Performance

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Collection 1940-59

123.6M streams

123,610,723

Eddie Heywood

2.1M streams

2,130,177

The Magic Touch Of

1.4M streams

1,375,792

Complete Jazz Series 1944

185.3K streams

185,275

Complete Jazz Series 1950 - 1951

159.3K streams

159,306

Canadian Sunset

96.8K streams

96,794

Eddie Heywood & His Orchestra

94.1K streams

94,143

Complete Jazz Series 1944 - 1946

75.3K streams

75,342

The King of the Piano (Remastered)

62.4K streams

62,418

An Evening With

60.2K streams

60,194

Biography

The Eddie Heywood Sextet was very popular in the mid-'40s, playing melodic and tightly arranged versions of swing standards. Heywood's father, Eddie Heywood, Sr., was a strong jazz pianist of the 1920s who often accompanied Butterbeans and Susie. He taught piano to his son, who played professionally when he was 14. Heywood Jr. performed with bands led by Wayman Carver (1932), Clarence Love (1934-1937), and, after moving to New York, Benny Carter (1939-1940). Heywood led his own group from that period on, backing Billie Holiday on a few occasions starting in 1941. In 1943, Eddie Heywood took several classic solos on a Coleman Hawkins quartet date (most notably "The Man I Love") and put together his first sextet, which also included Doc Cheatham and Vic Dickenson. Their 1944 version of "Begin the Beguine" became a hit, and three years of strong success followed. During 1947-1950, Heywood was stricken with a partial paralysis of his hands and could not play at all. He made a gradual comeback in the 1950s, mostly performing watered-down commercial music in addition to composing the standard "Canadian Sunset." Despite a second attack of paralysis in the late '60s, Eddie Heywood continued performing into the 1980s. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi