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Highland Cemetery (Kansas City, MO)

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This is a contributing entry for Highland Cemetery (Kansas City, MO) and only appears as part of that tour.Learn More.

Benjamin “Bennie” Moten was an influential pianist and bandleader whose career was essential to the development of Kansas City-style jazz. Moten grew up in Kansas City and took up the piano at an early age, learning his craft from two of Scott Joplin’s former students. He attended Lincoln High School but left before graduating to pursue a career in music and, in 1918, joined two fellow entertainers in forming the B.B.&D. Orchestra. He put together the Bennie Moten Orchestra four years later. 


Tie, Coat, Jaw, Collar

Grave 7, Lot 87, Block 4

Plant, Cemetery, Headstone, Tree

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Moten's reputation as a good-natured bandleader helped him attract the best musicians, including a young Count Basie. Their orchestra developed and refined Kansas City’s unique style of blues-driven and hard-swinging jazz, spreading the new sound through nearly 100 recordings produced for the Okey and Victor recording labels. 

In addition to his ability to lead, Moten excelled at the business of music. He cultivated support from political boss Tom Pendergast and leveraged the relationship to make sure his band played the best gigs across the city, even at venues owned by white promoters. 

In 1935, his band traveled to Denver, Colorado, to begin an engagement. Moten remained behind to undergo a routine tonsillectomy. Unfortunately, there were post operative complications upon his return to Kansas City. He would pass away at Wheatley-Provident Hospital at 1826 Forest Avenue in Kansas City, MO. Moten is buried in Highland Cemetery in Kansas City, Missouri