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Small Day Tomorrow

739.7K streams

739,687

The Devil's Best Tunes: the Beatnik Sc...

433.6K streams

433,564

Devil May Care

427K streams

426,966

More Talents!

277.3K streams

277,290

Man of Many Talents

145.4K streams

145,387

Sunday At Iridium

89K streams

88,994

Right On My Way Home

85.4K streams

85,447

Too Much Coffee Man

37K streams

37,023

Eulalia

22K streams

21,954

Bob Dorough Trio & Special Guests Live...

17.6K streams

17,567

Biography

Although underexposed most of his life, Bob Dorough was an adventurous, risk-taking master of vocalese (the process of writing and singing lyrics to instrumental jazz solos) and scat singing who directly or indirectly influenced Mark Murphy, Michael Franks, Mose Allison, and Kurt Elling. The Arkansas native started out on piano in the 1940s, then took up singing in the early '50s (when he played for boxer Sugar Ray Robinson, an entertainer at the time). From 1954-1955, Dorough lived in Paris, where he recorded with singer Blossom Dearie. The improviser launched his own recording career when he signed with Bethlehem in 1955 and recorded the excellent Devil May Care, which introduced the defiant title song and lyrics to Charlie Parker's "Yardbird Suite." But sadly, he recorded only sporadically after that. In 1962, Dorough co-wrote "Comin' Home Baby" (a hit for Mel Tormé) with Ben Tucker, and in 1966 he recorded his second album, Just About Everything, for Focus. In the early '70s, he began writing and directing Schoolhouse Rock!, the series of educational children's TV programs. Though instructional material became his bread and butter, Dorough recorded obscure jazz dates for 52 Rue East, Orange Blue, Pinnacle, Bloomdido, Laissez-Faire, and other tiny labels in the 1970s and 1980s. In 1997, a 73-year-old Dorough received some long-overdue attention from a major label when the Capitol-distributed Blue Note released Right on My Way Home. Too Much Coffee Man followed in the spring of 2000. His Sunday brunch residency at New York's Iridium club culminated in 2004's live offering Sunday at Iridium and, at a sprightly 82 years of age, Dorough traveled to England for a series of live dates. The tour culminated in a recording session that spawned the charming Small Day Tomorrow album in 2006. Dorough was still performing and recording into his nineties, with the Enja label releasing the Bob Dorough Trio album But for Now in 2015. He died at his home in Mount Bethel, Pennsylvania in April 2018 at the age of 94. ~ Alex Henderson, Rovi