
Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Floyd Maurice “Stumpy” Brady was born on August 4, 1910 in Brownsville, Pennsylvania. At the end of the 1920s he performed and recorded with Zack Whyte’s Chocolate Beau Brummels before touring with Al Sears. During the next decade he played with Andy Kirk in New York, recorded with Blanche Calloway, and returned briefly to Whyte’s band in 1933.
He replaced Ed Cuffee in McKinney’s Cotton Pickers, and then performed and recorded with Claude Hopkins from 1936 to 1938 and Teddy Wilson from 1939 to 1940. As a member of the Lucky Millinder orchestra, Stumpy played a solo while accompanying Sister Rosetta Tharpe in the soundie Lonesome Road in 1941.
Other musicians and bandleaders he worked with include Al Sears, Count Basie, Joe Guy touring with Billie Holiday in 1945, Jay McShann, Fletcher Henderson, Roy Eldridge, and Cat Anderson. After a period of inactivity in the 1950s, Brady resumed playing in the 1960s with Slide Hampton’s band, Luckey Roberts’s orchestra, and Edgar Battle’s big band.
Trombonist Stumpy Brady died on February 11, 1998.
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Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Lawrence Brown was born on August 3, 1907 on August 3, 1907 in Lawrence, Kansas. When he was about six or seven years old his family moved to Oakland, California. He began playing the violin at a young age, but quickly grew tired of it and turned to playing the tuba in his school’s band.
Coming from a musical background, his mother played the organ and the piano and he often sang as a part of his father’s sermons when he preached at the A. M. E. Church. Brown discovered the trombone while doing janitorial work at his father’s church and wanted to replicate the sound of cello on a trombone.
Beginning his career with Charlie Echols and Paul Howard, in 1932 he joined Duke Ellington’s band. He was featured with the band every year on compositions such as Blue Cellophane and Golden Cress. Leaving Ellington’s band in 1951, Lawrence joined Johnny Hodge’s band, where he stayed for four years. After this stint he took a five year position as a session player with CBS.
He rejoined Ellington in 1960 and stayed with him until 1970. After leaving Ellington’s band the second time at the age of 63, Brown stopped performing.
Trombonist Lawrence Brown, whose fast technical style inspired trombonists from Tommy Dorsey to Bill Harris, died on September 5, 1988 in Los Angeles, California, at the age of 81.
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Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Martin Pickett was born on August 2, 1969 in Bristol, United Kingdom. His love of music took shape in his early teens, writing songs and playing guitar. He studied classical guitar through to Bristol University, while having piano as a second instrument and exploring compositional approaches.
After graduating Pickett received a Postgraduate Certificate in Education (PGCE) in secondary music education, then moved to Oxford, UK to teach music in a secondary school. It was during this period that his interest in jazz piano dominated his musical activities.
In 1998 Martin left his teaching post to work as a freelance jazz pianist and teacher. Since this time he has worked in a variety of settings and worked with a wide array of Britain’s most talented musicians.
He has recorded his own compact disc, I’ll Be With You Again in 2005 and played on albums by Diane Nalini, Tim Wilson, 3BPM, and Frank Hockney. He was featured as a composer on all of these apart from Frank’s project.
Pianist Martin Pickett has been a teacher in Oxford since 1998 and continues to focus his attention to being a freelance jazz pianist, performing with the group 3BPM, and songwriting collaboration with Tony Isaacs..
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Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Ian Davis was born on August 1, 1953 in South Carolina and started drumming at fifteen as an R&B drummer with The Barons, playing gigs on the South Carolina chittlin’ circuit with Earl Davis, George McCauley, Craig Washington, Phil Griffin, and Cool John Ferguson. He played folk and fusion in the Seventies, alt-pop, improvisational, and big band music in the 80’s, and played with Blue Chair, Mind Sirens, Bicentennial Quarters, Trailer Bride, and Chris Stamey/Kirk Ross in the 90’s. He went on to become the host drummer for six years at the Carrboro Arts Center monthly jazz jam.
Moving to the Bay area of San Francisco, California in 1995 Davis played with the Mills College based large improvising ensemble Micro Collective Orchestra along with Scott Rosenberg, Matt Ingalls, Morgan Guberman, Brian Pearson, Brian Kane, and many others. Following his 1997 return to North Carolina he organized the structured improvisational orchestra Micro-East Collective, similar in design to Micro.
He and composer, performer, producer and engineer Chris Stamey have recorded and produced three compact discs for Micro-East. Ian also manages Umbrella Records. He currently plays in improvisational duos with guitarist Jason Bivins, soprano and tenor saxophonist Mahlon Hoard, Onomata, a pulse-based improvising quartet, Unstable Ensemble, a Bloomington based improvisation ensemble, and The Dave Fox Quartet out of Greensboro, North Carolina.
Davis has been invited to play gigs with Eugene Chadbourne, he toured with Andrew Voigt, Morgan Guberman, and Toshi Makihara as part of the music and dance group Corpus Ludens. Drummer Ian Davis continues to record improvisational performers during house concerts sponsored by the Triangle’s Alliance for Improvised Music.
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Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Gordon “Gordy” Johnson was born July 31, 1952 in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and was quickly immersed in the world of music as his father Clifford was in the bass section of the Minnesota Orchestra for 47 years and his mother Thelma taught piano. His main instrument growing up was the flute, however, he also played bass, keyboards and guitar, and sang rock and roll.
Graduating in 1974 from Eastman School of Music at the University of Rochester in New York, Gordy played flute in the Eastman Wind Ensemble and bass in the Eastman Jazz Ensemble, Studio Orchestra and Arrangers Workshop Orchestra.
Johnson spent a year breaking into the New York City music scene often playing with pianist and college classmate Phil Markowitz. In 1975, Gordy hit the road for a three-year stint with the Maynard Ferguson Orchestra, alongside drummer Peter Erskine. World tours followed with Gene Bertoncini, Roy Buchanan, the Paul Winter Consort and Chuck Mangione. He was also busy with studio recordings.
Moving back to the Twin Cities in 1989 where he became one of the most in-demand bass players in town ever since. He has performed, toured and/or recorded with Joanne Brackeen, Herb Ellis, Rosemary Clooney, Scott Hamilton, Michael Johnson, Jay McShann, Dewey Redman, Jim Rotondi, Diane Schuur, Marlena Shaw, Stacey Kent and Toots Thielemans, among others.
Double bassist and bass guitarist Gordy Johnson, who has recorded five albums as a leader and fourteen as a sideman, continues to play an average of 250 gigs a year, which keeps quite busy.
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