The last sultan, p.45

The Last Sultan, page 45

 

The Last Sultan
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  a handwritten document: Selma Goksel e-mail, March 23, 2009.

  she was furious: Selma Goksel e-mail, February 12, 2009.

  “I have no religion”: Mango, Ataturk.

  “Although my father was basically a timid man”: AE, undated autobiographical fragment, AE Archive.

  “left behind the teeming hodgepodge”: Ibid.

  “the clean quiet serenity”: Ibid.

  “this bland beautiful sterile country”: Ibid.

  18 Kalcheggweg: Selma Goksel e-mail, May 13, 2009.

  “a mixture of Turkish”: AE, undated autobiographical fragment, AE Archive.

  eight days: Selma Goksel e-mail, February 15, 2009.

  “Hanimefendi”: Selma Goksel e-mail, July 3, 2009.

  A short, stout: Photo, AE, “What’d I Say.”

  “the sad haunting Oriental”: AE, undated autobiographical fragment, AE Archive.

  “would never participate”: Ibid.

  “a beloved distant”: Selma Goksel e-mail, February 2, 2008.

  “a miserable-looking beggar”: Selma Goksel e-mail, February 8, 2009.

  “perhaps a bit spoiled”: Ibid.

  “He was like a hero”: AE, undated autobiographical fragment, AE Archive.

  In a photograph from this period: Photo, AE, “What’d I Say.”

  “was always a bloody”: AE, undated autobiographical fragment, AE Archive.

  33 rue de Villejust: Selma Goksel e-mail, May 13, 2009.

  “I don’t like this”: Selma Goksel e-mail, February 7, 2008.

  broomstick as a mast: Selma Goksel e-mail, February 2, 2008.

  Stephan Mallarmé, the actor Jean Gabin: www.forum.prepas.org.

  Josephine Baker, the Mills Brothers: Gross, “The Real Sultan of Swing.”

  “It’s nothing”: AE, undated autobiographical fragment, AE Archive.

  a street full of holes: Mica Ertegun, 4/25/09.

  “Mother, what happened”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, 11/13/02, AE Archive.

  At his own request: Official Document, Department of State, Division of International Conferences and Protocol, June 25, 1934, AE Archive.

  “a couple of ruffians who”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, January 23, 2003, AE Archive.

  his mother panicked: Selma Goksel e-mail, February 7, 2008.

  July 23, 1932: Selma Goksel e-mail, April 5, 2009.

  invited to dine: Selma Goksel e-mail, April 2, 2009.

  practiced her curtsy: Ibid.

  “they hardly ever saw”: Selma Goksel e-mail, February 7, 2008.

  “was very British and very strict”: Ibid.

  “We wore our party”: Ibid.

  “was interested in women”: Goksel.

  “Ahmet just sort of left”: Ibid.

  “the King of Jazz”: Newspaper clip, source unknown, Richard Havers e-mail, July 2, 2009.

  “His Famous Orchestra”: Newspaper ad, source unknown, Richard Havers e-mail, July 2, 2009.

  The grandson of a former slave: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ellington_Duke.

  “typically expected of black artists”: Harvey G. Cohen, “Dawn of the Jazz Age.”

  “the primitive, discordant, rule-breaking”: Ibid.

  three huge cardboard cutouts: Photo, ibid.

  pearl gray: Lawrence, Duke Ellington and His World.

  nearly four thousand: Ibid.

  9 pence: Newspaper ad, source unknown, Richard Havers e-mail, July 2, 2009.

  the kind of extended ovation: Harvey G. Cohen, “Dawn of the Jazz Age.”

  three trumpet players: Photo, ibid.

  “a display of neat and fast footwork”: Newspaper clip, source unknown, Richard Havers e-mail, July 2, 2009.

  “the original snake hips girl”: Lawrence, Duke Ellington and His World.

  “the program to a happy conclusion”: Ibid.

  “scores of smartly dressed young English people”: Ibid.

  “hundreds in the hinterlands”: Ibid.

  “a small army of”: Ibid.

  “besieged the Duke”: Ibid.

  “a precursor to Beatlemania”: Harvey G. Cohen, “Dawn of the Jazz Age.”

  “It was nothing like”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, January 23, 2003, AE Archive.

  to see Cab Calloway: Gross, “The Real Sultan of Swing.”

  “I was twelve”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, November 13, 2002, AE Archive.

  “there were very many cowboys there”: AE letter, October 21, 1934, AE Archive.

  “I kiss you”: Ibid.

  “making the trip”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, November 13, 2002, AE Archive.

  four days, thirteen hours, and fifty-eight minutes: en.wikipedia.org/SSRex.

  “a rung above the first-class cabins”: Selma Goksel e-mail, November 20, 2009.

  “But when the sea”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, November 13, 2002, AE Archive.

  “There were only”: Selma Goksel e-mail, March 27, 2009.

  “enjoyed roaming around”: Selma Goksel e-mail, November 20, 2009.

  “thousands of dollars”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, November 13, 2002, AE Archive.

  “We arrived in”: Ibid.

  “the black Pullman”: Ibid.

  “very strict”: Ibid.

  “Americans were savages”: Ibid.

  “a shameful act”: Akcam, A Shameful Act.

  “outlawed ethnic and minority”: Balakian, Author Interview.

  “earnestly hoped”: Minassian, Musa Dagh.

  “utterly negative”: Ibid.

  “If the movie is made”: Ibid.

  “Munir Ertegun became”: Balakian, 2/16/09.

  “My personal view”: Selma Goksel e-mail, 2/8/09.

  donated $3.5 million: Draft of press release, August 26, 1994/For release September 12, 1994, AE Archive.

  “There are different”: Bennetts, “Devil in a Bespoke Suit.”

  “made it clear”: Sassounian, “Ahmet Ertegun Knew What’s Good for Turkey.”

  “a shame that the”: Ibid.

  “I could not write”: Ibid.

  TWO: THE NATION’S CAPITAL

  “When I was just”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, April 22, 2003, AE Archive.

  “seat and center of domestic”: Federal Writers Project, The WPA Guide to Washington, D.C.

  “John Law”: Ibid.

  “rows of small squalid houses”: Selma Goksel e-mail, January 26, 2008.

  “to spend and to dream”: Scott, “Turkish Delight.”

  “architectural elements of”: www.Turkeyembassy.com.

  a huge ballroom: Photo, Scott, “Turkish Delight.”

  cost $400,000: Scott, “Turkish Delight.”

  “So we wound up”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, January 23, 2003, AE Archive.

  one of the first things: Ibid.

  “I first found myself”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, January 23, 2003, AE Archive.

  “unfortunately mentioned”: Ibid.

  “excused from both chapel”: Letter from the Reverend Albert H. Lucas, April 13, 1935, AE Archive.

  “glad indeed to”: Ibid.

  “Your Excellency”: Ibid.

  “learned to regard”: Ibid.

  “sympathy with”: Ibid.

  “Mr. Headmaster”: Letter from Mehmet Munir to the Reverend A. H. Lucas, April 16, 1935, AE Archive.

  “My father took me”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, January 23, 2003, AE Archive.

  “at least three times”: Selma Goksel e-mail, February 2, 2008.

  “imitation black speech”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, January 30, 2003, AE Archive.

  “Washington was like”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, January 23, 2003, AE Archive.

  “a dime apiece”: AE, “What’d I Say.”

  “things that others”: Poole, “Lush Life.”

  “a habitué of”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, January 23, 2003, AE Archive.

  “shilled for a while”: Ibid.

  “was really just colored water”: Ibid.

  “greasy place”: Ibid.

  “all the strippers”: Ibid.

  “Eastern European Gypsy”: Ibid.

  “beer joints where”: Ibid.

  “Black Broadway”: Virtual Tour of Shaw, www.pbs.org/ellingtonsdc/vtVenues.htm.

  “the Washington equivalent of”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, January 23, 2003, AE Archive.

  “everything clicked”: Ibid.

  “a lot of the teachers”: AE, Landon Magazine.

  “school’s more traditionalist”: Ibid.

  “We were always”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, January 23, 2003, AE Archive.

  “a long list of names”: Selma Goksel e-mail, January 9, 2009.

  “is a made-up word”: Ibid.

  “waited till the”: Wade and Picardie, Music Man.

  “Satchelmouth Swing”: Weeks, interview, www.allaboutjazz.com.

  “Lips Page’s special”: Ibid.

  “started collecting very seriously”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, January 23, 2003, AE Archive.

  “Collecting Hot”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, January 30, 2003, AE Archive.

  “a big head”: Wade and Picardie, Music Man.

  “didn’t have Communist tendencies”: Ibid.

  “European”: Ibid.

  “including my parents”: Selma Goksel e-mail, January 22, 2009.

  “disgraceful episode”: Ibid.

  “My first meeting”: Document, AE Archive.

  zoot suit: Selma Goksel e-mail, February 8, 2009.

  “not well known”: Holzman, Author Interview.

  “You started out”: Ibid.

  “jewel of the program”: Ibid.

  “My first question”: Ibid.

  Ralph Waldo Emerson: Documents, AE Archive.

  Because she had cared: Selma Goksel e-mail, January 31, 2008.

  “an intellectual bookshop”: Columbia University Oral History Research Office, January 23, 2003, AE Archive.

  “said was a”: Ibid.

  “a mixed crowd”: Ibid.

  “very unusual”: Ibid.

  “a young guy”: AE, “What’d I Say.”

  “We’ve been reading”: Gottlieb.

  waiters in white jackets: Bill Gottlieb photo.

  huge bust of Kemal Ataturk: Selma Goksel e-mail, November 23, 2009.

  the only restaurant: AE, “What’d I Say.”

  “quite possibly the hippest”: Rolling Stone magazine as quoted by Katz, “Lester Young Turns 100.”

  “bread”: Ibid.

  “That’s cool”: Ibid.

  “You dig?”: Ibid.

  “I feel a draft”: Ibid.

  “bells”: Ibid.

  “to be”: Mezzrow and Wolfe, Really the Blues.

  “outraged Southern senator”: AE, “What’d I Say.”

  “It has been brought”: Ibid.

  “that God had created”: Selma Goksel e-mail, January 28, 2009.

  “errand boy”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, January 30, 2003, AE Archive.

  “When we gave”: Ibid.

  “advertised in the white”: Ibid.

  “little flyers”: Ibid.

  “didn’t know it”: Ibid.

  “make a big scene”: Ibid.

  “Swingtime in the Capital”: AE, “What’d I Say.”

  “Man, you gotta give”: Ibid.

  “The Turkish Ambassador came”: Memorandum to the President from Adolph Berle, Assistant Secretary of the Department of State, April 6, 1940, AE Archive.

  “There is a”: Ibid.

  “My father”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, November 13, 2002, AE Archive.

  life in the nation’s capital: Conant, The Irregulars.

  “the star”: Goksel.

  “Listen, you return that”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, November 13, 2002, AE Archive.

  “I don’t know”: Ibid.

  “heart used to sink”: Ibid.

  “stand at attention”: Ibid.

  “At which point”: Ibid.

  “difficult, if not impossible”: Selma Goksel e-mail, April 1, 2009.

  On March 14, 1944: St. John’s College Commencement Exercises Booklet, AE Archive.

  medieval philosophy: Weiner, “Ahmet Ertegun.”

  “whole embassy was astir”: Selma Goksel e-mail, June 19, 2008.

  In a photograph: Photo, George Skadding, http://google.com/hosted/life.

  “I am deeply grieved”: Statement by the President of the United States, November 11, 1944, AE Archive.

  On January 25, 1946: Memorandum for the President, original signed and returned to Dean Acheson on January 25, 1946, AE Archive.

  “the battleship on which”: AE, “What’d I Say.”

  “Although we felt”: Selma Goksel e-mail, June 19, 2008.

  THREE: MAKING RECORDS

  “After the Second”: AE, Author Interview, 3/11/88.

  “visited by close friends”: Selma Goksel e-mail, December 16, 2009.

  some of her personal belongings: Selma Goksel e-mail, May 14, 2009.

  $100: Ibid.

  $5 to $25: Gillett, Making Tracks.

  “I get more than”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, January 23, 2003, AE Archive.

  turned down offers: Ibid.

  “working hard”: AE, Letter to Selma Goksel, July 3, 1947, AE Archive.

  “didn’t feel like”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, January 23, 2003, AE Archive.

  even to speak out against: http://en.wikipedia.org/Conscription_in_Turkey.

  a very attractive young: Selma Goksel e-mail, June 29, 2009.

  send Ahmet $30: Selma Goksel e-mail, June 23, 2009.

  “Ahmet had some”: Selma Goksel e-mail, February 8, 2009.

  “I have not found”: Undated letter to Selma Goksel, AE Archive.

  want ads: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, January 23, 2003, AE Archive.

  “a bunch of crooks”: Ibid.

  “After that”: Ibid.

  “he could memorize”: Selma Goksel e-mail, June 21, 2008.

  “a cheap recording studio”: AE, Unidentified video interview, AE Archive.

  “could sing the blues”: Ibid.

  “all these guys who”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, January 23, 2003, AE Archive.

  “knew what black life”: Atlantic: Hip to the Tip.

  “around to thinking”: Gillett, Making Tracks.

  “breezed in”: AE, “What’d I Say.”

  “I’d like one of”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, January 30, 2003, AE Archive.

  “made a lot of money”: Ibid.

  “Oh, I’ve got money”: Ibid.

  “a rich friend”: Letter to Selma Goksel, August 22, 1947, AE Archive.

  “who had an avant-garde”: AE, “What’d I Say.”

  “I’m not interested”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, January 30, 2003, AE Archive.

  “in the Forest Hotel”: Ibid.

  “a very tough lady”: Ibid.

  “the star dressing room”: Ibid.

  “with the big star”: Ibid.

  “It quickly became”: Ibid.

  “best friends for”: AE, Unidentified video interview, AE Archive.

  “We didn’t have”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, January 30, 2003, AE Archive.

  Born in Brooklyn: White, “Herb Abramson.”

  published a small newspaper: Abramson.

  Erasmus Hall High School: Erasmus Hall High School records.

  “the poor man’s Harvard”: www.barrypopik.com.

  “he could find”: Abramson.

  “he was a Jew”: Ibid.

  “a lot of very”: Bienstock.

  “tried desperately to”: Bienstock.

  “I already lost”: Abramson.

  “ran five miles”: Ibid.

  “very late in”: Bienstock.

  “did a lot of things”: Ibid.

  Abramson’s two biggest hits: Kramer, “Atlantic and R&B Trend Developed Side by Side.”

  “He didn’t like”: Abramson.

  “a different kind of mind”: Bienstock.

  “The reason”: Abramson.

  “his heart was”: Ibid.

  “Atlantic was formed”: Ibid.

  “knew all”: AE, “What’d I Say.”

  “where to get pressings”: AE, Author Interview, 3/11/88.

  “Ahmet was such a”: Sander, Trips.

  “They all knew”: AE, “What’d I Say.”

  “We all went”: Goksel.

  “thought he was”: Ibid.

  “Over a two-and-a-half”: Abramson.

  “Dr. Sabit hasn’t been”: AE, Letter to Selma Goksel, Selma Goksel e-mail, June 24, 2009.

  a contract consisting: Document, AE Archive.

  “The name Atlantic”: AE, “What’d I Say.”

  “active in promotional”: Ibid.

  “We were grabbing at”: Ibid.

  “We must have”: AE, Columbia University Oral History Research Office, May 1, 2003, AE Archive.

  “the major companies”: Ibid.

  “just thrown in the garbage”: Ibid.

  $60 a week: Gillett, Making Tracks.

  “The name sounds good”: Letter to AE from Nesuhi Ertegun, January 22, 1948, AE Archive.

  “time to be properly”: Ibid.

  “Received press release”: Ibid.

  “By the way”: Ibid.

  “Nobody believes”: Bienstock.

  “Ahmet was still very”: Gottlieb.

  “He didn’t have”: Ibid.

  “Ahmet had”: Bienstock.

  went to number twelve: AE, “What’d I Say.”

  “selling most of the”: Selma Goksel e-mail, April 2, 2009.

  “I only hope”: Letter from Selma Goksel, May 13, 1948, AE Archive.

  “very sweet”: Bienstock.

  “He could do”: Ibid.

  “We were very”: AE, “What’d I Say.”

  “It was a funky”: Wakschal.

  “dozens of small”: Jackson, Big Beat Heat.

  “the Street of Hope”: Ibid.

  “Dearest sweetest darling”: Letter from AE to Selma Goksel, January 28, 1949, AE Archive.

 

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