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Tag Archives: Frank Wess

Dennis Mackrel

Drummer Dennis Mackrel is definitely respectable by working music artists, yet undervalued from the jazz community all together. Mackrel is most likely most widely known as the drummer hand-picked by Mel Lewis in 1990 to dominate responsibilities in the Vanguard Jazz Orchestra when Lewis was struggling to continue. This is …

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Joe Temperley

Baritonist Joe Temperley was an ideal musician to complete for Harry Carney during re-creations of Duke Ellington’s music, a job that often overshadowed his own good voice. Temperley in fact started over the alto and documented on tenor with British rings led by Harry Parry (1949), Jack port Parnell, Tony …

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Toshiko Akiyoshi

As an arranger, Toshiko Akiyoshi (influenced originally by Gil Evans and Thad Jones) continues to be particularly notable for incorporating components of traditional Japan music into her otherwise bop-ish graphs. A solid (and underrated) pianist in the Bud Powell custom, Akiyoshi was created in China but transferred to Japan in …

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Sonny Payne

Sonny Payne had the part of his life time as Count number Basie’s drummer. It had been the perfect placement for the hard-driving drummer and he easily fit into flawlessly with pianist Basie and guitarist Freddie Green through the prime many years of Count’s second great music group. The boy …

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Teddy Reig

A colorful character and something of the very most essential jazz producers ever, Teddy Reig was involved with many essential periods from the 1940s, ’50s, and ’60s. He began making in 1945 and was shortly working frequently at Savoy of all of the most significant schedules (like the Charlie Parker …

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Herbie Mann

Herbie Mann played a multitude of music throughout his profession. He became very popular in the 1960s, however in the ’70s became therefore immersed in pop and different varieties of globe music that he appeared dropped to jazz. Nevertheless, Mann never dropped his capability to improvise artistically as his afterwards …

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Henry Coker

In case a copy of each album this trombonist had appeared on was packed into bins, the effect would look something similar to the huge jazz record collections which are often wanted to purchasers. One box only will be recordings with Count number Basie and another may be full of …

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Gerry Wiggins

A respected “music artists’ musician” type, Wiggins has led several classes of his own but made his reputation generally by accompanying feminine jazz-oriented singers, included in this Lena Horne, Kay Starr, Eartha Kitt, Helen Humes, Carmen McRae, Linda Hopkins, and Marilyn Monroe (with whom he done the film “Let’s Fall …

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Buster Smith

A talented alto saxophonist and an arranger/composer who probably wrote “A single O’Clock Leap” (although Count number Basie received the credit), Buster Smith’s efforts to jazz are difficult to assess because he was under-recorded throughout his profession. Charlie Parker frequently acknowledged Smith’s impact on his shade, as well as the …

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Buddy Catlett

The incredibly solid bassist Buddy Catlett continues to be going strong because the later ’50s, appearing on a lot more than 100 jazz recordings. He’s also a multi-instrumentalist stemming from his research as a kid on clarinet and saxophone, abilities he held up throughout his profession. In 1996 he tricked …

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