Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Jeannie Cheatham was born Jean E. Evans on August 14, 1927 and grew up in Akron, Ohio. At the age of five, she started having lessons on her aunt’s newly-acquired piano, which was soon moved to her home when it transpired that she had a talent for music her aunt lacked. Not long after, she began playing for services at the church her family attended. Throughout her school years, her piano teacher also took her to play at weddings and social events, as well as giving recitals

She first played jazz music at age 14 when she was requested to join a local 15-piece rehearsal orchestra. Still in high school Jeannie began playing in smaller groups and found herself in demand professionally as most younger male musicians were drafted into the US Army during World War II. In 1944, she was accepted as a student at the University of Akron but was unable to complete more than one year for financial reasons.

She met and married Jimmy Cheatham, with whom she formed the Sweet Baby Blues Band in 1984. Her autobiography, Meet Me With Your Black Drawers On: My Life In Music, was published in 2006, the same year they received a lifetime achievement award at the San Diego Music Awards, and in 2022, were inducted into the San Diego Music Hall of Fame.

It was noted by Los Angeles Times contributor Dirk Sutro that Jeannie Cheatham remains one of the under-appreciated greats of jazz and blues, both for her spare, tasteful piano playing, which ranges from boogie-woogie to Monk‑ish surprises, and for her earthy but sensuous voice.

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Requisites

SURF RIDE | ART PEPPER

Saxophonist Art Pepper made his debut recording session of Surf Ride in Los Angeles, California on March 4, 1952, when he recorded tracks 4-6 on the album. Subsequent recording sessions took place on March 29, 1953  when he recorded tracks 1-3 and then on August 25, 1954 recording tracks 7-12. The three sessions resulted in the completion of the twelve takes that ultimately made it to the album.

The album was produced by Ozzie Cadena and originally released as a 12 inch LP on the Savoy label in 1956. The liner notes were written by Yasukuni Terashima and the cover offers a clear though slightly too wholesome California motif to be considered for an addition to the cheesy Fifties Batchelor Collection of “girls on covers “, though the redhead in bikini helps.

TRACKLIST | 37:25 All compositions by Art Pepper except where noted.
    1. Tickle Toe (Lester Young) – 2:55
    2. Chili Pepper – 3:00
    3. Susie the Poodle – 3:14
    4. Brown Gold – 2:26
    5. Holiday Flight – 3:1
    6. Surf Ride – 2:54
    7. Straight Life – 2:52
    8. Cinnamon – 3:11
    9. Thyme Time – 3:30
    10. The Way You Look Tonight (Dorothy Fields, Jerome Kern) – 3:48
    11. Nutmeg – 3:15
    12. Art’s Oregano – 3:08
PERSONNEL
  • Art Pepper – alto saxophone
  • Jack Montrose – tenor saxophone (tracks 7-12)
  • Russ Freeman (tracks 1-3), Hampton Hawes (tracks 4-6), Claude Williamson (tracks 7-12) – piano
  • Monty Budwig (tracks 7-12), Joe Mondragon (tracks 4-6), Bob Whitlock (tracks 1-3) – bass
  • Larry Bunker (tracks 4-12), Bobby White (tracks 1-3) – drums

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Guy Patrick Paquinet was born in Tours, France on August 13, 1903, Tours, France. He played in an army band in the early 1920s, then worked with Paul Gason, Lud Gluskin, Fred Mélé, and Don Parker.

Guy led his own ensemble from 1934 to 1936, then worked as a sideman for Alix Combelle, Django Reinhardt, and Ray Ventura. In the 1940s he returned to bandleading, leading his own ensembles through the 1950s and working with, among others, Sidney Bechet, Dizzy Gillespie, and Tony Proteau.

Trombonist Guy Paquinet, whose son André became a noteworthy trombonist, transitioned on January 5, 1981 in Selle-sur-le-Bied.

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Stanley Mackay Greig was born on August 12, 1930 in Joppa, Edinburgh, Scotland to a father who was a drummer and piano tuner. While still in high school he played with Sandy Brown in 1945, then played piano and drums with him from 1948 to 1954. Moving to London, England in the mid-Fifties he played with Ken Colyer, Humphrey Lyttelton, and Bruce Turner, then with the Fairweather-Brown All-Stars in 1958-59.

He played with Turner again briefly before becoming a member of Acker Bilk’s Paramount Jazz Band from 1960 to 1968. After 1969 Greig made piano his primary instrument, leading his own small groups and playing boogie woogie and blues piano. He played with Dave Shepherd and Johnny Hawksworth as a sideman in the early 1970s, then formed the London Jazz Big Band in 1975.

From 1977-80 he played with George Melly, then toured as a bandleader in Europe in the early Eighties. He worked again with Lyttelton for a decade beginning in 1985, then worked with Wally Fawkes later in the 1990s. The Stan Greig Trio played many gigs in and around London, with the Rolling Stones’s Charlie Watts sometimes turning out on drums.

Pianist, drummer, and bandleader Stan Greig transitioned on November 18, 2012 after suffering from Parkinson’s disease.

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Peter John King was born on August 11, 1940 in Kingston upon Thames, Surrey, England. He took up the clarinet and saxophone as a teenager, entirely self-taught. His first public appearances were in 1957, playing alto in a trad jazz group at the Swan Public House in a group organized by trumpeter Alan Rosewell. After the performance he chose to be a professional musician. He came under the strong musical influence of Charlie Parker developing a bebop style inspired by Parker.

In 1959, at the age of 19, he was booked by Ronnie Scott to perform at the opening of Scott’s club in Gerrard Street, London, England. In the same year, he received the Melody Maker New Star award. He worked with Johnny Dankworth’s orchestra from 1960 to 1961, and went on to work with the big bands of Maynard Ferguson, Tubby Hayes, Harry South, and Stan Tracey, the Brussels Big Band, and the Ray Charles band on a European tour.

He played in small groups with musicians such as Philly Joe Jones, Zoot Sims, Al Cohn, Red Rodney, Hampton Hawes, Nat Adderley, Al Haig, John Burch, Bill Watrous, and Dick Morrissey, Tony Kinsey, Bill Le Sage, Jimmy Witherspoon, Joe Williams, Jon Hendricks, and Anita O’Day. His musical curiosity led him to associate with freer idioms in John Stevens’ ‘Freebop’ group in the 1980s. He appeared on the soundtrack of the 1969 film The Italian Job. He was a member of the Charlie Watts Tentet.

From the early 1990s, his style matured and flourished as an improviser and a composer. He found ways to combine jazz and classical techniques without diluting either and he recorded the results on his albums Tamburello, Lush Life and Janus with the Lyric String Quartet.

He won the BBC ‘Musician of the Year’ award, appeared in the documentary film, No One But Me, discussing jazz vocalist Annie Ross and appeared in the movies Blue Ice and The Talented Mr. Ripley. His autobiography Flying High was widely praised for its candour and honesty about his musical career and personal life, his international associations in the jazz world, and the many years in which he battled addiction. Saxophonist, clarinetist and composer Peter King transitioned on August 23, 2020 in Putney, South London, England at 80.

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