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Jammin' In Swingville

432.6K streams

432,586

Annie Laurie

252.5K streams

252,510

Classics: 1944-1949

170.5K streams

170,474

1949-1951

166.8K streams

166,762

Classics: 1951-1954

151.1K streams

151,138

Some Groovy Fours (France, 1968-1974) ...

95.5K streams

95,485

Jumpin' The Blues (1970)

52.3K streams

52,339

Food for Thought (Bordeaux-Barcelone 1...

28.2K streams

28,182

Swingville Volume 4: Callin' the Blues

24.5K streams

24,453

Blues Groove

17.1K streams

17,075

Biography

Tiny Grimes was one of the earliest jazz electric guitarists to be influenced by Charlie Christian, and he developed his own swinging style. Early on, he was a drummer and worked as a pianist in Washington. In 1938, he started playing electric guitar, and two years later he was playing in a popular jive group, the Cats and the Fiddle. During 1943-1944, Grimes was part of a classic Art Tatum Trio which also included Slam Stewart. In September 1944, he led his first record date, using Charlie Parker; highlights include the instrumental "Red Cross" and Grimes' vocal on "Romance Without Finance (Is a Nuisance)." He also recorded for Blue Note in 1946, and then put together an R&B-oriented group, "the Rockin' Highlanders," that featured the tenor of Red Prysock during 1948-1952. Although maintaining a fairly low profile, Tiny Grimes was active up until his death, playing in an unchanged swing/bop transitional style and recording as a leader for such labels as Prestige/Swingville, Black & Blue, Muse, and Sonet. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi