicity (stamps, paint, posters, cardboard, printing), the shop’s bills
(telephone and gas), rental payments for the shop, and Williams’s personal loans to the shop, for which
she also recorded the shop’s repayments to her. However, these expense books were also essential for
holding her accountable about her own daily expenses, serving at times to remind her of the degree
to which her time and income went toward personal errands and spending. Williams consistently
recorded payments for her sister, Grace Mickles (who struggled with alcoholism), and for Grace’s
children [37]. Other expenses included her performance trips to other cities, the one-time services of
an accountant, and the annual cost of a post office box. Total receipts for the shop, from 1 September
through 31 December 1960 amounted to $1,035.32. Against $357.38 in expenses for that quarter, the
total gain amounted to $677.94 [38].
Naturally, accounting was central to participating in any institutionalized system of accountability.
For the year ending 31 May 1960, Williams filed the New York State Department of Social Welfare’s
Annual Report for Charitable Organizations, declaring an income of $3,260.63 ($727.30 from the
rummage sale and $2,533.33 in donations) and $1,952.50 in expenses ($973.74 for the rummage sale,
and $978.76, possibly related to fundraising donations), for a total net income of $1,308.13 (although
because of a miscalculation, she reported $100 less than the actual total) [39]. Williams filed a financial
report on 15 February 1961, a required submission to New York’s Department of Welfare, Division of
Public Solicitation. She declared $3,322.19 in receipts ($1,531.77 from the thrift shop sales and $1,790.42
in donor contributions) and $1,599.64 in total expenses, for a net income of $1,722.55 (although Williams
again mistakenly calculated the total as $10 less than the actual amount). On the reverse page of the
form, she indicated that the foundation’s bank account contained $1,806.20 for the purpose of “helping
needy and deserving musicians.” She also needed to explain two other expenses she titled “Loan
repaid to M. L. Williams” and “Aid $62.38” in writing on the reverse page:
Aid: Check in the amount of 47.38 was given to Diane Coles to pay back room rent and to
rehabilitate herself.
Aid: George Gordon, Musician, had heart attack on job. Took care of him by letting him
watch thrift shop. Gave George Gordon 1 check for $10.00 and 1 for $5.00.
$100.00 of $165.00 loan made to fund by Mary Lou Williams. [40]
With this financial form and others, there were obvious descriptive limitations on what Williams
could classify as her “care” for particular musicians, given her professional traveling schedule and other
financial obligations in addition to managing the shop. Fifteen dollars for George Gordon was certainly
not enough to cover his healthcare costs, but perhaps the relatively insubstantial amount obscures
the degree of Williams’s actual involvement when she “took care of him” in her shop—constant
communication with Gordon over his period of recuperation, errands she may have run for him,
recruiting others to check in on his progress, preparing meals for him, and even regular conversations
with him about life, music, and future goals beyond his immediate illness. The checks may have even
represented the official amount that she provided Gordon once he was well enough to leave the shop,
concealing Williams’s true religious labor—her investment of time and finances—to ensure his recovery.
Such matters of personal care are not as easy to quantify on federal forms, particularly when time was
constantly a precious and limited resource for the busy Williams. Additionally, the George Gordon
Singers performed for one of Williams’s albums of religious jazz in 1964, so her personal and financial
relationship with this musician extended well beyond what one individual form could capture.
In the 1960s, several musicians appeared in Williams’s checkbooks as the recipients of payments
for performances with her (in addition to personal loans): bassist George Tucker (1927–1965), who
Religions 2016, 7, 108 12 of 18

performed for Williams’s trio; Andrew Cyrille (b. 1939), eventually an avant-garde drummer for jazz
pianist Cecil Taylor, whose musical style represented a comical foe for Williams in her normative
articulation of jazz as music ([28], pp. 259–62); drummer Berisford “Shep” Shepherd (b. 1917);
drummer, arranger, and singer James “Osie” Johnson (1923–1966); double bassist and photographer
Milton John “Milt” Hinton (1910–2000); and drummer Percy Brice (b. 1923) [41]. These musicians
likely had stable enough employment to maintain bank accounts, whereas the thrift shop employees
and struggling musicians Williams encountered most likely received “out-of-pocket” compensation
or charity, respectively. In her 1965 income tax files, Williams indicated a total of $227.76 in personal
payments to several African American musicians: bassist Eustis Guillemet (b. 1934), drummer
Granville William “Mickey” Roker (b. 1932), bassist Melbourne R. “Bob” Cranshaw (b. 1932), and a
donation to pianist and composer Tadley Ewing Peake “Tadd” Dameron (1917–1965) [42]. It is plausible
that Williams enlisted these musicians, and others, as her sidemen for various concert performances
in order to afford them steady income and to allow them to continue exercising their musical gifts.
But Williams also maintained lasting correspondences with some musicians, who shared with her their
progress in (and frustrations with) the music industry, the details of their daily prayer habits, and their
reflections on social unrest [43].
The irony of Williams never succeeding in raising the profile (and resources) of this foundation was
that the constant care for her immediate family diverted her income, which she could have otherwise
put towards the Bel Canto mission. As reflected in her checkbook, Williams’s sister, Grace Mickles,
and her children were the perpetual recipients of funds for essentials like food, overdue rent, clothing,
and bus fare. Williams even paid Mickles’s life insurance policy. Beyond the care of relatives, included
in Williams’s regular expenses were items essential to her embrace of Catholicism: she wrote checks
regularly to Our Lady of Lourdes church for $20 worth of prayer candles, $4 for a Catholic pamphlet,
$5 for prayers from the Mother Mary Missions, $30 for the Franciscan Missionary, a $25 donation
to the poor, and a $400 donation to the Catholic Youth Organization. She recorded her donations to
other congregations, like the Holy Rosary Church, St. Leo’s Church, St. Mary’s Catholic Church, and
St. Patrick’s Church. In addition to substantial (but infrequent) personal expenses, like $300 gowns
for her concerts, $124 to cover recording session costs, $75 expenses for hair care, the circulation of
Williams’s personal income for charitable and business purposes siphoned off potential resources
for the foundation [41]. Sizable deposits of her own money into the thrift shop’s account—such as
personal checks totaling $864, $2,000 in concert revenues, her regular salary of $512.71 for performing
at the Hickory House nightclub in New York city, and a bank loan for $2,000, all in 1965—never
became enough to offset the store’s preexisting rental debt, overdue utility bills, and her perpetual aid
to others [44]. These expenses accompanied Williams’s support for her mother, by this point ailing
from cancer. In part, Williams’s immediate charitable generosity and substantial family obligations
counteracted the long-term religious mission she envisioned for a specific musical population.

4. Conclusions: Alternative Modes of Religious Community and Discourse, Novel Practices of


Devotional Labor and Leadership
Duke Ellington sympathized with any effort to affirm God and to affirm believing in God.
While on the road in the mid-1960s, in preparation for his Sacred Concerts, he used hotel stationery
to make notes to himself concerning potential lyrics for his sacred music. In this process, he was
transcribing his efforts to verbalize what it meant to express belief in God. A reflection at the Detroit
Hilton hotel became a driving assertion of his sacred concerts: “Every Man Prays in His Own Language
& there is No Language GOD Does Not Understand.” With the opposite side of the paper, Ellington
explained that music was “My Language,” that it “Got Me into Church,” and that it was “Possibly My
Most Eligible Form of Semantics—if I am to Speak to GOD” [45]. The constantly touring Ellington
made sense of God on the road without a regular church home, theologizing as he read the Christian
Bible and engaged mostly liberal religious literature [46]. When he finally attended houses of worship,
it was without adhering to their specific doctrinal commitments—it was as a celebrated musician,
Religions 2016, 7, 108 13 of 18

similar to an honored guest preacher, but bearing a primarily musical and nondenominational message.
In these moments, the famous composer could bypass lay status within any denomination and enjoy a
relatively exalted status in white religious spaces (and in the black religious spaces where ministers
and congregants respected his jazz career) as a professional African American artist who enjoyed more
than forty years of career success.
Ellington was a prominent African American race representative and served such a role in white
religious spaces, although the religious literature he enjoyed did not emerge from African American
Christian denominations or thinkers. The home of Ellington’s Sacred Concert music was not the
mainline African American Protestantism of Washington, D.C. in which his parents raised him. Rather,
Ellington engaged an explicitly ecumenical religious project that brought him into the world of white
mainline liberal Protestantism in the United States and of Western Europe. Additionally, the theological
reflections that Ellington produced with his sacred musical compositions represented his responses
to the discourses and concerns of liberal Christianity, particularly in his manner of wrestling with
appropriate language to address and characterize the nature of God, and with the noteworthy absence
of Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit from the language of a composer moving primarily throughout
mainline Christian religious spaces.
Moreover, while Ellington bore implicitly the task of representing African American Christianity
in his new music, his primary familiarity with African American religious life was relegated to his
childhood, where he spent Sundays between his father’s African Methodist Episcopal Zion church and
his mother’s National Baptist Convention, USA church. Engagement with the evolving expressions
and theologies of Afro-Protestantism in the first half of the twentieth century was absent in Ellington’s
adulthood, and he gravitated more toward white mainline Protestant leaders, thinkers, and religious
spaces. His sister, Ruth, a significant champion of Ellington’s religious legacy, a congregant at St. Peter’s
Lutheran Church in Manhattan, and his family member most responsible for creating his archive, was
similarly situated between white mainline and evangelical religious worlds [47]. Gospel developed
as an African American music form and industry in the years between Ellington’s religious youth
and his Sacred Concerts in the mid-1960s, and its popularity spread throughout African American
Christianity (from Holiness-Pentecostal churches to the Baptist and Methodist mainline). Consequently,
a significant temporal and theological gulf existed between Ellington’s religious life and that of many
African American Christians, despite Ellington’s de facto identity as an African American racial and
religious representative to predominantly white mainline Protestant audiences. In this light, the
greater posthumous popularity of Ellington’s sacred music in white American mainline and European
Protestant churches is not an ironic outcome, and these are the congregations that continue to perform
his compositions annually.
Undeniably, Mary Lou Williams’s Bel Canto Thrift Shop failed as a sustainable business. However,
the overwhelmingly negative assessments of her work on this project from the late 1950s through the
1960s deals insufficiently with the worth of her daily labor to run her shop, to manage her finances,
and to aspire to realize a support system for musicians in need and, thereby, forge a new sense of
community between jazz artists and broader societies. Biographer Dahl’s sources for analysis of the
foundation effort and management of the thrift shop did not include the musicians who were recipients
of Williams’s charity. The primary voices are those who financed Williams’s initial mission efforts
(ultimately at a loss) and those who sought to refocus her attention on composing and performing
new jazz music. Williams, ever the meticulous record-keeper, maintained many of the documents
related to her foundation efforts that reveal moments of promise, setback, progress, and failure. These
documents also provide a record of several musicians who experienced Williams’s charity, regardless
of the foundation’s ultimate fate.
To probe the worth of establishing and maintaining the Bel Canto Foundation for Williams, the
professional jazz musician, convert, and African American woman, is to explore the persistent diligence
of an entrepreneurial (and Catholic) newcomer whose primary musical profession likely prevented
established social service organizations, prospective financiers, and Catholic authorities from taking
Religions 2016, 7, 108 14 of 18

her efforts seriously enough to robustly support her mission. This effort to establish the Bel Canto
Foundation represented tensions for Williams the musician. There was the fundamental tension in
managing her professional output (traveling to perform and produce new music) versus managing
her Bel Canto Foundation’s daily affairs (the local operation of her thrift shop and maintaining
correspondences with potential donors). However, there was another tension for Williams the successful
African American jazz artist. While she was a newcomer to the Roman Catholic faith, having been
baptized and confirmed on 9 May 1957 following several years of religious exploration, she was
anything but a novice in her musical profession. Williams was an adult who charted a path to
prominence within one jazz community, confident in her ability to manage a substantial project like this
foundation because she had secured revenue for herself through the ongoing retrieval and management
of her composition copyrights. Consequently, she strived to become more than a regular parishioner in
her new Catholic community. She attracted the friendship of many Catholic priests and enjoyed retreats
with religious Catholic women, like the Cenacle Sisters Convent in Lancaster, Massachusetts [48].
These were relationships where Williams sought conversation and prayer partners about matters
mundane, grave, and lighthearted; yet she also actively sought the Catholic hierarchy’s legitimization
of the moral work she began prior to her formal conversion, partially through the Church’s financial
investment in her entrepreneurial efforts. The Catholic authorities she befriended, however, were fans
of Williams the prominent jazz artist, not necessarily Williams the charitable organization executive.
They encouraged her to put her full energies into developing her music (in particular, developing her
concept of “sacred jazz”) rather than treading into unfamiliar professional territory.
By 1966, Mary Lou Williams was no longer involved in the daily management of her Bel Canto
Thrift Shop. Williams strived to provide musicians their own contemplative, creative space through
her daily labor to realize her foundation by managing her thrift shop and seeking various fundraising
strategies. And some of those musicians made daily journeys into her Catholic community through
mass attendance, priestly consultations, and correspondences with Williams herself. For Williams,
the labor of her thrift shop activity served an interstitial purpose—between a sense of divine calling
without a specific religious home, and her explicitly Catholic practices and production of sacred jazz.
Duke Ellington embraced the authority to speak about God that listening audiences afforded him,
and he sought to do so publicly so that Protestants, Jews, and Catholics would accept his musical
messages. However, Ellington’s private reflections in hotels reveal that the composer never used
specifically Protestant, Jewish, or Catholic language to speak of his God. For many other jazz musicians
in need, Mary Lou Williams served as the financial and communal intermediary between personal
(and emotional) destitution and professional stability. She sought to create a new social institution
with a new understanding of her divine calling. However, Williams’s pursuit of reviving jazz creativity
to forge “good” jazz music did not require making new Catholics. For scholars of American religion,
engaging the archives of these two African American jazz musicians reveals complex individual
religious identities, expressions, and practices that allow us to view women and men attempting to
define precisely their religious roles and affiliations as well as articulating belief in their personal and
professional lives.

Acknowledgments: I am grateful to Judith Weisenfeld, Wallace Best, Jessica Delgado, Clifton Granby,
Kijan Bloomfield, Irene Elizabeth Stroud, and the Religion in the Americas and Religion and Culture workshops
at Princeton University for their feedback on earlier papers that became this publication. Additionally, I am
grateful to Tad Hershorn and Joe Peterson of the Institute of Jazz Studies, and to Wendy Shay and Joe Hursey of
the National Museum of American History Archives Center at the Smithsonian, for their research assistance in
locating archival materials for this publication.
Conflicts of Interest: The author declares no conflict of interest.
Religions 2016, 7, 108 15 of 18

References and Notes


1. While concerns about the cultural and moral worth of jazz lingered for black Christian clergy over the next
few decades, the music came to represent an idealized set of democratic and expressive possibilities in the
Cold War era and functioned as a reflection on the progressive strides of civil rights activism. This evolution
in perception accompanied innovations and developments in music and performance, where jazz enjoyed a
smaller audience no longer interested in big band dance music and more invested in the music as a listening,
intellectual artistic experience that small instrumental combos created. Fans and professional critics signified
jazz musicians as artistic virtuosos, America’s international cultural ambassadors, and representatives of an
elite African American culture capable of capturing, through music, the sounds, moods, and political desires
of a people. For more, see Penny M. Von Eschen. Satchmo Blows Up the World: Jazz Ambassadors Play the Cold
War. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2004.
2. For jazz scholar Holly Farrington, racial representation is evident in the jazz profession because of the
production of more than forty jazz autobiographies between 1936 and 1996. Duke Ellington’s 1973
autobiography, Music Is My Mistress, revealed that the musician was “always on stage” when performing,
and “his racial identity forced him to become a representative, linking public perception of African Americans
irretrievably to the individual achievement of celebrities and artists such as himself.” See Holly E. Farrington.
“Narrating the Jazz Life: Three Approaches to Jazz Autobiography.” Popular Music and Society 29 (2006):
375–86. [CrossRef]
3. In the history of civil rights legal activism, according to historian Kenneth Mack, race representation refers
to “those who claimed to speak for, stand in for, and advocate for the interests of the larger group.” Since
the nineteenth century, for African Americans to call for a “representative colored man” or “representative
Negro” has involved a tension between an atypical member of the race in terms of her or his accomplishments
and an “authentic” member of the race who was “as much like the masses of black people as possible.”
The representative colored men, “...the lucky few who had attained enough education and training to become
doctors, dentists, schoolteachers, ministers, and lawyers,” were to serve as the best cases for full and equal
African American citizenship. See Kenneth W. Mack. Representing the Race: The Creation of the Civil Rights
Lawyer. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2012, pp. 4, 5, 20. Popular black jazz professionals became de
facto race representatives because of their coverage in the black and white press, due to their inter/national
travel and publicity, and because of the emergence of music criticism.
4. Edward Kennedy Ellington, and Mercer Ellington. Music Is My Mistress. Garden City: Doubleday, 1973.
5. For further analysis of Ellington’s racial and religious themes in his popular compositions, see Vaughn Booker.
“‘An Authentic Record of My Race’: Exploring the Popular Narratives of African American Religion in the
Music of Duke Ellington.” Religion and American Culture: A Journal of Interpretation 25 (2015): 1–36. [CrossRef]
6. “Rough Copy,” p. 2, Series 5: Performances and Programs, 1963–1989, Box 5, Folder 4 (Duke Ellington’s
Festival of Religion and the Arts, 1966), Ruth Ellington Collection, Archives Center, National Museum of
American History.
7. “The Baltimore Hilton, Baltimore, MD,” Series 5: Personal Correspondence and Notes, 1941–1974,
Box 6, Folder 1 (Notes, undated), Duke Ellington Collection, Archives Center, National Museum of
American History.
8. “Obituary—Raymond Walter Johnson.” The Seattle Times, 2010. Available online: http://www.legacy.com/
obituaries/seattletimes/obituary.aspx?pid=146007696 (accessed on 10 October 2014).
9. “Destined For Greatness,” (Seattle, WA: Life Messengers, date unknown), Series 14: Religious
Material, 1928–1974, Box 2, Folder 2, Duke Ellington Collection, Archives Center, National Museum of
American History.
10. “Jacksonville Hilton, Jacksonville, FL,” Series 5: Personal Correspondence and Notes, 1941–1974,
Box 6, Folder 1 (Notes, undated), Duke Ellington Collection, Archives Center, National Museum of
American History.
11. “Downtowner/Rowntowner Motor Inns, location unknown,” Series 5: Personal Correspondence and Notes,
1941–1974, Box 6, Folder 1 (Notes, undated), Duke Ellington Collection, Archives Center, National Museum
of American History.
Religions 2016, 7, 108 16 of 18

12. “Hotel Washington, Washington, DC,” Series 5: Personal Correspondence and Notes, 1941–1974,
Box 6, Folder 1 (Notes, undated), Duke Ellington Collection, Archives Center, National Museum of
American History.
13. Duke Ellington with Erich Kunzel and the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. “Poetic Commentary ‘A’,”
Orchestral Works, © 1989, 1970 by MCA Records, Inc., MCAD-42318, Compact disc.
14. “Ramada Inn Roadside Hotel, San Antonio, TX,” Series 5: Personal Correspondence and Notes, 1941–1974,
Box 6, Folder 1 (Notes, undated), Duke Ellington Collection, Archives Center, National Museum of
American History.
15. “Ramada Inn Roadside Hotel, Greensboro, NC,” and “The Baltimore Hilton, Baltimore, M.D.,” Series 5:
Personal Correspondence and Notes, 1941–1974, Box 6, Folder 1 (Notes, undated), Duke Ellington Collection,
Archives Center, National Museum of American History.
16. “Ilikai Wakiki, Honolulu, HI,” Series 5: Personal Correspondence and Notes, 1941–1974, Box 6, Folder 1
(Notes, undated), Duke Ellington Collection, Archives Center, National Museum of American History.
17. Harvey G. Cohen. Duke Ellington’s America. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2010.
18. Edward Kennedy Ellington. Duke Ellington’s My People. © 1992, 1963 by Legacy Recordings, AK-52759,
Compact disc. The line “Snatched Jonah, yes He did, from the belly of the whale” contains the masculine
pronoun to refer to God. However, Ellington’s manuscript lyrics for this song do not include “yes He
did,” appearing instead as “Snatched Jona/From the belly of the whale.” This indicates McPhail’s original
improvisation of the line. Nevertheless, this inclusion of exclamatory speech acknowledges the importance
of this way of testifying about God in African American Protestantism. This composition existed prior to
his composition of the Sacred Concerts, and it is the only instance of the use of “He” in Ellington’s original
Sacred Concert lyrics. See “My People by Duke Ellington—Ain’t But The One,” p. 5, Series 5: Handwritten
Notes, Etc., Queenie Pie, Box 8, Folder 12, Duke Ellington Collection, Archives Center, National Museum of
American History.
19. Edward Kennedy Ellington. “Supreme Being,” Second Sacred Concert, © 1990, 1968 by Prestige Records,
PCD 24045-2, Compact disc.
20. Wilbert Hill writes that “Tell Me It’s the Truth” is an example of Ellington incorporating characteristics
of 1950s and 1960s gospel music in his First Sacred Concert, namely, “...use of the tambourine, triple
meter, a simple harmonic progression, call and response, and idiomatic orchestration of the gospel style
accompaniment part supporting the melody sung by a contralto.” See Wilbert Weldon Hill. “The Sacred
Concerts of Edward Kennedy ‘Duke’ Ellington.” Ph.D. Dissertation, The Catholic University of America,
1995. p. 76.
21. “The Shamrock Hilton, Houston, TX,” Series 5: Personal Correspondence and Notes, 1941–1974,
Box 6, Folder 1 (Notes, undated), Duke Ellington Collection, Archives Center, National Museum of
American History.
22. “Jazz Goes to Fifth Avenue Church.” Christianity Today 10 (1966): 42.
23. “A Statement from Duke Ellington,” Series 5: Performances and Programs, 1963–1989, Box 5, Folder 4 (Duke
Ellington’s Festival of Religion and the Arts, 1966), Ruth Ellington Collection, Archives Center, National
Museum of American History.
24. “Has the Black American Musician Lost His Creativeness and Heritage in Jazz?” p. 1, 4, Series 5:
Personal Papers, ca. 1970–1971, Box 2, Folder 25, Mary Lou Williams Collection, Institute of Jazz Studies,
Rutgers University.
25. Lowell D. Holmes, and John W. Thomson. Jazz Greats: Getting Better with Age. New York: Holmes & Meier
Publishers, Inc., 1986.
26. Smithsonian Institution Interviews with Jazz Musicians: Williams, Mary Lou, Jazz Oral History Project
117.5.5, Transcript, Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University. After she stopped performing at Café Society,
Williams regarded her apartment as “...a headquarters for young musicians.” She stated, “I’d even leave the
door open for them if I was out. Tadd Dameron would come to write, when he was out of inspiration, and
Monk did several of his pieces there. Bud Powell’s brother, Richie, who also played piano, learned how to
improvise at my house. And everybody came or called for advice. Charlie Parker would ask what did I
think about him putting a group with strings together, or Miles Davis would ask about his group with the
tuba—the one that had John Lewis and Gerry Mulligan and Max Roach and J. J. Johnson in it. It was still
like the thirties—musicians helped each other, and didn’t just think of themselves."
Religions 2016, 7, 108 17 of 18

27. Whitney Balliett. “Profiles: Out Here Again.” The New Yorker, 2 May 1964.
28. Tammy L. Kernodle. Soul on Soul: The Life and Music of Mary Lou Williams. Boston: Northeastern University
Press, 2004.
29. Linda Dahl. Morning Glory: A Biography of Mary Lou Williams. New York: Pantheon Books, 1999.
30. “Certificate of Incorporation of Bel Canto Foundation, Inc., Pursuant to the Membership Corporation
Law,” p. 1, Series 4: Business Papers, Subseries 4L: Bel Canto, ca. 1950–1971, 1977, undated, Box 67,
Folder “Bel Canto, Certificate of Incorporation, New York, New York, 1958,” Mary Lou Williams Collection,
Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University.
31. “Bel Canto Account—Disbursement and Receipts,” Series 4: Business Papers, Subseries 4L: Bel Canto, ca.
1950–1971, 1977, undated, Box 47, Folder 6 (Benefit Activities [Concert, Rummage Sale, etc.]), Mary Lou
Williams Collection, Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University.
32. “Letter to Mary Lou Williams from Dave Brubeck, September 23, 1958,” Series 4: Business Papers,
Subseries 4L: Bel Canto, ca. 1950–1971, 1977, undated, Box 47, Folder 6 (Benefit Activities [Concert, Rummage
Sale, etc.]), Mary Lou Williams Collection, Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University.
33. “Bell Telephone Company—Deposits,” Series 4: Business Papers, Subseries 4L: Bel Canto, ca. 1950–1971,
1977, undated, Box 47, Folder 6 (Benefit Activities [Concert, Rummage Sale, etc.]), Mary Lou Williams
Collection, Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University.
34. “Letter from Herbert J. Bliss to Mr. Henry Zaccardi, American Federation of Musicians, September 10, 1958,”
and “Letter from Henry Zaccardi to Herbert J. Bliss, September 16, 1958,” Series 4: Business Correspondence,
Subseries 4I: Legal Affairs, 1941–1980, undated, Box 41, Folder 2 (Bliss, Herbert J., 1958), Mary Lou Williams
Collection, Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University.
35. “Bell Telephone Company—‘Loot to Boot’ Paid Out,” Series 4: Business Papers, Subseries 4L: Bel Canto,
ca. 1950–1971, 1977, undated, Box 47, Folder 6 (Benefit Activities [Concert, Rummage Sale, etc.]),
Mary Lou Williams Collection, Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University. Williams wrote checks for
advertisements in the New York Times, the New York Amsterdam News, and for poster and banner
advertisements. The Carnegie Hall booking cost $1,740.38, while other miscellaneous costs like parking
tickets, supplies, and car rental added to her total. Additionally, Williams’ bank statement lists the total cost
as $3,210.42, $1 lower than the accurate total.
36. “Rummage Sale—at 318 East 29 St” and “Rummage Sale! 310 East 29th Street,” Series 4: Business Papers,
Subseries 4L: Bel Canto, ca. 1950–1971, 1977, undated, Box 47, Folder 6 (Benefit Activities [Concert, Rummage
Sale, etc.]), Mary Lou Williams Collection, Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University.
37. “Bel Canto Expenses,” Series 4: Business Papers, Subseries 4L: Bel Canto, ca. 1950–1971, 1977, undated,
Box 47, Folder 8 (Bound Notebook, New York, New York, 1959–1960), Mary Lou Williams Collection,
Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University.
38. “Bel Canto Foundation Expenses...1960,” pp. 1, 2, and “Summary,” Series 4: Business Papers, Subseries 4L:
Bel Canto, ca. 1950–1971, 1977, undated, Box 48, Folder 5–8 (Financial Records—Expenditures, Inventory,
Transactions, New York, 1958–1971, undated), Mary Lou Williams Collection, Institute of Jazz Studies,
Rutgers University.
39. “Form CR-131, ‘Annual Report—Charitable Organizations,’” Series 4: Business Papers, Subseries 4L:
Bel Canto, ca. 1950–1971, 1977, undated, Box 49, Folder 4 (Licenses, Leases, Insurance, State and Local
Documents, 1959–1961), Mary Lou Williams Collection, Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University.
40. “Form M-537g, ‘Financial Report’,” Series 4: Business Papers, Subseries 4L: Bel Canto, ca. 1950–1971,
1977, undated, Box 48, Folder 5–8 (Financial Records—Expenditures, Inventory, Transactions, New York,
1958–1971, undated), Mary Lou Williams Collection, Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University.
41. “Checkbooks and Balance Registers, 1962–1964,” Series 4: Business Papers, Subseries 4M: Banking, Box 50,
Mary Lou Williams Collection, Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University.
42. “Mary Lou Williams (Income Tax),” p. 1, Series 4: Business Papers, Box 62, Folder “Taxes-Federal Income
Taxes, 1965,” Mary Lou Williams Collection, Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University.
43. Between 1965 and 1966, Eustis Guillemet updated Williams on his decision to leave New York City,
in addition to his occasional requests for financial support for music equipment and rent. While staying at a
YMCA in Atlantic City, NJ, Guillemet informed Williams of the changing social climate: “...[T]here might be
more marches and sit ins this summer. The whites live on one side[,] the colored on the other. Most of the
youngsters are participating in either marches or sit ins. So say some extra prayers that God will show His
Religions 2016, 7, 108 18 of 18

justice and graces in bettering conditions of both people if it be His Holy Will and salvation of the Souls
involved.” On his regular Catholic practices, Guillemet conveyed to Williams his dedication in moments of
personal frustration: “Good talking to you and very good reading from ya. I was uptight at the time and
at a very low point. Not that I didn’t know what to do, I just couldn’t get together but I did as I talked to
a priest and he told [me] that sometimes God permits stress and strain to show us how weak we are and
upon asking His Graces, He lets us know that we are still dependent on Him...One day I got a good look
at the people I’ve been around and it frightened me. I hope I wasn’t looking at myself. If I was I have a
long way to go and a lot of work to do. Anyway I went to New York and sat with the Blessed Sacrament
and a day later I got myself together. I guess I was away too long. The Sacrament isn’t exposed too often
here and there aren’t too many Catholics, active that is. But like you said[,] pray and keep your mind on
the music. That I will do with all determination because every time I look the other way I start getting in
trouble.” See “Letter from Eustis Guillemet to Mary Lou Williams, February 5, 1965,” “Letter from Eustis
Guillemet to Mary Lou Williams, May 30, 1966,” and “Letter from Eustis Guillemet to Mary Lou Williams,
22 June 1966,” Series 3: Personal Correspondence, Subseries 3B: Correspondence with Friends, ca. 1925–1952,
1958–1981, Box 8, Folder 11 (Eustis Guillemet, 1965–1973, undated), Mary Lou Williams Collection, Institute
of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University.
44. “Mary Lou Williams (Income Tax),” p. 3, Series 4: Business Papers, Box 62: Folder Taxes-Federal Income
Taxes, 1965, Mary Lou Williams Collection, Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University.
45. “The Detroit Hilton, Detroit, MI,” Series 5: Personal Correspondence and Notes, 1941–1974, Box 6, Folder 1
(Notes, undated), Duke Ellington Collection, Archives Center, National Museum of American History.
46. Ellington received much of his religious literature as gifts from clerical fans. His collection of religious
literature reveals that a profession of religious commitment in twentieth-century America does not seal
the individual off from the reality of competing religious commitments, which may even appear as the
well-intentioned proselytizing of others who admire a popular jazz musician and wished for him to join their
particular fellowship. Nevertheless, Ellington received these gifts as clergy encouraging him to create sacred
music “not as a matter of career, but in response to a growing understanding of my own vocation.” See
“A Statement from Duke Ellington,” Series 5: Performances and Programs, 1963–1989, Box 5, Folder 4 (Duke
Ellington’s Festival of Religion and the Arts, 1966), Ruth Ellington Collection, Archives Center, National
Museum of American History.
47. Douglas Martin. “Ruth Ellington Boatwright, 88, the Sister of Duke Ellington.” The New York Times,
11 March 2004. Available online: http://www.nytimes.com/2004/03/11/arts/ruth-ellington-boatwright-
88-the-sister-of-duke-ellington.html (accessed on 31 October 2014).
48. See Series 3: Personal Correspondence, Subseries 3D: Correspondence with Religious, Box 20, Folder 14
(Sister Martha Morris: Correspondence, 1967), Mary Lou Williams Collection, Institute of Jazz Studies,
Rutgers University.

© 2016 by the author; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access
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