Ragtime and jazz drummer
Lada on drums with the Louisiana Five
Anton Lada (September 25, 1890 – August 28, 1944)[ 1] was a ragtime , jazz and dance musician.[ 2] He was a drummer. He played with and was the manager of the Louisiana Five .[ 3] He recorded on Columbia Records and toured.[ 4] Lada performed for dancing and vaudeville shows and made a series of recordings for Emerson Records , Edison Records , and Columbia Records .
He is credited as co-composer of a number of tunes with Spencer Williams , most successfully the "Arkansas Blues".
After the breakup of his first Louisiana Five, he formed a series of his own bands before launching a new "Original Louisiana Five" band and moving to Hollywood to do film scores.[ 5]
Lada was born in Prague in the Kingdom of Bohemia and moved with his family to Chicago as a child.[ 5]
Lada formed various bands and made recordings with them.[ 6] [ 7]
He composed "Let Us Be Sweethearts Again" with Ernie Erdman in 1921.[ 8] He copyrighted "Neglected Blues" with Williams.[ 9]
Harry L. Alford arranged some of his songs.[which? ]
^ "Lada, Anton, 1890–1944 – Full record view – Libraries Australia Search" . Librariesaustralia.nla.gov.au .
^ "Lada, Anton 1890–1944 [WorldCat Identities]" . Worldcat.org .
^ lada, [anton; five, louisiana. "Search results from Audio Recording, African Americans, Lada, [Anton], Audio, Popular Songs of the Day, Performing Arts Encyclopedia, Louisiana Five, Available Online" . Library of Congress .
^ "Music Trades" . Music Trades Corporation. February 17, 1921 – via Google Books.
^ a b "Heroes #16: Anton Lada, 1890–1944" . November 12, 2019.
^ Rust, Brian (February 16, 2002). Jazz and Ragtime Records (1897–1942): L-Z, index . Mainspring Press. ISBN 9780967181929 – via Google Books.
^ Rust, Brian (February 16, 1975). The American Dance Band Discography 1917-1942: Irving Aaronson to Arthur Lange . Arlington House. ISBN 9780870002489 – via Google Books.
^ Erdman, Ernie; Lada, Anton (January 1, 1921). "Let Us Be Sweethearts Again" . Historic Sheet Music Collection .
^ "Catalog of Copyright Entries: Third series" . February 16, 1948 – via Google Books.