Home / Tag Archives: February 1 (page 4)

Tag Archives: February 1

Vinnie Burke

The increased loss of the usage of a finger altered the direction of Vinnie Burke’s career. A onetime violinist and guitarist, after his remaining pinky knuckle was smashed while operating at a munitions manufacturer, he was pressured to change to bass. He caused Joe Mooney and Tony Scott, after that …

Read More »

Jenö Jandó

If the artistic identities of some performers are destined up with the documenting companies that maintained their music-making — Artur Rubinstein with RCA Red Seal, for instance, or Yo-Yo Ma using the crossover-friendly incarnation of Sony/CBS — then your face from the Naxos label and its own repertory-based, high-volume, low-budget …

Read More »

David McComb

The Triffids’ later frontman David McComb had Nick Cave’s deep, impassioned vocals and Leonard Cohen’s poetic, insightful lyrics but neither quality compensated him with commercial success. Delivered on Feb 17, 1962, in Perth, Australia, McComb was the boy of a cosmetic surgeon and a geneticist. McComb began his initial group, …

Read More »

Jani Lane

Within a genre of music where survival from the fittest isn’t just a cliché but a means of life, Jani Lane embodied the heart of ten years of excess, hedonism, and rock and roll & move. As the business lead vocalist of Warrant, he helped to propel the music group …

Read More »

George Beverly Shea

Gospel vocalist George Beverly Shea spent the majority of his 45-12 months career closely connected with evangelist Billy Graham. His best-known track is usually “How Great Thou Artwork,” that was compiled by Rev. Stuart K. Hine in the 1920s. Shea can be a distinguished author of well-known hymns such as …

Read More »

Joe Sample

Among the many jazzmen who all started out using hard bop but went electric powered through the fusion period, Joe Test was, in the later ’50s, a founding person in the Jazz Crusaders along with trombonist Wayne Henderson, tenor saxman Wilton Felder, and drummer Stix Hooper. The Crusaders’ debts to …

Read More »

Don Everly

Subjected to music young, Don Everly teamed up along with his brother, Phil Everly, to create the favorite ’50s and ’60s rock and roll duo the Everly Brothers. Their initial record, Bye Bye Appreciate, gained them worldwide recognition and popularity. Blessed in Brownie, KY, Don Everly was the kid of …

Read More »

James Black

Though he’s little known beyond New Orleans rather than recorded an album under his own name, drummer James Black was a Crescent City legend with the capacity of performing from complex modernist jazz to gritty funk. An achieved composer aswell, Dark had a status to be an irascible bandleader, intimidating …

Read More »

Crown Prince Waterford

b. Charles Waterford, 21 Oct 1919, Jonesboro, Arkansas, USA. Waterford’s parents, who had been both musicians, trained their kid to sing. His initial professional jobs had been with Andy Kirk’s 12 Clouds Of Pleasure and Leslie Sheffield’s Rhythmaires. Waterford became referred to as ‘the Crown Prince FROM THE Blues’ during …

Read More »

Jacqueline Dankworth

The little girl of Uk jazz-pop vocalist Cleo Laine and saxophone/clarinet player John Dankworth, Jacqueline Dankworth continues to determine her own legacy being a highly-talented jazz/pop vocalist. Her debut record, First Cry, released in 1994, was a cooperation with jazz vibraphonist Anthony Kee, while her second work, Field Of Blue, …

Read More »