Born in Detroit, MI on October 16, 1917, Ivelee Flowers received classical training at a conservatory there while spending much of his youth listening to Fats Waller records and seeing Waller perform live whenever possible. When he was about 19 years old, Flowers befriended the famous pianist, who recognized the young man's abilities and advised him to pursue a career as a professional musician. In 1939 when Waller His Rhythm settled into the Yacht Club on 52nd Street in New York City, Flowers got a gig playing piano in the lobby, where he was heard by producer John Hammond, who tried to secure bookings for the aspiring entertainer. After gravitating back to Detroit for long enough to establish what would become a protracted working relationship with the management at Baker's Bar at Eight Mile and Livernois, Flowers returned to New York where he performed at the Swing Club, the Famous Door, and various musical bars in Greenwich Village. His first recordings, made in 1941, attracted little attention.
After Waller passed away suddenly in December 1943, Flowers continued to play and sing like his idol. Following in Waller's footsteps, he accepted an invitation from Waller's last manager Ed Kirkeby to star in an all-star #Tribute to Fats Waller that was broadcast in February 1945 and made records for Hit, Guild, and V-Disc. Flowers' instrumental recordings of 1945 included delightfully executed stride and swing adaptations of classical works by J.S. Bach, Johann Strauss, and Frederic Chopin, as well as ballads and standards, and eight-to-the-bar exercises like the Eight Mile Boogie, an inspired invocation of his turf back home in the Motor City. During the summer of 1946, Flowers began recording for Waller's label Victor with Herman Autrey, Gene Sedric, Cedric Wallace, and Slick Jones, musicians who had spent years as the core of Waller's little Rhythm band. The group was billed as Pat Flowers His Rhythm.
Ed Kirkeby, who had made hot jazz and novelty records with the California Ramblers in the 1920s, now acted as manager for Flowers and helped him concoct clever titles like Bring Me Some Money Honey, Exhilarated, Exasperated, Exhausted, and Aloysius Do the Dishes. Other material was borrowed from Louis Jordan, the King Cole Trio and, of course, Fats Waller. During 1948, Flowers was forced out of the studio by the AFM recording ban; his solution was to hasten back to regular bookings at Baker's Bar, which was renamed Baker's Keyboard Lounge during his extended residency. In November 1955, Flowers opened for Art Tatum, and in February 1956 he played his last set at Baker's; he moved over to the Danish Inn in Farmington. He also managed to do a little recording for the Dot record label. Although he toured Europe in the mid-'70s and recorded for Black and Blue with a group that featured bassist Slam Stewart, much of the rest of his life was spent in relative obscurity. Pat Flowers passed away in Detroit on October 6, 2000. Most of his recordings have been reissued in the Classics Chronological Series. ~ arwulf arwulf, Rovi