Thursday, 16 June 2016
Floyd Dakil born 16 June 1945
Floyd Arthur Dakil (June 16, 1945 – April 24, 2010) was a
Texas musician best known for his often compiled song "Dance Franny
Dance". He later went on to play guitar in Louis Prima's band.
Dakil was born in
Childress County, Texas. He started out as an adolescent wild man, forming his Floyd Dakil Combo with five other high school
sophomores in 1963. In 1964, the combo recorded their first and
best-known single for the Jetstar label, the regional hit “Dance,
Franny, Dance,” live in front of a crowd at the Pit Club, where they were the house band. They were clean-cut teens in sharp suits who played savage, crazy and loose dance music that still stands out today as one of the hottest sounds to come out of the happening Dallas-Fort Worth ‘60s garage scene.
"Dance Franny Dance", reached the sixtieth slot on
a "top sixty"
chart compiled by a San Francisco radio station. It was re-issued nationally on the Guyden label. Its inclusion in compilations on Texas rock has become essential. Floyd Dakil went on to record three 45s on the Earth label as the Floyd Dakil Four.
chart compiled by a San Francisco radio station. It was re-issued nationally on the Guyden label. Its inclusion in compilations on Texas rock has become essential. Floyd Dakil went on to record three 45s on the Earth label as the Floyd Dakil Four.
After the Earth 45s, Floyd kept the band together while earning a B.A. from Texas Tech. In 1968 he had a solo 45 “Merry Christmas Baby” / “One Day” on Pompeii. Sometime after that Floyd became
the guitarist for one of his idols, Louis Prima, and remained for several years until Prima’s ill health curtailed his touring. Dakil stayed in Las Vegas, where he played the lounges and opened for the likes of Bill Cosby and Phyllis Diller. During July 1972 he married Jolene Nunn.
In 1975 he released a LP with his own group, Live! in which
he runs
through 42 songs in as many minutes. It’s definitely an odd mix, if you can imagine “Everyday People” segueing to a chorus of
“Yummy Yummy Yummy” then straight into “Whiskey River”! Also about 1975 Floyd turned down a two LP contract with CBS, feeling that the contract was unfair in charging promotional costs back to the artist.
through 42 songs in as many minutes. It’s definitely an odd mix, if you can imagine “Everyday People” segueing to a chorus of
“Yummy Yummy Yummy” then straight into “Whiskey River”! Also about 1975 Floyd turned down a two LP contract with CBS, feeling that the contract was unfair in charging promotional costs back to the artist.
In the late ’80s he started a band with Larry Randall, and this group’s songs were featured in a 1991movie, Love Hurts with a brief cameo by the group.He was working in real estate, and teaching guitar lessons at the Grapevine Antique Mall in Grapevine, Texas, but occasionally appeared with reunited members of his original band under thename The Pitmen. . In 2009 Floyd was one of the featured acts at the Ponderosa Stomp at SXSW in Austin.
Wednesday, 15 June 2016
David Rose born 15 June 1910
David Rose (June 15, 1910 – August 23, 1990) was a
British-born American songwriter, composer, arranger, and orchestra leader and
was one of the most popular and distinctive mainstream instrumental pop
composers of the '40s,'50s and '60s, He was responsible for two numbers that
embody the two moral poles of exotica: "Holiday for Strings" and
"The Stripper."
Recipient of four Emmy awards, David Rose was born in
London to Jewish parents and raised in Chicago and he studied at the Chicago
College of Music. After starting as an arranger for NBC Radio in Chicago, he
moved to Hollywood in 1928 and led the orchestra for the Mutual Broadcasting
network. Mutual is supposed to have forced Rose to cut his orchestra back to
just a string section to save costs, leading him to focus on writing for
strings.
He was married on October 8, 1938, to the actress Martha
Raye. They were divorced on May 19, 1941. He was married for a second time, on
July 28, 1941, to the actress and singer Judy Garland. They had no children,
though Garland reportedly underwent at least one abortion during the marriage,
at the insistence of her mother, her husband, and the studio that employed her,
MGM. Garland and Rose divorced in 1944. He had two daughters with his third
wife, Betty Bartholomew. His granddaughter is singer-songwriter Samantha James.
The climax of this period was his 1944 hit, "Holiday
for Strings," or as we all know and love it, "that shopping
song." "Holiday for Strings" was also later used as the theme
song for the Garry Moore and Red Skelton shows.
Rose joined MGM
after the war and worked for the studio in television, film, and recordings. He
orchestrated much of the first few seasons of "Bonanza." He backed a
number of MGM's vocalists, including Connie Francis on her hit, "My Happiness,"
and had several instrumental hits of his own. He cashed in on the calypso craze
of 1956-57 with "Calypso Melody," a Top 40 hit. He also released an
album of classical pieces done with upbeat rhythm sections, titled
"Concert with a Beat." Rose
was a live steam hobbyist, with his own backyard railroad.
"The Stripper" was composed by Rose and recorded in 1958. It was originally used as the B-side to his single, "Ebb Tide". The choice of the record's B-side was not by Rose, but by an MGM office boy. MGM indicated they wanted to put the record on the market quickly. A B-side was needed and with Rose away, the office boy went through some of Rose's tapes searching for one. "The Stripper" featured especially prominent trombone lines, giving the tune its lascivious signature, and evokes the feel of music used to accompany burlesque striptease artists. The piece features in the films Slap Shot, The Full Monty and Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit as well as TV series Little Britain and Scrubs. It was also famously used in a parody by British comedy duo Morecambe and Wise, where they danced to the tune while making breakfast.
"The Stripper" was composed by Rose and recorded in 1958. It was originally used as the B-side to his single, "Ebb Tide". The choice of the record's B-side was not by Rose, but by an MGM office boy. MGM indicated they wanted to put the record on the market quickly. A B-side was needed and with Rose away, the office boy went through some of Rose's tapes searching for one. "The Stripper" featured especially prominent trombone lines, giving the tune its lascivious signature, and evokes the feel of music used to accompany burlesque striptease artists. The piece features in the films Slap Shot, The Full Monty and Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit as well as TV series Little Britain and Scrubs. It was also famously used in a parody by British comedy duo Morecambe and Wise, where they danced to the tune while making breakfast.
He continued to work in television, serving as musical
director for the series "Little House on the Prairie" in the late
1970s and early 1980s. He died in Burbank, California of a heart attack at the
age of 80 and was buried in Mount Sinai Memorial Park Cemetery in Hollywood
Hills, California. (info edited from spageagepop.com & Wikipedia)
Sunday, 12 June 2016
Charlie Feathers born 12 June 1932
Charlie Feathers (June 12, 1932 – August 29, 1998) was an
influential American rockabilly and country music performer.
Charles Arthur Feathers was born in Holly Springs,
Mississippi, and recorded a string of popular singles like "Peepin'
Eyes," "Defrost Your Heart," "Tongue-Tied Jill," and
"Bottle to the Baby" on Sun Records, Meteor and King Records in the
1950s.
Feathers was known for being a master of shifting
emotional and sonic dynamics in his songs. His theatrical, hiccup-styled,
energetic, rockabilly vocal style inspired a later generation of rock
vocalists, including Lux Interior of The Cramps.
He studied and recorded several songs with Junior
Kimbrough, whom he called "the beginning and end of all music". His
childhood influences were reflected in his later music of the 1970s and 1980s,
which had an easy-paced, sometimes sinister, country-blues tempo, as opposed to
the frenetic fast-paced style favoured by some of his rockabilly colleagues of
the 1950s.
He started out as a session musician at Sun Studios,
playing any side instrument he could in the hopes of someday making his own
music there. He eventually played on a small label started by Sam Phillips
called Flip records which got him enough attention to record a couple singles
for Sun Records and Holiday Inn Records. By all accounts the singer was not
held in much regard by Phillips, but Feathers often made the audacious claim
that he had arranged "That's All Right" and "Blue Moon of
Kentucky" for Elvis Presley and recorded "Good Rockin' Tonight"
months before Presley. He also claimed that his "We're Getting Closer (To
Being Apart)" had been intended to be Elvis' sixth single for Sun. He did,
however, get his name on one of Elvis' Sun records, "I Forgot To Remember
To Forget" when the writer Stan Kesler asked him to record a demo of the
song.
He then moved on to Meteor Records and then King Records
where he recorded his best-known work. When his King contract ran out he still
continued to perform, although Feathers—perhaps typically—thought there was a
conspiracy to keep his music from gaining the popularity it deserved.
When the rockabilly revival started up in Europe in the
early '70s, Feathers became the first living artist up for deification by
collectors. His old 45s suddenly became worth hundreds of dollars, and every
interviewer wanted to know why he never really made it big and what his true
involvement with Sun consisted of. Feathers embroidered the story with a skewed
view of rock & roll history with each retelling, to be sure, but once he
picked up his guitar and sang to reinforce his point, the truth came out in his
music. Never mind why he didn't make it back in the '50s; he could still
deliver the goods now.
In the mid-1980s, he performed at times at new music
nightclubs like the Antenna Club in Memphis, Tennessee, sharing the bill with
rock-and-roll bands like Tav Falco's Panther Burns, who, as devoted fans of
Feathers, had introduced him to their label's president. During this time,
rockabilly icon Colonel Robert Morris played drums for Charlie. Charlie said
"Robert tore up a brand new set of drums, but the crowd was dancing on the
tables".
He released his New Jungle Fever album in 1987 and Honkey
Tonk Man in 1988, featuring the lead guitar work of his son, Bubba Feathers.
These later albums of original songs penned by Feathers were released on the
French label New Rose Records, whose other 1980s releases included albums by
cult music heroes like Johnny Thunders, Alex Chilton, Roky Erickson, The
Cramps, The Gun Club, and others.
With health problems plaguing him from his diabetes and a
surgically removed lung, Feathers continued on his own irascible course,
recording his first album for a major label in 1991 (Elektra's American Masters
series) and continuing to perform and record for his wide European fan base.
Truly an American music original, Feathers died August 29, 1998, of
complications following a stroke; he was 66. (Info edited from Wikipedia & All Music)
Saturday, 11 June 2016
Bonnie Lee born 11 June 1931
Bonnie Lee (June 11, 1931 – September 7, 2006) was an
American Chicago blues singer, known as "The Sweetheart of the Blues.“ She
was a long-time fixture of Chicago's contemporary blues scene as well as one of
the last surviving links to its post-war heyday. Many great blues artists have
come from the Texas area but, arguably, none so adorable as Ms. Bonnie Lee.
With a career that spanned more than fifty years, Lee stirred the mixture of
jazz sophistication, deep rooted blues feeling and southern charm to come with
a style that's was all her own.
Born Jessie Lee Frealls on June 11, 1931, in Bunkie, LA,
Lee grew up in Beaumont, TX, where she studied piano and sang in her church's
choir. Gospel singer Lillian Ginn was sufficiently impressed to extend an
invitation to join her on tour, but Lee's mother refused to grant her
permission. As a teen Lee nevertheless toured the South as a member of the
Famous Georgia Minstrels, befriending blues legends Clarence
"Gatemouth" Brown and Big Mama Thornton along the way.
She relocated to Chicago in 1958, hitching a ride with a
delivery van driver and settling at the West Side apartment of an aunt. After
toiling in anonymity as a singer and dancer, in 1960 Lee signed to J. Mayo
Williams' Ebony label to cut her debut single, "Sad and Evil Woman,"
credited at Williams' insistence to Bonnie "Bombshell" Lane, a
moniker she reportedly despised. The single fared poorly, and Lee continued
touring the Chicago jazz and blues club circuit, developing a potent voice as
earthy as it was electrifying.
In the late '70s, she also cut a handful of singles for
Slim's own Airway label. In 1982, performing with Zora Young and Big Time Sarah
as Blues with the Girls, she toured Europe, and they recorded an album in Paris.
In 1992 Lee performed on Magic Slim's album 44 Blues,
with John Primer. Lee also enjoyed a decade-long collaboration with
renowned bassist Willie Kent, during which time she recorded the 1995 Delmark
LP Sweetheart of the Blues as well as the 1998 Wolf Records set I'm Good. In
addition, she contributed to myriad compilations, most notably Women of Blue
Chicago and Chicago's Finest Blues Ladies.
Health problems nevertheless plagued
Lee throughout the latter half of her life, and she died in Chicago, Illinois,
on September 7, 2006, at the age of 75. (Info edited from AMG)
Thursday, 9 June 2016
Johnny Ace born 9 June 1929
John Marshall Alexander, Jr. (June 9, 1929 – December 25,
1954), known by the stage name Johnny Ace, was an American rhythm and blues
singer. He scored a string of hit singles in the mid-1950s before dying of an
accidental self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Alexander was born in Memphis, Tennessee, the son of a
preacher, and grew up near LeMoyne-Owen College. After serving in the navy
during the Korean War, Alexander joined Adolph Duncan's Band as a pianist. He
then joined the B. B. King band. Soon King departed for Los Angeles and
vocalist Bobby Bland joined the army. Alexander took over vocal duties and
renamed the band The Beale Streeters, also taking over King's WDIA radio show.
Becoming "Johnny Ace", he signed to Duke
Records (originally a Memphis label associated with WDIA) in 1952. Urbane
'heart-ballad' "My Song," his first recording, topped the R&B
charts for nine weeks in September. ("My Song" was covered in 1968 by
Aretha Franklin, on the flipside of "See Saw".)
Ace began heavy touring, often with Willie Mae "Big
Mama" Thornton. In the next two years, he had eight hits in a row,
including "Cross My Heart," "Please Forgive Me," "The
Clock," "Yes, Baby," "Saving My Love for You," and
"Never Let Me Go." In December, 1954 he was named the Most Programmed
Artist of 1954 after a national DJ poll organized by U.S. trade weekly Cash Box.
Ace's recordings sold very well for those times. Early in
1955, Duke Records announced that the three 1954 Johnny Ace recordings, along
with Thornton's "Hound Dog", had sold more than 1,750,000 records.
After touring for a year, Ace had been performing at the
City Auditorium in Houston, Texas on Christmas Day 1954. During a break between
sets, he was playing with a .22 caliber revolver. Members of his band said he
did this often, sometimes shooting at roadside signs from their car.
It was widely reported that Ace killed himself playing
Russian roulette. Big Mama Thornton's bass player Curtis Tillman, however, who
witnessed the event, said, "I will tell you exactly what happened! Johnny
Ace had been drinking and he had this little pistol he was waving around the
table and someone said ‘Be careful with that thing…’ and he said ‘It’s okay!
Gun’s not loaded… see?’ and pointed it at himself with a smile on his face and
‘Bang!’ — sad, sad thing. Big Mama ran out of the dressing room yelling ‘Johnny
Ace just killed himself!"
Thornton said in a written statement (included in the
book The Late Great Johnny Ace) that Ace had been playing with the gun, but not
playing Russian roulette. According to Thornton, Ace pointed the gun at his
girlfriend and another woman who were sitting nearby, but did not fire. He then
pointed the gun toward himself, bragging
g that he knew which chamber was loaded.
The gun went off, shooting him in the side of the head. According to Nick Tosches, Ace actually shot
himself with a .32 pistol, not a .22, and it happened little more than an hour
after he had bought a brand new 1955 Oldsmobile.
Ace's funeral was on January 9, 1955, at Memphis'
Clayborn Temple AME church. It was attended by an estimated 5,000 people. "Pledging
My Love" became a posthumous R&B No. 1 hit for ten weeks beginning
February 12, 1955. As Billboard bluntly put it, Ace's death "created one
of the biggest demands for a record that has occurred since the death of Hank
Williams just over two years ago." His single sides were compiled and released as
The Johnny Ace Memorial Album.
One of the brightest stars of the R & B world was
lost much too soon and certainly because of a moment of foolish youthful
indiscretion. Johnny Ace had a definite shot at becoming the first great cross
over artist of the rock 'n roll years had he lived. His ballad singing style
seemed to transcend the social barriers that had existed up to that time, and
his in person performances made him a popular and influential star of the time.
He was a once in a lifetime performer, and he left us much too soon. (Info mainly
Wikipedia)
Wednesday, 8 June 2016
Harry Torrani born 8 June 1902
Harry Hopkinson (8 June 1902--4 March 1979) has been
credited as one of the world's greatest yodellers. He was billed as the "Yodelling
Cowboy from Chesterfield."
Born Harry Hopkinson at the turn of the century at North
Wingfield, Derbyshire, England, in one of the long-since demolished Little Morton
Cottages, he went from butcher’s errand boy to become a music-hall superstar
who was idolised for his yodelling talents, and during a show business career
which spanned half a century made over 25 single records, which today are
valuable collectors’ items.
It is said that he was blessed with a voice `sweeter than
any nightingales’; a voice recognised for its purity by choirmaster Herbert
Butterworth who encouraged Harry to become a boy soprano with the North
Wingfield Church Choir. Harry’s Sunday evening solos had the building packed to
the seams. After a spell working in the local colliery, he entered show
business in a troupe of travelling entertainers.
Harry moved to the newly opened Williamthorpe Colliery.
He loved the ponies but hated the pit work, and after suffering an accident
which left him partially buried for some hours, decided that being a miner was
not for him - and set his heart on a singing career.
When harry was still a teenager, he won a local talent
contest where his unique voice was recognised by an entertainment agent who
signed him up to tour the country with a music-hall troupe. He changed his name
and his image; Harry Hopkinson ex-miner and former butcher’s errand boy became
Austin Layton, Music Hall Star.
Dressed in his top hat and tails and looking the picture
of elegance with his white gloves and silver-topped cane, the image-makers of
the day made the young man with the boyish good looks into the epitome of the
1920’s `Toff’. By the time he was 25 Harry had become the complete showman –
and was soon to become an international celebrity following a further change of
management and style. For the Music Halls he had been billed as `The Singing
Puzzle’ and opened his stage act mysteriously concealed behind a curtain, or
sometimes a newspaper, wearing a long wig and a cloak which the audience were
allowed brief glimpses of during the performance. The unamplified voice would
ring around the theatre, convincing the audience by it’s amazing high-pitched
clarity that its owner was female – until the song ended and Harry revealed
himself, throwing off the cloak and tossing the wig across the stage to
rapturous applause.
The yodelling part of Hopkinson's act was expanded, and
he adopted the more commercial and continental sounding name Harry Torrani.
Success followed success for `Torrani’. Harry toured the
world during the 1930’s, appearing at theatres as far apart as the U.S.A.,
Africa, Australia and New Zealand. In an era that witnessed a revolution in the
medium of entertainment with the advent of the wireless and the new-fangled gramophone
records, Harry Torrani became a yodelling legend.
Hopkinson recorded his first yodelling song on 27 August
1931 for the Regal Zonophone label, Honeymoon Yodel coupled with Happy and
Free. His recording career continued until 1942. Some of his songs were Yodel
All Day, Yodellers Dream Girl, Honeymoon Yodel, The Australian Yodel, Mammy's
Yodel! and Mississippi Yodel!.
As well being an accomplished performer, he also wrote
most of his own material. He appeared in Variety Theatres worldwide and also
made wireless broadcasts.
Hopkinson retired from show business during the late
1940s. In his retirement he worked as a watch repairer, after suffering a
stroke he entered a Nursing Home where he remained until his death on 4th
March, 1979 at the age of 77.
Slim Whitman, when asked who in his opinion was the
world’s greatest yodeller, answered without hesitation, “Harry Torrani.” (Info mainly edited from
oldcountrystyle.webs.com)
Thanks to "gruntlesnoot" @You tube for making this clever video.
Monday, 6 June 2016
Jimmie Lunceford born 6 June 1902
James Melvin "Jimmie" Lunceford (June 6, 1902 –
July 12, 1947) was an American jazz alto saxophonist and bandleader of the
swing era.
Lunceford was born in Fulton, Missouri, but attended school
in Denver and earned a Bachelor of Arts degree at Fisk University. In 1927,
while teaching high school in Memphis, Tennessee, he organized a student band,
the Chickasaw Syncopators, whose name was changed to the Jimmie Lunceford
Orchestra when it began touring. The orchestra made its first recording in
1930. After a period of touring, the band accepted a booking at the prestigious
Harlem nightclub, The Cotton Club in 1933.
The Cotton Club had already featured Duke Ellington and Cab Calloway, who won their first widespread fame from their inventive shows for the Cotton Club's all-white patrons. Lunceford's orchestra, with their tight musicianship and often outrageous humour in their music and lyrics made an ideal band for the club, and Lunceford's reputation began to steadily grow.
The orchestra waxed a few notable songs for Victor, and then
started recording regularly for Decca. Their tight ensembles and colourful
shows made them a major attraction throughout the remainder of the swing era.
Among their many hits were "Rhythm Is Our Business," "Four or
Five Times," "Swanee River," "Charmaine," "My
Blue Heaven," "Organ Grinder's Swing," "Ain't She
Sweet," "For Dancers Only," "'Tain't What You Do, It's the
Way That Cha Do It," "Uptown Blues," and "Lunceford Special."
The stars of the band included arranger Sy Oliver (on trumpet and vocals),
Willie Smith, Trummy Young (who had a hit with "Margie"), and tenor
saxophonist Joe Thomas.
Lunceford's stage shows often included costumes, skits, and obvious jabs at mainstream white jazz bands, such as Paul Whiteman's and Guy Lombardo's. Despite the band's comic veneer, Lunceford always maintained professionalism in the music befitting a former teacher; this professionalism paid off and during the apex of swing in the 1930s, the Orchestra was considered the equal of Duke Ellington's, Earl Hines' or Count Basie's.
As well as recording for the Decca label the band later
signed with the Columbia subsidiary Vocalion in 1938. They toured Europe
extensively in 1937, but had to cancel a second tour in 1939 because of the
outbreak of World War II. In 1939, it was a major blow when Tommy Dorsey lured
Sy Oliver away (although trumpeters Gerald Wilson and Snooky Young were
important new additions). Unfortunately, Lunceford underpaid most of his
sidemen, not thinking to reward them for their loyalty in the lean years. Columbia
dropped Lunceford in 1940 because of flagging sales so he returned to the Decca
label. The orchestra appeared in the 1941 movie Blues in the Night.
In 1942 Willie Smith was one of several key players who left
for better-paying jobs elsewhere, and the orchestra gradually declined. Jimmie
Lunceford was still a popular bandleader in 1947 when he suddenly collapsed and
died from cardiac arrest.
Rumours have
persisted that he was poisoned by a racist restaurant owner who was very reluctant about feeding his band. After Lunceford's death, pianist/arranger Ed Wilcox and Joe Thomas tried to keep the orchestra together, but in 1949 the band permanently broke up.
Rumours have
persisted that he was poisoned by a racist restaurant owner who was very reluctant about feeding his band. After Lunceford's death, pianist/arranger Ed Wilcox and Joe Thomas tried to keep the orchestra together, but in 1949 the band permanently broke up.
(info edited from
Wikipedia & AMG)
Sunday, 5 June 2016
Kurt Edelhagen born 5 June 1920
Kurt Edelhagen (5 June 1920 – 8 February 1982) was a
major European big band leader throughout the 1950s.
Edelhagen was born on June 5, 1920 in Herne, North
Rhine-Westphalia, Germany as Kurt Ludwig Edelhagen. He was trained as a clarinetist
and pianist in Essen, Germany, discovered Jazz during the Second World War, and
after the war, along with his long-time associate, drummer Bobby Schmidt,
formed a big band that originally played in the clubs of the occupying Allied
Armed Forces and subsequently performed before German audiences.
Edelhagen patterned his music after the big bands of Duke
Ellington and Dizzy Gillespie and, the man who was to become his idol, Stan
Kenton. "Stan Kenton," said Joachim Ernst Berendt [the leading German
authority on Jazz], "at that time was the last word in big band jazz and
Kurt Edelhagen appeared to us from the beginning as the German response to the
American challenge posed by Kenton."
Edelhagen was a natural bandleader and his band did radio
recordings for the American Forces Network (AFN) in Frankfurt/Main in 1948 He also headed ensembles for the radio
station in Frankfurt, in Nuremberg (1949-1952) and most notably the orchestra
of Sudwestfunk (1952-1957).
It seems that Edelhagen’s big break came in March 1954
when he took his band on the weekly television series "Jazz Time
Baden-Baden" which was produced and hosted by Joachim-Ernst Berendt. His
appearance of the series made the band known far beyond the southwest of
Germany. Edelhagen performed along with numerous stars of the international
jazz scene including Lionel Hampton, Mary Lou Williams and Chet Baker, among
many others. Looking for a singer for his big band Edelhagen discovered
Caterina Valente who joined his orchestra in 1953. Together they recorded her
first album that same year.
In 1957 Popular singer Tony Sandler recorded
several songs, such as "Ik weet wat je vraagt", with his orchestra
for the Polydor label. Below is one of my favourites from the band recorded in 1956.
Kurt with Elvis & Bill Haley, Frankfurt 1958 |
In 1957 he joined Westdeustcher Rundfunk in Cologne which
in time included such players as trumpeters Dusko Goykovich and Jimmy Deuchar,
altoist Derek Humble, and trombonist Jiggs Whigham. He headed that band until
it broke up in 1973 and remained semi-active up until near his death. Kurt
Edelhagen recorded fairly often in Germany during 1949-1972 although few of his
records (other than one put out by Golden Era) have been made available in the
U.S. His Radio Orchestra played at the opening ceremony of the 1972 Munich
Olympics.
Edelhagen died February 8, 1982 (age 61) in Cologne,
Germany.
(Info edited from Wikipedia, Jazz Profiles & AMG)