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Special Collections
Wilbur "Buck" Clayton Collection

Biographical & Career Information | Digitized Photograph Collection

Buck Clayton playing the trumpet.  Click for enlarged image.A seminal figure in the evolution of jazz, Wilbur "Buck" Clayton (1911-1991) distinguished himself as an arranger, composer, trumpeter and band leader. The Buck Clayton collection, which spans his career from 1928-1991, has approximately 5000 items including photographs, correspondence, contracts, sound recordings, printed and handwritten manuscripts, band arrangements, lead sheets, awards and assorted ephemera. Sound recordings from the collection are housed in the Marr Sound Archives on the ground floor of the Miller Nichols Library.

Buck Clayton in suit and tie, smiling and holding a trumpet in his right hand. Click for enlarged image.In 1995, Buck Clayton’s wife, Patricia, gave his collection to Special Collections in the Miller Nichols Library at UMKC. Now, through the cooperation of Special Collections and the University of Missouri Digital Library in Columbia, MO, over 1,500 photographs from the collection are available for viewing online. These photos chronicle Clayton’s long and illustrious career.

Photo portrait of Buck Clayton, 1933, inscribed to his mother and family. Click for enlarged view.Dapper and strikingly handsome with playful green eyes, trumpeter Buck Clayton first rose to national fame as the lead soloist with the first great Count Basie band that roared out of Kansas City in late fall, 1936. Ironically, while Clayton’s understated, bell-like sound is associated with the hard swinging Kansas City style, he actually spent little time in Kansas City. By the time he arrived at the famed Reno Club, a small dive on 12th Street, Clayton had already led a colorful career as a band leader, ranging from Los Angeles to Shanghai.

Photo of Buck Clayton as a child, in hat and overcoat standing next to a chair. Click for enlarged view.Born in Parsons, Kansas, Clayton grew up in a musical family. Clayton’s father, a minister, taught him the basics of music. Picking up the trumpet as a teenager, Clayton performed with the church band, featuring his mother on organ. He first heard the clarion call of jazz during a stopover by the George E. Lee band in Parsons. After high school, Clayton followed his muse to California, where he began his professional career.

Buck Clayton standing with members of his band, circa 1930's. Click for enlarged view.In Los Angeles, Clayton joined Charlie Echols' 14-piece band, playing taxi dances and ballrooms. Clayton and other band members soon left Echols to join forces with Broadway producer Earl Dancer and work in movies. When Dancer, a chronic gambler, disappeared with the payroll, Clayton took over leadership of the group. Just 23 years old, Clayton led his new band to China.

Portrait of Buck Clayton and his Harlem Gentlemen at the Canidrome Ballroom, Nov. 6, 1934. Band members (left to right) are Teddy Buckner, Joe McCutcheon, Reginald Jones, Armica Taylor, Duke Upshaw, Frank Pasley, Buck Clayton, Herbert Bumps Meyers, Jack Bratton, Caughey Roberts, Baby Lewis, Happy Johnson, Eddie Beal. Click for enlarged view.In 1934, the Clayton band opened at the palatial Canidrome Ballroom in Shanghai, China, becoming one of the first bands to play the Orient. Madame Chiang Kai-Shek and other celebrities flocked to the Canidrome nightly to sway to a potent mixture of hot jazz and classical music performed by the band, decked out in tails (see photo - right). The Clayton band spent the next two years at the Canidrome, with a short jaunt to Japan. A melee with a former Marine that turned the dance floor into a roiling free-for-all cost Clayton the job at the Canidrome. Unable to find steady work in Shanghai, Clayton and what remained of the band returned to the United States.

Basie Band reunion at the Apollo Theatre in Harlem, NY. From left to right, Dicky Wells, Buddy Tate, Count Basie, Buck Clayton, Jo Jones, Freddie Green, Earle Warren. Click for enlarged view.Back in the Los Angeles, Clayton reformed the big band and played several seasons at Sebastian’s Cotton Club and Club Araby. In the summer of 1936, Clayton left for New York to join Willie Bryant’s band at the original Cotton Club. On his way east, Clayton stopped off in Kansas City and joined the Basie Band at the Reno Club, replacing Lips Page as star soloist. Clayton’s solo excellence, arrangements and compositions bolstered the national rise of the Basie band. Clayton remained with the Basie band until he was drafted in 1943.

Buck Clayton holding a trumpet. Click for enlarged view.After his discharge in 1946, Clayton led a small group at Café Society and toured nationally with the Jazz at the Philharmonic. During the 1950s, Clayton toured Europe with his own group and freelanced with Joe Bushkin, Jimmy Rushing, Frank Sinatra and a host of other band leaders. Clayton recorded widely as a sideman and a leader, cutting a series of jam sessions for the Columbia label produced by John Hammond.

Buck Clayton with a group of students at Hunter College in New York. Click for enlarged view.Sidelined by lip surgery in 1967, Clayton focused on composing and arranging for other groups. He returned to playing in the early 1970s and toured internationally with his own group. When his lip gave out for good in the late 1970s, Clayton returned to directing, composing and arranging, while teaching at Hunter College in New York (see photo - left). In 1987, Clayton formed a big band to perform his compositions. Clayton continued creating and leading his “Swinging Dream Band” until his death in 1991. A few years later Clayton’s wife, Patricia, contacted the Miller Nichols Library about providing a home for his collection. Once transferred, the staff in Special Collections organized the Clayton Collection, making it available to patrons onsite.

Special Collections completed digitizing the photos in the Clayton Collection in May, 2003. Adhering to best practice, the photos were scanned in a high resolution format for preservation. These files were then converted to web-accessible images for online viewing. To insure longevity, the digital images are stored on CD-ROMs with gold recording surfaces, as well as two sets of computer servers. With the assistance of the University of Missouri Digital Library which serves up the images to viewers, a photographic portrait of Clayton’s life and his long and illustrious career is now accessible to users worldwide.

Photographs from the collection can be viewed at the University of Missouri Digital Library.
http://digital.library.umsystem.edu/cgi/i/image/image-idx?c=claytonic;


Special Collections is a non-circulating and non-browsing resource center. The Special Collections Reading Room is open to researchers Monday through Friday during the academic year. Public service hours for the current semester are listed at http://library.umkc.edu/spec-col-about/hours but researchers are encouraged to call ahead for verification of hours due to University intersessions and other events. Special Collections is located on the fourth floor of the Miller Nichols Library at 5100 Rockhill Road in Kansas City, Missouri. All inquiries concerning access to the collections should be addressed to Special Collections Library Information Specialists Teresa Gipson or Kelly McEniry.

Teresa Gipson
Special Collections Library Information Specialist
Miller Nichols Library
5100 Rockhill Rd
Kansas City, MO 64110
(816) 235-1532
Teresa Gipson
Fax (816) 333-5584
Kelly McEniry
Special Collections Library Information Specialist
Miller Nichols Library
5100 Rockhill Rd
Kansas City, MO 64110
(816) 235-1532
Kelly McEniry
Fax (816) 333-5584

For sound recordings from this collection, contact Chuck Haddix, Marr Sound Archives, Miller Nichols Library, University of Missouri-Kansas City. (816-235-2798)

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August 2, 2004