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Tag Archives: 1922 in St. Louis

Tom Turpin

Thomas “Mil” Turpin was created in Savannah, Georgia in 1873. His dad, “Honest John” Turpin, had taken great satisfaction in directing out the actual fact that after emancipation he hardly ever worked for anybody but himself. He do, however, try the politics of Reconstruction, and eventually a road in Savannah …

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Taswell Baird

Taswell Baird, Jr., towered among the preeminent trombonists of bebop’s heyday, collaborating with giants including Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker. Blessed in St. Louis on June 24, 1922, Baird — categorised as “Small Joe” per his middle name — obtained his initial trombone at age group 12 and by his …

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Olive Brown

When the blues appears to be the only music genre named following a color, the performer named Olive Brown signifies a small area of the music’s unique color wheel. Dark brown transformed her name from Olive Jefferson and evidently not really for matrimonial factors, so an assumption could be produced …

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Redd Foxx

A long time before Eddie Murphy, Andrew Dice Clay, or Howard Stern raised the ire of censors and threatened the sensitive sensibilities of mainstream American great taste, there is Redd Foxx, arguably probably the most notorious “blue” comic of his time. Prior to acquiring popularity in the 1970s because the …

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Ernie Wilkins

An excellent, slippery bop tenor sax participant, and a inventor of sharp-edged arrangements for bop and golf swing big rings who helped define the Count number Basie Mk. II design of the 1950s, Ernie Wilkins have been a normal fixture for the American jazz picture until 1979, when he drawn …

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