Walter Henri Dyett (also known as Captain Walter Henri Dyett; January 11, 1901 – November 17, 1969) was an American violinist and music educator in the Chicago Public Schools system. He served as music director and assistant music director at Chicago's predominantly African-American high schools; Wendell Phillips High School and DuSable High School. Dyett served as musical director at DuSable High School from its opening in 1935 until 1962. He trained many students who became professional musicians.
Dyett died on November 17, 1969, aged 68.[10] He is commemorated by Dyett High School, a Chicago public high school located in the Washington Park neighborhood in Chicago.[11][12]
Bibliography
"DU SABLE HIGH MUSIC CHIEF A STAR MAKER by Roi Ottley - Chicago Daily Tribune (1872-1963); Jan 9, 1960; pg. B12" for more biographical information.
An Autobiobraphy of Black Jazz by Dempsey J. Travis (1983)
^"Home". publishpath.com. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
^Fred Below — Magic Maker, an article of September 1983 by Scott K. Fish, which includes an in-depth interview with Fred Below, published in the Modern Drummer website (retrieved August 24, 2018)
^Ratliff, Ben (26 July 2008). "Johnny Griffin, 80, Jazz Saxophonist, Dies". New York Times. Retrieved 30 July 2021. Johnny Griffin, a tenor saxophonist from Chicago whose speed, control and harmonic acuity made him one of the most talented American jazz musicians of his generation yet who spent most of his career in Europe, died Friday at his home in Availles-Limouzine, a village in France.