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One of the few photos of P.G. |
He composed or co-composed hundreds of songs, including "Ain't Nobody's Business (If I Do)," "One Hour Mama" and "Dyin' Crapshooter's Blues." He was Bessie Smith's musical director and pianist for years and wrote songs tailored for her. He composed music for Orson Welles' critically acclaimed, immensely successful 1936 staging of MacBeth - set in Haiti and featuring an all-black cast.
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1939 photo of black musicians/composers in Harlem. (Click on the image to enlarge.) |
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Death Certificate for Porter Grainger |
Gradually he sank out of sight. He remains in the pantheon of the forgotten.
It was long thought that, due to dating of copyright renewals in his name, Grainger died in New York between 1951 and 1955. In fact, he died on October 30, 1948. (A genealogy researcher who goes by the name ladylorax recently unearthed the death certificate on ancestry.com.)
When the certificate was completed, his name was entered as "Porter, Granger" (that is, Granger Porter)—hence the difficulty in finding the record. He was living at 1300 Wylie Avenue in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He was brought to the Passavant Hospital at noon, where he remained for twenty minutes (which suggests he was DOA). Cause of death was written as "Pneumonitis, due to dentures lodged in his trachea." In other words, he choked on his dentures. He was 57 years and 9 days old.