
TONY HIGHTOWER w/ THE HENRY CONERWAY TRIO
Doors open at 5pm for dinner/Seating begins at 6:15p for the first show & 9:00p for the second show)
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TONY HIGHTOWER
In conjunction with for a treat with a concert featuring vocalist, Tony Hightower in the Hammonds House Special Place in the back Garden, admission also grants access to Joe Barry Carroll’s “My View From Seven Feet” exhibition.
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Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Charles Bullock, known in the industry as Chick, was born on September 16, 1898 in Montana to immigrants from England.. He belonged to a select group of mostly freelance vocalists who sang the vocal refrains on hundreds of New York sessions, which included Smith Ballew, Scrappy Lambert, Irving Kaufman, Arthur Fields, and Dick Robertson. Some of these vocalists were also musicians leading bands, but their singing was more often featured.
Though he began his career in vaudeville and sang in movie palaces, he rarely performed live because his face was disfigured due to an eye disease. His career as a studio musician took off in the late 1920s, and in the 1930s he sang with musicians such as Duke Ellington, Luis Russell, Cab Calloway, Bunny Berigan, Bill Coleman, Jack Teagarden, Tommy Dorsey, Jimmy Dorsey, Joe Venuti, and Eddie Lang.
Bullock’s recordings proved so popular that he used pseudonyms for some recordings, including the name Sleepy Hall. However, in the 1940s the World War II recording ban essentially ended Bullock’s career and he quit the music business in 1942. He moved to California in 1946 and took up real estate, opening his own company.
Chick was mostly associated with the ARC group of labels including Melotone, Perfect, Banner, Oriole, and Romeo. Many of his records were issued under the name Chick Bullock and his Levee Loungers.
Jazz and dance band vocalist Chick Bullock, who recorded some 500 tunes over the course of his career, transitioned on September 15, 1981, in California at the age of 82.
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The Jazz Voyager
Last week the Jazz Voyager was in Nashville checking out Rudy’s Jazz Room and had a great experience. This week he’s on his way and looking forward to another wonderful experience in Kansas City, Missouri at The Black Dolphin located at 1813 Grand Boulevard. Planning to catch an early set with the Tim Whitmer Quartet, I’ll be hanging around for the late hit by the Reyes Brothers Trio, both on Friday night..
Depending on which set you catch you can dine in or eat beforehand and then enjoy a full bar of cocktails, mocktails, wine and beer. The first set begins at 6:30~9:30pm followed by the second set 10:00pm ~ 1:00am. Rated $$, come and enjoy an evening of good music. For additional information, the number is 816-215-2954.
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Daily Dose Of Jazz…
George Colar, better known as Kid Sheik or Kid Sheik Cola, was born on September 15, 1908 in New Orleans, Louisiana. In his youth he started playing blues piano around 1920, but took up trumpet after being inspired by and taking lessons from Wooden Joe Nicholas and Chris Kelly for whom he sat in from time to time. During this period he briefly had a band of his own.
In the Thirties he played second trumpet with Buddy Petit, marched with Kid René’s band and from 1952 was a member of the Eureka Brass Band. He worked with George Lewis in the mid-1940s. His Gin Mill Blues is considered a nice fish fries boogie.
Over the years, Kid Sheik performed with many jazz notables, including Harold Dejan’s Olympia Brass Band and Louis Armstrong. By the 1960s he had his own band. He was still blowing strong in New Orleans in 1970.
Kid Sheik was the subject of the official New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival poster in 1990. He is featured in a 35mm twelve-minute black and white film directed by Frank Decola titled The Cradle Is Rocking, a copy of which is in the Folkstreams Collection in the Southern Folklife Collection of the Wilson Library at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill.
He is most associated with Dixieland jazz and was a long-term performer with the Preservation Hall Jazz Band. In his later years, he married pianist Sadie Goodson. Trumpeter Kid Sheik Cola, who got his nickname from his chic style of dress, transitioned on November 7, 1996.
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