Daily Dose Of Jazz…

EdwardBrunoCarr was born on February 9, 1928 in The Bronx, New York. Growing up he lived around many different ethnic groups, including neighborhoods with German and Italian residents. Listening to the radio as a youth, he heard different styles of music while developing his ear and his memory. By the time he started playing professionally he had anarsenal of songs that he surprised band leaders he already knew and had no need for charts when they handed them to him.

As a timbale player in Latin bands, one can hear the inflection in the way he plays his small tom-toms at times. Though not a household name, his playing with a lot of fire and conviction made him a sought after drummer among the jazz elite. Kenny Burrell, Billie Holiday, Ray Charles, John Coltrane, Charlie Parker, Michael Franks, Aretha Franklin, Monte Alexander, Stanley Turrentine, Roy Ayers, King Curtis and Harry “Sweets” Edison have all had him on their bandstand.

Here recorded several single albums, each with Aretha, Curtis Amy, Walter Davis Jr., Lou Donaldson, and Eddie “Cleanhead” Vinson, however, his largest body of work was with Herbie Mann, recording eighteen albums with the flutist from 1964 to 1970.

Drummer Bruno Carr, who was a frequent collaborator with Ray Charles, transitioned from lung cancer on October 25, 1993 in Denver Colorado at the age of 65.

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Marc McDonald was born in London, England on  February 8, 1961 and lived there for six years before his parents moved to Princeton, New Jersey, where he grew up. Since the 1980s he has led groups in the New York City metropolitan areas as well as Honolulu, London and Athens. Releasing his debut CD as a leader, It Doesn’t End Here, it features his own compositions and the inventive arrangements of standards, drawing from mainstream jazz, Brazilian, and New Orleans R&B  influences.

He has been equally active as a sideman and has been a member of award-winning composer Jamie Begian’s big band since 1998, appearing as a featured soloist on the band’s CD Trance.

In 1990, McDonald was among ten jazz composers invited to the ASCAP/Louis Armstrong Jazz Composers Workshop at New York’s Lincoln Center. Always the student, he attended the BMI Jazz Composers Workshop in New York for several years. Between 1991 and 1996 he was invited to premiere works for jazz chamber ensemble, solo saxophone, and saxophone quartet.

As an educator he has held a position for five years as a member of the artist faculty at a private music school in Princeton, and is currently in private teaching practice. Saxophonist and composer Marc McDonald continues to explore the world of jazz.

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Raymond Colignon was born on February 7, 1907 in Liège, Belgium. He initially was active as an accompanist for silent films, then went on to tour Switzerland, France and Algeria. In the early 1930s, he joined the Lucien Hirsch and His Orchestra who made the first recordings for Columbia Records. Between 1931 and 1934 he worked in a nightclub in his native town. From 1935 to 1940 he played and wrote big band arrangements with Fud Candrix.

As a soloist, he recorded under his own name for the Brussels Jazz Club record label. In 1939 he recorded Honeysuckle Rose for Telefunken and Swinging Through the Style, accompanied by bassist Camille Marchand and drummer Armand Dralandts. The early Forties saw him playing in Brussels, Belgium with Jack Lowens and His Swing Quartet, in Berlin, Germany with Kurt Widmann and his dance orchestra, and in Adolf Steimel ‘s Organum dance orchestra.

In 1941/42 further recordings were made in Brussels under his own name, with trumpeter and singer Billy West recording I Hear A Rhapsody and with Tony Jongenelen Gute Nacht, Mutter (Good NIght , Mother) sung in German. In the post World War II period he worked mainly as an organist in the genre of dance and entertainment music, recording Surprise Party – Calling All Dancers or Come Dance with Me for Philips.

Pianist, organist and arranger Coco Colignon, who was involved in 53 jazz recording sessions between 1931 and 1961, transitioned on February 10, 1987 in Wavre, Belgium.

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Vincent Peter Colaiuta was born on February 5, 1956 in Brownsville, Pennsylvania and was given his first drum kit when he was seven. He took to it naturally, with little instruction. By fourteen, the school band teacher gave him a book that taught him some of the basics and Buddy Rich was his favorite drummer until he heard the album Ego by Tony Williams, an event that changed his life. He started listening to organ groups, notably Jack McDuff, Jimmy McGriff and Don Patterson.

While matriculating through Berklee College of Music in Boston , Massachusetts at the time jazz fusion was on the rise, he listened to and admired Alphonse Mouzon and Billy Cobham. After leaving school, he played local gigs in Boston, joined a brief tour organized by Al Kooper, then worked in California on an album by Christopher Morris.

Returning to Boston, Colaiuta was drawn back to California by friends and took the bus from Boston to Los Angeles during the blizzard of 1978. After performing in jazz clubs, he won the audition to play drums for Frank Zappa, with whom he toured and appeared on the albums Joe’s Garage, Tinsel Town Rebellion, and Shut Up ‘n Play Yer Guitar.

In 1981, he left Zappa for the gig as a studio musician and recorded for the band Pages, Gino Vannelli, saxophonist Tom Scott, bassist Larry Klein, Joni Mitchell, touring with the latter. The late Eighties saw him as the house drummer for The Late Show Starring Joan Rivers. The band was led by Mark Hudson and was called the Party Boys and the Tramp.

By the end of the 1980s back as a studio musician he was recording albums, doing TV and film work during the day, and playing clubs at night. He worked with jazz musicians Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea, Buell Neidlinger, and the Buddy Rich Big Band. The 1990s he was with Sting, and released his debut solo album as well as two more as a leader.

He has won over fifteen Drummer of the Year awards from Modern Drummer magazine’s annual reader polls. These include ten awards in the “Best Overall” category. He was inducted into the Modern Drummer Hall of Fame in 1996 and the Classic Drummer Hall of Fame in 2014. Colaiuta has won one Grammy Award and has been nominated twice.  Drummer Vinnie Colaiuta continues to perform, tour and record.

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Arthur “Artie” Bernstein, born February 4, 1909 in Brooklyn, New York, started his musical career playing cello on board cruise ships to South America. He studied law at New York University, however, by 1929 he had started playing bass, and began performing in clubs around New York City. He performed with trumpeter Red Nichols, Red Norvo and others, and recorded with Ben Pollack, Jimmy and Tommy Dorsey, and many others in the 1930s.

In 1939 he performed with Benny Goodman at the second From Spirituals to Swing concert. He fell out with Goodman in 1941 after the bandleader fiddled with Bernstein’s music-stand light so that he would have problems reading the music to appear incompetent, giving the pretext to fire him.

He went on to win the Down Beat readers’ poll in 1943 and later moved to Los Angeles, California. Artie worked in the film industry for Universal Studios and Warner Bros., continuing to work for the latter organization until 1963.

Over the course of his career he worked with Arnold Ross Quintet, Charlie Christian Jammers, Hoagy Carmichael Trio, Ralph Burns Quintet, as well as the orchestras of Adrian Rollini, Billie Holiday, Cloverdale Country Club, Clyde Hurley, Cootie Williams, Eddie Condon, Frankie Trumbauer, Harry James, Jack Teagarden, Larry Clinton, Lionel Hampton, Metronome All Stars, Mildred Bailey And Her Swing Band, Putney Dandridge, Teddy Wilson, and Ziggy Elman.

Double bassist and cellist Artie Bernstein transitioned on January 4, 1964 in Los Angeles, one month to the day shy of his 55th birthday.

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