Jump to content

Search the Community

Showing results for tags 'siegel'.

  • Search By Tags

    Type tags separated by commas.
  • Search By Author

Content Type


Forums

  • About organissimo...
    • Announcements
    • organissimo - The Band Discussion
    • Forums Discussion
  • Music Discussion
    • Album Of The Week
    • Artists
    • Audio Talk
    • Blindfold Test
    • Classical Discussion
    • Discography
    • Jazz In Print - Periodicals, Books, Newspapers, etc...
    • Jazz Radio & Podcasts
    • Live Shows & Festivals
    • Mosaic and other box sets...
    • Miscellaneous Music
    • Musician's Forum
    • New Releases
    • Offering and Looking For...
    • Recommendations
    • Re-issues
    • The Vinyl Frontier
  • General Discussion
    • Hammond Zone
    • Miscellaneous - Non-Political

Calendars

  • Community Calendar
  • Gigs Calendar

Blogs

  • Bright Moments' Blog
  • Noj's Blog
  • Jim Alfredson's Blog
  • ALOC
  • Tom Storer's Blog
  • JDSG's Blog
  • JDSG's Blog
  • Sun Ras
  • Soemtime's the Cheese Is Not Good
  • Who Dat Music Productions
  • Keeping The Idiom Alive
  • Ringtones
  • Dzwoneknatelefon
  • Uptomods
  • PlayStation Portable ROMs
  • Ringtones For Your Phone
  • Soundcloudtomp3downloader

Find results in...

Find results that contain...


Date Created

  • Start

    End


Last Updated

  • Start

    End


Filter by number of...

Joined

  • Start

    End


Group


AIM


MSN


Website URL


ICQ


Yahoo


Jabber


Skype


Location


Interests

Found 4 results

  1. “The multifaceted Jimmy Rushing (1899-1972) was perhaps one of the more underrated singers of the 20th century. He performed equally well with blues, jazz or popular material. Whitney Balliett, the then jazz critic for The New Yorker, wrote of Rushing that "His supple, rich voice and his elegant accent have the curious effect of making the typical roughhouse blues lyric seem like a song by Noël Coward."... At Jazz Profiles, Steve Siegel explores Rushing's recording career after he left Count Basie. https://jazzprofiles.blogspot.com/2023/08/jimmy-rushing-his-recording-career.html?m=1
  2. Jazz Profiles: Sonny Clark - The Blue Note Years by Steve Siegel https://jazzprofiles.blogspot.com/2022/06/sonny-clark-blue-note-years-by-steve.html?m=0
  3. Ed Reed: From San Quentin to Jazz at Lincoln Center By Steve Siegel “Ed Reed is the Phoenix of jazz. In his 92 years, he seems to have navigated as many rises and falls as the legendary mythological bird. He has, at various times in his life, due to almost 40 years of heroin addiction, endured as much grief and heartbreak (most of it self-directed) as any man should have to endure. He freely admits he has been the cause of a similar amount of the same within his family and the friends that have supported him through it all." https://jazzprofiles.blogspot.com/2021/09/ed-reed-from-san-quentin-to-jazz-at.html?m=0
  4. With previous features on pianist Wade Legge, the Great Day in Harlem Photograph “Mystery Man” - William J. Crump, drummer Frankie Dunlop, vocalist Jimmy Rushing, critic and author Nat Hentoff, and Jazz Party: A Great Night In Manhattan featuring the Miles Davis Sextet and the Duke Ellington Orchestra, the September 9, 1958 fest that Columbia Records put on at the Plaza Hotel for its executives and guests, Steve Siegel has assumed the role of “unofficial” staff writer for JazzProfiles. His latest effort is about the obscure trumpet player Dupree Bolton [1929-1993], who appeared, seemingly from nowhere in California in 1959 and set the West Coast jazz world abuzz with his performance as a sideman. He then disappeared just as quickly and reappeared a few years later, again as a sideman, displaying mind-blowing chops. He was then gone again, never to officially record again for the remainder of his life. https://jazzprofiles.blogspot.com/2021/07/dupree-bolton-uneven-life-by-steve.html?m=1
×
×
  • Create New...