Performance

Monthly Listeners

Current

22.12 %
0 less streams than the last month

Followers

Current

2.32 %
0 less streams than the last month

Streams

Current

0.48 %
0 less streams than the last month

Tracks

Current

Popularity

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Top Releases

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The Very Best Of

2.7M streams

2,726,264

Slam Bam (Hérouville, France, 1971) [...

275.6K streams

275,622

Bowin' Singin' Slam

249.4K streams

249,414

Stewart, Slam / Major Holley: Shut Yo'...

204.9K streams

204,852

Jumpin' At The Deuces

146.5K streams

146,515

Ultimative Jazz Bass

122.3K streams

122,285

Retrospective

93.5K streams

93,511

Jumpin' At The Deuces

76K streams

75,987

Slam Stewart - Volume 2 (MP3 Album)

75.9K streams

75,935

Slamboree (New York City, 1972) [The D...

54.3K streams

54,302

Biography

Slam Stewart was a superior swing-oriented bassist whose ability to bow the bass and hum an octave apart made him famous in the jazz world. He had thought of the idea while studying at Boston Conservatory when he heard Ray Perry singing along with his violin. In 1936, Stewart was with Peanuts Holland's group and the following year he started playing regularly with guitarist/singer/comedian Slim Gaillard in a group logically dubbed "Slim and Slam." "Flat Foot Floogie" became a huge hit and kept the group working through the early '40s. After leaving Gaillard, Stewart was in great demand. He played with Art Tatum's trio, was featured on records with the Benny Goodman Sextet, Red Norvo (a famous session with Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie), and Lester Young (a classic rendition of "Sometimes I'm Happy"), and led his own group which for a period featured the up-and-coming pianist Erroll Garner. Stewart performed a couple of stunning duets with tenor saxophonist Don Byas at a 1945 Town Hall concert and later worked with Billy Taylor, Roy Eldridge, Bucky Pizzarelli, the Newport All-Stars, and a countless number of other jazz greats. He even recorded two albums with bassist Major Holley (who also bowed and hummed but in unison). Up until the end, Slam Stewart occupied his own unique niche in jazz. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi