Performance

Monthly Listeners

Current

Followers

Current

Streams

Current

Tracks

Current

Popularity

Current

Top Releases

View All

Showcase

193.3K streams

193,349

Jeepers Creepers

117.1K streams

117,139

Russian Lullaby (Jazz Club Collection)

117.1K streams

117,139

Five Classic Albums Plus (Vic Dickenso...

117.1K streams

117,139

Jeepers Creepers

117.1K streams

117,131

Gentleman of the Trombone

99.5K streams

99,494

The Essential

88K streams

88,013

Further On

73K streams

73,043

Showcase, Vol. 1

69.6K streams

69,583

Bobby Hackett - Featuring Eddie Condon...

35K streams

34,964

Biography

A distinctive trombonist with a sly wit and the ability to sound as if he were playing underwater, Vic Dickenson was an asset to any session on which he appeared. He stated out in the 1920s and '30s playing in the Midwest. Associations with Blanche Calloway (1933-1936), Claude Hopkins (1936-1939), Benny Carter (1939), Count Basie (1940), Carter again (1941), and Frankie Newton (1941-1943) preceded a high-profile gig with Eddie Heywood's popular sextet (1943-1946); Dickenson also played and recorded with Sidney Bechet. From then on he was a freelancing soloist who spent time on the West Coast, Boston, and New York, appearing on many recordings (including some notable dates for Vanguard) and on the legendary Sound of Jazz telecast (1957). In the 1960s, Dickenson co-led the Saints and Sinners, toured with George Wein's Newport All-Stars, and worked regularly with Wild Bill Davison and Eddie Condon. During 1968-1970, he was in a quintet with Bobby Hackett and in the 1970s, he sometimes played with the World's Greatest Jazz Band. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi