Knowledge (XXG)

Roy Eaton

Source đź“ť

20: 112:, and in his first two years created 75% of all the music produced there. In 1957, physicians gave him a 10 percent chance of surviving an automobile accident in Utah that left him comatose and killed his wife of under one year. He worked almost three decades in advertising, with Young & Rubicam, 119:
In 1986, he returned to regular concert performance at Alice Tully Hall, in Lincoln Center with a unique program format, "The Meditative Chopin", a subsequent "The Meditative Chopin II" in 1987 and a third recital in the same hall in 1992. Eaton is a long-time practitioner of
334: 294: 274: 151: 299: 279: 319: 329: 314: 309: 289: 35:(born May 14, 1930) is an American pianist and advertising creative. He is cited as the first black American prominent in the field of advertising. 304: 284: 124:. Beginning in 1968. He was inducted into the Advertising Hall of Fame in 2010. After suffering a stroke in 2017, Roy has continued to perform. 199: 324: 253: 121: 47:. His father was a mechanic and his mother a governess He took up classical piano when he was six and shortly after, in 1937, played at 72: 105:, serving all of that time in a hospital radio station, WFDH in Fort Dix, NJ where he wrote and produced radio and TV programs. 155: 76: 64: 344: 60: 87: 83: 52: 339: 19: 56: 269: 91: 189: 113: 109: 26: 95: 263: 68: 48: 108:
In 1955, on leaving the Army, Eaton was taken on as a copywriter and composer at
224: 102: 98:; he subsequently became a music instructor at the Manhattan School of Music. 194: 44: 101:
He was drafted for two years into the U.S. Army at the time of the
18: 254:
Meet the Ad Industry Pioneer Behind Some Very Memorable Jingles
248: 152:"Black History Month: an interview with Roy Eaton" 75:the following season, and also made his New York 59:Chopin Award. He made his concert debut with the 43:The son of Jamaican immigrants, Eaton grew up in 116:and later his own company, Roy Eaton Music Inc. 335:United States Army personnel of the Korean War 8: 55:competition. In June 1950, he won the first 16:American pianist and advertising creative 295:21st-century African-American musicians 275:20th-century African-American musicians 133: 219: 217: 145: 143: 141: 139: 137: 71:in 1951. He was reengaged to perform 7: 300:21st-century American male musicians 280:20th-century American male musicians 183: 181: 179: 177: 175: 173: 320:African-American classical pianists 14: 330:American male classical pianists 315:American advertising executives 310:21st-century classical pianists 290:20th-century classical pianists 202:from the original on 2016-01-31 305:21st-century American pianists 285:20th-century American pianists 1: 325:American classical pianists 82:His education included the 361: 61:Chicago Symphony Orchestra 51:, winning gold medal in a 122:Transcendental Meditation 88:Manhattan School of Music 84:City College of New York 53:Music Education League 29: 57:Kosciuszko Foundation 22: 92:University of Zurich 63:performing Chopin’s 114:Benton & Bowles 110:Young & Rubicam 345:People from Harlem 190:"Artist Biography" 30: 158:on April 22, 2012 23:Roy Eaton (1958) 352: 249:Official website 236: 235: 233: 231: 221: 212: 211: 209: 207: 185: 168: 167: 165: 163: 154:. Archived from 150:Edwards, Geoff. 147: 65:F Minor Concerto 27:Carl Van Vechten 360: 359: 355: 354: 353: 351: 350: 349: 260: 259: 245: 240: 239: 229: 227: 223: 222: 215: 205: 203: 187: 186: 171: 161: 159: 149: 148: 135: 130: 79:debut in 1952. 73:Beethoven’s 4th 41: 24: 17: 12: 11: 5: 358: 356: 348: 347: 342: 337: 332: 327: 322: 317: 312: 307: 302: 297: 292: 287: 282: 277: 272: 262: 261: 258: 257: 251: 244: 243:External links 241: 238: 237: 213: 188:Seida, Linda. 169: 132: 131: 129: 126: 40: 37: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 357: 346: 343: 341: 340:Living people 338: 336: 333: 331: 328: 326: 323: 321: 318: 316: 313: 311: 308: 306: 303: 301: 298: 296: 293: 291: 288: 286: 283: 281: 278: 276: 273: 271: 268: 267: 265: 255: 252: 250: 247: 246: 242: 226: 220: 218: 214: 201: 197: 196: 191: 184: 182: 180: 178: 176: 174: 170: 157: 153: 146: 144: 142: 140: 138: 134: 127: 125: 123: 117: 115: 111: 106: 104: 99: 97: 93: 89: 85: 80: 78: 74: 70: 69:George Schick 66: 62: 58: 54: 50: 49:Carnegie Hall 46: 38: 36: 34: 28: 21: 228:. Retrieved 204:. Retrieved 193: 160:. Retrieved 156:the original 118: 107: 100: 81: 42: 32: 31: 270:1930 births 225:"Roy Eaton" 264:Categories 256:, Fox News 128:References 103:Korean War 77:Town Hall 33:Roy Eaton 25:Photo by 200:Archived 195:AllMusic 230:3 July 206:3 July 162:3 July 94:, and 90:, the 86:, the 67:under 45:Harlem 232:2014 208:2014 164:2014 96:Yale 39:Life 266:: 216:^ 198:. 192:. 172:^ 136:^ 234:. 210:. 166:.

Index


Carl Van Vechten
Harlem
Carnegie Hall
Music Education League
Kosciuszko Foundation
Chicago Symphony Orchestra
F Minor Concerto
George Schick
Beethoven’s 4th
Town Hall
City College of New York
Manhattan School of Music
University of Zurich
Yale
Korean War
Young & Rubicam
Benton & Bowles
Transcendental Meditation





"Black History Month: an interview with Roy Eaton"
the original



Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.

↑