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Rex Stewart
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==Career== As a boy he studied piano and violin; most of his career was spent on cornet.<ref name="Swing">{{cite book |last1=Yanow |first1=Scott |title=Swing |date=2000 |publisher=Miller Freeman Books |location=San Francisco |isbn=978-0-87930-600-7 |pages=149β151}}</ref> Stewart dropped out of high school to become a member of the Ragtime Clowns led by Ollie Blackwell.<ref name="Feather">{{cite book |last1=Feather |first1=Leonard |last2=Gitler |first2=Ira |title=The Biographical Encyclopedia of Jazz |url=https://archive.org/details/biographicalency00feat |url-access=registration |date=2007 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-507418-5 |page=[https://archive.org/details/biographicalency00feat/page/623 623]β624}}</ref> He was with the Musical Spillers led by [[Willie Lewis]] in the early 1920s, then with [[Elmer Snowden]], [[Horace Henderson]], [[Fletcher Henderson]], [[Fess Williams]], and [[McKinney's Cotton Pickers]].<ref name="Swing" /><ref name="Feather" /> In 1933 he led a big band at the Empire Ballroom in New York City.<ref name="Feather" /> Beginning in 1934, he spent eleven years with the [[Duke Ellington]] band.<ref name="Swing" /><ref name="Feather" /> Stewart co-wrote "Boy Meets Horn" and "Morning Glory" and supervised recording sessions by members of the Ellington band. He left Ellington to lead "little swing bands that were a perfect setting for his solo playing."<ref name="Shipton">{{cite web |last1=Shipton |first1=Alyn |title=BBC - (none) - Jazz Library - Rex Stewart |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/jazzlibrary/pip/d5lon/ |website=Bbc.co.uk |access-date=14 March 2020 |date=29 February 2008}}</ref> He toured in Europe and Australia with [[Jazz at the Philharmonic]] from 1947 to 1951. Beginning in the early 1950s, he worked in radio and television and wrote jazz criticism for the ''[[Los Angeles Times]]''<ref name="Feather" /> and the magazines ''[[Playboy]]'' and ''[[DownBeat]]''. The book ''Jazz Masters of the Thirties''<ref name="Swing" /><ref name="Feather" /> is a selection of his criticism. He lived in upstate New York after purchasing a one hundred year old farmhouse. He hosted a jazz radio program in Troy, New York, and owned a small restaurant for a short time near a drag racing track in Vermont. While living in France, he attended the [[Le Cordon Bleu]] school of cooking<ref name="Feather" /> and dedicated his life to becoming a fine cook. Stewart moved to Los Angeles, California, to be near his children. His son Paul Albert Hardy lived in New York City. While in Los Angeles he reunited with musicians from the Ellington band and played jam sessions in clubs. He was a studio musician for ''[[The Steve Allen Show]]'' and with George Cole he hosted two radio shows: ''Dixieland Doings'' and ''Things Aint What They Used to Be''. His autobiography, ''Boy Meets Horn'', was published in 1991.<ref name="Feather" /> He died of a brain hemorrhage in Los Angeles.<ref name="Feather" />
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