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Vol. 2 (2015 - Remaster)

829.8K streams

829,848

Nonet & Octet

688.3K streams

688,331

The Classic Albums: 1953-1960

364.1K streams

364,141

All That Jazz, Vol. 141: The Man at th...

338.4K streams

338,393

Oscar Pettiford Modern Quintet (Remast...

301.5K streams

301,539

Complete Jazz Series 1951 - 1954

284.1K streams

284,114

Lucky Thompson Featuring Oscar Pettifo...

204K streams

203,986

Oscar Pettiford

122.8K streams

122,797

Day After Day

90.2K streams

90,176

Jazz for a Lazy Day

88.3K streams

88,317

Biography

Oscar Pettiford was (along with Charles Mingus) the top bassist of the 1945-1960 period, and the successor to the late Jimmy Blanton. In addition, he was the first major jazz soloist on the cello. A bop pioneer, it would have been very interesting to hear what Pettiford would have done during the avant-garde '60s if he had not died unexpectedly in 1960. After starting on piano, Pettiford switched to bass when he was 14 and played in a family band. He played with Charlie Barnet's band in 1942 as one of two bassists (the other was Chubby Jackson) and then hit the big time in 1943, participating on Coleman Hawkins' famous "The Man I Love" session; he also recorded with Earl Hines and Ben Webster during this period. Pettiford co-led an early bop group with Dizzy Gillespie in 1944, and in 1945 went with Coleman Hawkins to the West Coast, appearing on one song in the film The Crimson Canary with Hawkins and Howard McGhee. Pettiford was part of Duke Ellington's orchestra during much of 1945-1948 (fulfilling his role as the next step beyond Jimmy Blanton), and worked with Woody Herman in 1949. Throughout the 1950s, he mostly worked as a leader (on bass and occasional cello), although he appeared on many records both as a sideman and a leader, including with Thelonious Monk in 1955-1956. After going to Europe in 1958, he settled in Copenhagen where he worked with local musicians, plus Stan Getz, Bud Powell, and Kenny Clarke. Among Pettiford's better-known compositions are "Tricotism," "Laverne Walk," "Bohemia After Dark," and "Swingin' Till the Girls Come Home." ~ Scott Yanow