
Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Harold Rubin was born on May 13, 1932 in Johannesburg, South Africa of Israeli descent. Attending Jeppe High School for Boys he received private instruction in the fine arts and classical clarinet as a teenager. He developed a fascination with jazz and began playing at the Skyline Night Club at eighteen. He went on to enroll as an architecture student at the University of the Witwatersrand and completed his professional studies in London, England.
Rubin’s creative endeavours in South African society during the 1950s and 1960s dissented against the apartheid-era Afrikaner establishment by defying the country’s racist social norms. Rubin organised his own jazz group in the 1950s, snuck into black townships, and played alongside black musicians.
Openly protesting the repressive political environment, Harold left the country for Israel, where he quickly established himself in Tel Aviv, and was employed as an architect and taught at an academy of architecture and design from the 1960s until his retirement in 1986. He returned to playing jazz in late 1979, having previously given up performance for more than a decade after his emigration from Africa. He became a founding member of the 1980s Zaviot Jazz Quartet, who throught he decade performed and recorded on Jazzis Records.
He was awarded the Landau Award in tribute to his contributions to jazz music in 2008, he continued to play jazz with musicians of the younger generations in Tel Aviv. Clarinetist Harold Rubin, who concentrated in the free jazz genre, transitioned on April 1, 2020 at the age of 87.
More Posts: bandleader,clarinet,history,instrumental,jazz,music

Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Gerald Wiggins was born on May 12, 1922 in New York City. He started classical piano lessons when he was four but by his teenage years became interested in jazz. He doubled on bass while attending High School & Art and for a period in the 40s accompanied Stepin’ Fetchit. Following this he worked and toured with the big bands of Les Hite, Louis Armstrong and Benny Carter. Stationed in Seattle while in the military he played in the local jazz clubs.
By the mid 40s Wiggins relocated to Los Angeles and played music for television and film. He has worked with Lena Horne, Kay Starr, Nat King Cole, Lou Rawls, Jimmy Witherspoon Helen Humes, Joe Williams, Ernie Andrews and Eartha Kitt to name a few. He also worked at the Hollywood studios as a vocal coach and worked with Marilyn Monroe and others.
Always a highly flexible pianist, Wiggins was comfortable in swing and bop settings with a consistently witty style filled with catchy riffs became his distinctive signature. His best-known recording as an organist was Wiggin’ Out but it was Wiggins’ trio work with Andy Simpkins and Paul Humphreys that is legendary. Pianist Gerald Wiggins passed away at the age of 86 on July 13, 2008.
More Posts: bandleader,history,instrumental,jazz,music,organ,piano

Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Beryl Audley Bryden was born May 11, 1920 in Norwich, Norfolk, England and was an only child Her enthusiasm for jazz music started during her teenage years, becoming a member of the National Rhythm Club when she was 17 and became secretary of the local branch in 1941. An ardent jazz fan she established a Nat Gonella fan club in her teens, before taking up the washboard and singing, influenced by Bessie Smith.
Moving to Cambridge in 1942 at 22, post WWII she returned to London with the hope of starting a career in music/ She worked with Mick Mulligan and George Melly at London jazz venues and became a supporter of visiting American jazz acts when the Musicians Union ban was lifted. Beryl befriended, amongst others, Buck Clayton, Louis Armstrong and Bud Freeman, with whom she recorded.
By 1949 she formed her own group called Beryl’s Back-Room Boys and later worked with Mike Daniels. In 1955 she joined the Chris Barber band on washboard, and played on Rock Island Line with Lonnie Donegan on vocals. This track helped trigger the ‘skiffle’ craze of the late 1950s.
Graduating to the Monty Sunshine jazz band she covered Bessie Smith’s Young Woman’s Blues, Gimme a Pigfoot (And a Bottle of Beer, and Coney Island Washboard Blues, which demonstrated her washboard technique.
She remained active at the end of the British trad jazz boom, and became particularly popular in Northern Europe, playing with the Ted Easton Jazz Band and The Piccadilly Six. She was active well into the Nineties playing with the Metropolitan Jazz Band, Digby Fairweather, Nat Gonella and her own Blue Boys.
Vocalist Beryl Bryden, whose final recording was with Nat Gonella shortly before her death, transitioned from lymphoma, aged 78, at St Mary’s Hospital, Paddington, England on July 14, 1998
More Posts: bandleader,history,instrumental,jazz,music,vocal,washboard

Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Lorne Lofsky was born May 10, 1954 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada and began playing rock at school dances but later took an interest in jazz after hearing the album Miles Davis’ Kind of Blue. During the 1970s he attended York University in Toronto studying music while working around Toronto’s clubs. He worked with Canadian musicians Butch Watanabe and Jerry Toth and with Pepper Adams, Bob Brookmeyer and Chet Baker when they visited.
In 1980, Lofsky met fellow Canadian, pianist Oscar Peterson, who produced his first album It Could Happen to You. He toured with Peterson in the 1980s, and he toured and recorded as a member of Peterson’s quartet and quintet in the 1990s. Lofsky has also worked with Ed Bickert, Ruby Braff, Rosemary Clooney, Kirk MacDonald, Rob McConnell, Tal Farlow, Dizzy Gillespie, Johnny Hartman, and Clark Terry.
In the early-1980s, Lofsky began an important musical association with saxophonist Kirk Macdonald leading to the formation of a quartet. From 1983 to 1991 Lofsky played in a quartet with guitarist Ed Bickert. This collaboration yielded two recordings, one for Concord Records titled This Is New, along with a tour of Spain in 1991.
He has taught at York University, Humber College’s Community Music School and the University of Toronto. Guitarist Lorne Lofsky continues to perform, record, and tour.
More Posts: bandleader,guitar,history,instrumental,jazz,music

Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Steve Holt was born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada on May 9, 1954 and exhibited musical ability in early childhood, playing piano at the age of four. By the time he was a teenager, he was a regular on the Montreal club scene.
Self-taught until he entered McGill University, he received instruction from pianist Armas Maiste, whose bebop playing influenced him. Holt became a student of Kenny Barron, traveling regularly to New York City for private lessons. Graduating from McGill in 1981 with that university’s first Bachelor of Music major in Jazz Performance, he taught jazz improvisation there.
Steve’s 1983 debut album, The Lion’s Eyes was nominated for a Juno Award. He has worked with Larry Coryell, Eddie Henderson, and Archie Shepp. Moving to Toronto, Canada in 1987 he worked as an equity analyst and for a time he also continued playing clubs at night. He released three albums in the early Nineties ~ Christmas Light, Just Duet and Catwalk.
At the end of the decade Holt returned his concentration to music full-time and three years later his fifth album, The Dream, was released. He turned his attention to music production and stopped performing jazz live until 2014. A move to the countryside reignited his interest in jazz performance and in 2017 he opened a health food store in Warkworth, Ontario that operates as a jazz venue once a week.
Pianist Steve Hunt continues to play jazz while maintaining outside interests.
More Posts: bandleader,history,instrumental,jazz,music,piano


