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- Q5096668 subject Q13282407.
- Q5096668 subject Q15279462.
- Q5096668 subject Q6647142.
- Q5096668 subject Q6939312.
- Q5096668 subject Q7214823.
- Q5096668 subject Q7444181.
- Q5096668 subject Q8205186.
- Q5096668 subject Q8246743.
- Q5096668 subject Q8735848.
- Q5096668 subject Q8871237.
- Q5096668 abstract "James Hawthorne Bey (April 17, 1913 – April 8, 2004) was an American jazz percussionist and African folklorist. He played under the name of Chief Bey.Born in Yemassee, South Carolina, Bey moved with his family to Brooklyn and then to Harlem, where he began playing drums and singing in church choirs. He also served in the Navy during World War II conflict and later attended cosmetology school.In the 1950s, Bey performed in an international tour of Porgy and Bess starring Leontyne Price and Cab Calloway. Besides this, he began a busy recording career performing on Herbie Mann's At the Village Gate (1961), Art Blakey's The African Beat (1962), Ahmed Abdul-Malik's Sounds of Africa (New Jazz, 1961), as well as albums by Harry Belafonte, Miriam Makeba and Pharoah Sanders, among others. He took his stage name after joining the Moorish Science Temple of America, a Muslim sect. Then he taught the shekere, a West African percussion instrument, at the Griot Institute at Intermediate School 246 in Brooklyn.Bey died at his home in Brooklyn of stomach cancer at the age of 90.".
- Q5096668 wikiPageExternalLink Chief+Bey.
- Q5096668 wikiPageExternalLink lastpost2.php3?edit=1083437436.
- Q5096668 wikiPageExternalLink 13BEY.html.
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- Q5096668 wikiPageWikiLink Q13282407.
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- Q5096668 wikiPageWikiLink Q6939312.
- Q5096668 wikiPageWikiLink Q7214823.
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- Q5096668 wikiPageWikiLink Q7444181.
- Q5096668 wikiPageWikiLink Q8205186.
- Q5096668 wikiPageWikiLink Q8246743.
- Q5096668 wikiPageWikiLink Q8735848.
- Q5096668 wikiPageWikiLink Q8871237.
- Q5096668 wikiPageWikiLink Q9684.
- Q5096668 type Thing.
- Q5096668 comment "James Hawthorne Bey (April 17, 1913 – April 8, 2004) was an American jazz percussionist and African folklorist. He played under the name of Chief Bey.Born in Yemassee, South Carolina, Bey moved with his family to Brooklyn and then to Harlem, where he began playing drums and singing in church choirs.".
- Q5096668 label "Chief Bey".