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Roy Bargy
Roy Bargy
American musician
1
Zez Confrey
Zez Confrey
American composer and performer of piano music.
2
Scott Joplin
Scott Joplin
American composer, musician, and pianist
3
Joseph Lamb
Joseph Lamb
American composer of ragtime music
4
Original Dixieland Jass Band
Original Dixieland Jass Band
American jazz band
5
Arthur Marshall
Arthur Marshall
American composer and pianist
6
Mike Bernard
Mike Bernard
ragtime musician
7
Ford Dabney
Ford Dabney
American conductor and songwriter
8
Tom Turpin
Tom Turpin
American ragtime composer and saloon-keeper
9
Scott Hayden
Scott Hayden
American composer of ragtime music
10
James Scott
James Scott
American ragtime composer
11
Wilbur Sweatman
Wilbur Sweatman
American musician
12
Louis Chauvin
Louis Chauvin
U.S. ragtime pianist
13
Glover Compton
Glover Compton
American musician
14
F. Henri Klickmann
F. Henri Klickmann
American composer and songwriter
15
Euday L. Bowman
Euday L. Bowman
American composer
16
Isham Jones
Isham Jones
American bandleader, saxophonist, bassist and songwriter
17
Alma M. Sanders
Alma M. Sanders
American composer
18
James P. Johnson
James P. Johnson
American pianist and composer
19
Maceo Pinkard
Maceo Pinkard
American composer, lyricist, and music publisher
20
Gus Kahn
Gus Kahn
German-American lyricist
21
Jimmy Blythe
Jimmy Blythe
American jazz and boogie-woogie pianist
22
Terry Waldo
Terry Waldo
American musician
Charley Straight
American musician

Charley Straight

Intro
American musician
Genres
Music
The label of Charley Straight's recording of Forgetful Blues for Paramount, made in 1923.

Charles Theodore "Charley" Straight (January 16, 1891 – September 22, 1940) was an American pianist, bandleader and composer. He started his career in 1909 accompanying singer Gene Greene in Vaudeville. In 1916, he began working at the Imperial Piano Roll Company in Chicago, where he recorded dozens of piano rolls. He became a popular bandleader in Chicago during the 1920s. His band, the Charley Straight Orchestra, had a long term engagement at the Rendezvous Café from 1922 to 1925 and recorded for Paramount Records and Brunswick Records in the 1920s.

During the 1920s Straight worked with Roy Bargy on the latter's eight Piano Syncopations. In describing "Rufenreddy", the fifth in the series, the ragtime historian "Perfessor" Bill Edwards stated:

The actual parentage of this piece will likely remain obscured to some degree, since Bargy's collaborator, Charley Straight, more or less may have let Bargy take credit when the piano rolls of the Eight Piano Syncopations were transcribed into sheet music form. It is likely that Straight wrote the bulk of the composition in 1918, and Bargy added many of his individual touches to it in the performance, the end result being that there is some of each of them within.

Straight died in Chicago on the evening of September 22, 1940, after being struck by a car. At the time, Straight was working as a sanitary inspector for the city of Chicago, and was emerging from a manhole in the street.