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Nathaniel Shilkret
Nathaniel Shilkret
American composer, conductor, clarinetist, pianist, business executive, and music director
1
Emil Richards
Emil Richards
American musician
2
Ralph Peer
Ralph Peer
Talent scout, recording engineer and record producer
3
Ferde Grofé
Ferde Grofé
American composer, arranger, pianist and instrumentalist
4
Werner Janssen
Werner Janssen
American conductor
5
Lew Soloff
Lew Soloff
American musician
6
Keiko Abe
Keiko Abe
Japanese composer and marimba player
7
L. Wolfe Gilbert
L. Wolfe Gilbert
Composer, lyricist, author, publisher
8
Gene Austin
Gene Austin
American singer and songwriter (1900-1972)
9
Scott Joplin
Scott Joplin
American composer, musician, and pianist
10
Shelly Manne
Shelly Manne
American jazz drummer
11
Lew Brown
Lew Brown
Russian-American Tin Pan Alley lyricist, songwriter
12
Edison Denisov
Edison Denisov
Russian Soviet composer
13
Lionel Hampton
Lionel Hampton
American jazz vibraphonist, pianist, percussionist, bandleader and actor (1908-2002)
14
Johnny Green
Johnny Green
American conductor, arranger, composer, pianist; Harvard AB 1928, achieved early fame as a songwriter and orchestra leader in the 1920s and 1930s
15
Richard Stoltzman
Richard Stoltzman
American musician
16
Fred Van Eps
Fred Van Eps
American banjoist
17
James F. Hanley
James F. Hanley
American songwriter and author
18
Susie Ibarra
Susie Ibarra
American musician
19
William Albright
William Albright
Composer, pianist, organist
George Hamilton Green
American musician

George Hamilton Green

Intro
American musician
Music
Member of, past and present
All-Star Trio

All-Star Trio

George Hamilton Green with xylophone, circa 1918.

George Hamilton Green Jr. (May 23, 1893 – September 11, 1970) was a xylophonist, composer, and cartoonist born in Omaha, Nebraska. He was born into a musical family, both his grandfather and his father being composers, arrangers, and conductors for bands in Omaha. From age four G.H. Green showed a prodigious talent as a pianist; he then took up the xylophone and by the age of eleven was being promoted as the “world’s greatest xylophonist” and was playing for crowds of 7,000-10,000. In 1915, when Green was 22 years old, a review in the United States Musician stated: "He has begun where every other xylophone player left off. His touch, his attack, his technique, and his powers of interpretation in the rendition of his solos being far different than other performers. To say his work is marvelous and wonderful would not fully express it." George Hamilton Green wrote several pieces for solo ragtime xylophone with accompaniment, as well as a xylophone method book which continues to be used by percussion pedagogues across the country. Some of his compositions for xylophone include: "Ragtime Robin", "Cross Corners", "Charleston Capers", "Rainbow Ripples", "Log Cabin Blues", "The Whistler", and "Jovial Jasper"

He was a popular recording artist starting in 1916 with the Edison Company and was employed, along with his two brothers, Joe and Lew Green, as the original sound music crew for Walt Disney’s first three cartoons.

According to Nathaniel Shilkret, Green was not only a "wonderful xylophone artist," but an inventor. Shilkret said that Green designed the vibraphone at Shilkret's request.

Green was an important ragtime composer and authored many pieces that remain standards for the instrument even today. He retired from performing in the late 1940s to pursue a successful career in cartooning. Green would die in 1970, just a few years before a revival in the popularity of his ragtime xylophone music, and before his induction into the Percussive Arts Society Hall of Fame in 1983 The rebirth of his music was led by members of the NEXUS Percussion Ensemble in the late 1970s. Through their efforts, G.H. Green’s xylophone music has been preserved and remains a relevant part of contemporary percussion pedagogy and performance.