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All Hours & Directions

Terrell Main Library

10am - 6pm

Circulation Desk

10am - 6pm

Research Help Daytime

Closed

Research Help Evening

Closed

Libraries Administrative Office

Closed

Azariah's Cafe

10am - 4pm

CIT Help Desk

Writing Center Daytime

Closed

Writing Center Evening

Closed

Speaking Center

Directions:

Location:

Mary Church Terrell Main Library
148 W College St. Oberlin, OH 44074-1545

Parking:

The main visitor lot is the east Service Building lot, and the south row of the Carnegie Building lot for visitors to offices within that building.

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History of the Collection

The son of two vaudeville performers, Buddy Rich was born into a world of music and performance in New York City on September 30, 1917.

Rich's musical talent was evident from an early age, and by the time he was two years old he was singing, dancing, and playing drums on stage with his family, billed as “Baby Traps the Drum Wonder.” Rich led his first stage band at the age of eleven, and he soon began touring the world. He was both a prodigy and an autodidact, and he worked his way to being one of the highest-paid child performers of the 1930s in the United States.

As an adult, Rich was always an in-demand drummer, and he performed with many of the greatest bandleaders of the era. In 1937 he began touring with Joe Marsala’s band, and he also briefly toured with Bunny Berigan and Artie Shaw. From 1939 to 1942 Rich was a member of Tommy Dorsey's band, before joining the United States Marine Corps in World War II. After the war he toured with Dorsey again, as well as Harry James, Les Brown, Charlie Ventura, and Norman Granz’s Jazz at the Philharmonic.

In the recording studio, Rich played with top musical talents, including Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie on the 1950 Bird and Diz studio album. Rich also led his own big band starting in the late 1950s. His second band, formed in 1966, achieved great international success for nearly a decade. Rich dissolved the band in 1974 and opened up a club in Manhattan, Buddy’s Place, where he performed regularly. In the 1970s and 80s he again toured across the country with a new group of young musicians, performing in smaller venues, such as high schools and community centers. Rich died on April 2, 1987 from complications following the removal of a brain tumor.

Although Rich was a child of the vaudeville era, he applied his formidable drumming technique to a variety of musical styles and became one of the premier drummers of the 20th century. Rich was known for his speed and dexterity, but also for his impeccable timing and sense of tempo. Queen drummer Roger Taylor said of Rich, “I would say of just sheer technique he's the best I've ever seen,” and Gene Krupa called him “the greatest drummer ever to have drawn breath.”