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・ Erwin Gehrke
・ Erwin Georg Keilholz
・ Erwin Geschonneck
・ Erwin Gillmeister
・ Erwin Graf
・ Erwin Grasinger
・ Erwin Griswold
・ Erwin Guido Kolbenheyer
・ Erwin Gutawa
・ Erwin Hadewicz
・ Erwin Hagedorn
・ Erwin Hahn
・ Erwin Halletz
・ Erwin Hauer
・ Erwin Heerich
Erwin Helfer
・ Erwin Hillier
・ Erwin Hinckley Barbour
・ Erwin Hochmair
・ Erwin Hochsträsser
・ Erwin Hoffer
・ Erwin Home for Worthy and Indigent Women
・ Erwin House
・ Erwin House (Allendale, South Carolina)
・ Erwin House (Greenwood, Florida)
・ Erwin Huber
・ Erwin Hymer
・ Erwin Isaacs
・ Erwin J. Haeberle
・ Erwin Jaenecke


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Erwin Helfer : ウィキペディア英語版
Erwin Helfer

Erwin Helfer (born January 20, 1936) is an American boogie-woogie, blues and jazz pianist.
==Biography==
Born in 1936 and raised in Chicago, Illinois, United States. Erwin Helfer is a Chicago boogie woogie and jazz innovator, performer, and educator. Helfer was mentored by William Russell, who introduced him to Baby Dodds, Mahalia Jackson, Glover Compton, Cripple Clarence Lofton, and Estelle Mama Yancey, as a young teenager growing up in Chicago in the early 1950s.
William Russell moved to New Orleans and worked on a Ford Foundation grant which led to the creation of the Jazz Archives at Tulane University. Helfer followed Russell to New Orleans and studied at Tulane University. He studied Psychology but he did not complete a degree. He became very close to Billie Pierce and DeDe Pierce. He spent time outside of class studying the piano style of Crescent City pianists Archibald and Professor Longhair.
In 1956, Erwin Helfer made the only recordings of house rent party pianist Doug Suggs and also recorded Speckled Red, Billie Pierce, and James Robinson (on the LP entitled Primitive Piano for his Tone Records and subsequently reissued by The Sirens Records SR-5005). Other tracks from the Speckled Red recording session were issued on Delmark Record's first release.
Helfer began his professional career when Estelle Yancey, wife of pianist and boogie-woogie pioneer Jimmy Yancey, coaxed him to fill in for her accompanist, Little Brother Montgomery. His initial performance with Yancey led to a long-term professional partnership with the singer that lasted to her death in 1986 at age ninety.〔Santelli, Robert. ''The Big Book of Blues'', Penguin Books, page 201, (2001) - ISBN 0-14-100145-3〕
In the 1960s and early 1970s, Erwin Helfer recorded for Chess Records, Testament Records, Flying Fish Records, and various European labels. Peter J. Welding, one of the preeminent blues historians and scholars of all time, wrote that Helfer had "mastered the rhythmic and melodic subtleties" of the blues piano style.
In 1976, Helfer recorded ''Heavy Timbre - Chicago Boogie Piano'' for The Sirens Records; the recording session simulated a house rent party and included blues pianists Blind John Davis, Sunnyland Slim, Willie Mabon, and Jimmy Walker.
In 1982 Helfer partnered with Pete Crawford and started Red Beans Records, and released albums by Estelle Yancey, Blind John Davis, Johnny "Big Moose" Walker, and other Chicago blues artists. These recordings were sold to Evidence Records.
In 2001, Helfer began collaborating with The Sirens Records, which restarted in 2001. He was nominated for the Blues Music Awards in 2003, for 'Comeback Blues Album of the Year', for his CD ''I'm Not Hungry But I Like To Eat - Blues''.〔( Blues Music Awards Database )〕 He has subsequently recorded ''St. James Infirmary'', ''Careless Love'', and ''Erwin Helfer Way'' for The Sirens Records.
Recently he has played at the Chicago Jazz Festival, 2005–2007; Hungary's Debrecen Jazz Festival, 2005, the Chicago Blues Festival, 1986-2010, and throughout Chicago's blues clubs.

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