Talk:Thelma Terry

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article is within the scope of WikiProject Biography. For more information, visit the project page.
Start This article has been rated as start-Class on the Project's quality scale. [FAQ] See comments

[edit] Nomination for deletion under AFD

This article was nominated for deletion. The outcome was a speedy keep. Capitalistroadster 00:54, 3 November 2006 (UTC)

[edit] November 3, 2006 changes

I've made significant changes to this page. My sources were David Apolloni's essay on Thelma Terry (Apolloni is a known and respected amateur jazz historian - virtually all jazz historians are amateurs, so that's not a slag at him) and the Red Hot Jazz website. I tried to retain a neutral point of view on this.

One of the problems historians have researching 1920s jazz musicians is that outside of those that remained popular into the post-war period (Louis Armstrong and Gene Krupa to name two), there isn't much information on them and many of their recordings have disappeared. There wasn't as much money in recording as there was in touring in those days; fewer people owned record players and the sound quality wasn't that great. Often even notable pressings would only reach 1000 or 2000 copies.

I'll add photos when I figure out what is fair use and whether any of them could be public domain (pre-1923). Apolloni's article includes photos but says they're all copyright Thelma Terry's daughter. That's patently incorrect with respect to the MCA promo pieces, which (I'm guessing) are copyright MCA.

For the person who asked who that guy was whose image was in an old edit - good question! He looks a bit like he should be running for elected office or giving financial advice on an American cable channel. I think he was in there simply because the file name is terry.jpg. --Charlene 01:35, 3 November 2006 (UTC)