Performance

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On Prestige

65.4M streams

65,362,065

My Romance

50.7M streams

50,650,130

Boss Tenor

49.5M streams

49,502,058

The Boss Is Back!

8.3M streams

8,334,351

Three Little Words

5.3M streams

5,326,721

Greatest Hits, Vol. 1 - The Sixties

3.7M streams

3,710,623

Boss Tenor (RVG Remasters / Remastered...

3.6M streams

3,614,717

Boss Tenors: Straight Ahead From Chica...

3.1M streams

3,063,010

Young Jug

2.3M streams

2,288,259

Gentle Jug, Volume 3

2.1M streams

2,105,145

Biography

Gene Ammons, who had a huge and immediately recognizable tone on tenor, was a very flexible player who could play bebop with the best (always battling his friend Sonny Stitt to a tie) yet was an influence on the R&B world. Some of his ballad renditions became hits and, despite two unfortunate interruptions in his career, Ammons remained a popular attraction for 25 years. Son of the great boogie-woogie pianist Albert Ammons, Gene Ammons (who was nicknamed "Jug") left Chicago at age 18 to work with King Kolax's band. He originally came to fame as a key soloist with Billy Eckstine's orchestra during 1944-1947, trading off with Dexter Gordon on the famous Eckstine record Blowing the Blues Away. Other than a notable stint with Woody Herman's Third Herd in 1949 and an attempt at co-leading a two tenor group in the early '50s with Sonny Stitt, Ammons worked as a single throughout his career, recording frequently (most notably for Prestige) in settings ranging from quartets and organ combos to all-star jam sessions. Drug problems kept him in prison during much of 1958-1960 and, due to a particularly stiff sentence, 1962-1969. When Ammons returned to the scene in 1969, he opened up his style a bit, including some of the emotional cries of the avant-garde while utilizing funky rhythm sections, but he was still able to battle Sonny Stitt on his own terms. Ironically the last song that he ever recorded (just a short time before he was diagnosed with terminal cancer) was "Goodbye." ~ Scott Yanow