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Essential Jazz Flute Collection

327.6K streams

327,583

Jazz Heat Bongo Beat

118.6K streams

118,629

Jazz Loves Paris

87.2K streams

87,224

Jazz Loves Paris

87.2K streams

87,224

Quartet & Quintet Sessions: 1956 - 195...

84.2K streams

84,153

Johnny Otis Presents Tanganyika

77.3K streams

77,346

The LA Jazzman

56.7K streams

56,735

Buddy Collette: The Complete 1961 Mila...

38K streams

38,010

Calm, Cool & Collette: Buddy Collette ...

36.3K streams

36,279

Chico Hamilton Quintet and Buddy Colle...

3K streams

30,041

Biography

An important force in the Los Angeles jazz community, Buddy Collette was an early pioneer at playing jazz on the flute. Collette started on piano as a child and then gradually learned all of the woodwinds. He played with Les Hite in 1942; led a dance band while in the Navy during World War II; and then freelanced in the L.A. area with such bands as the Stars of Swing (1946), Edgar Hayes, Louis Jordan, Benny Carter, and Gerald Wilson (1949 and 1950). An early teacher of Charles Mingus, Collette became the first Black musician to get a permanent spot in a West Coast studio band (from 1951 to 1955). He gained his greatest recognition as an important member of the Chico Hamilton Quintet (1955 and 1956), and he recorded several albums as a leader in the mid- to late '50s for Contemporary. Otherwise, he mostly stuck to the L.A. area, freelancing, working in the studios, playing in clubs, teaching, and inspiring younger musicians. Although a fine tenor player and a good clarinetist, Collette's most distinctive voice is on flute; he recorded an album with one of his former students, the great James Newton (1989). In addition, Collette participated in a reunion of the Chico Hamilton Quintet, and recorded a two-disc "talking record" for the Issues label in 1994, in which he discussed some of what he had seen and experienced through the years. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi