Artist: Gene Ammons: mp3 download Genre(s): Jazz Gene Ammons's discography: Blowing the Blues Away 1944-1947 Year: 2002 Tracks: 19 Young Jug Year: 1994 Tracks: 20 The Gene Ammons Story: The 78 Era Year: 1994 Tracks: 27 Big Sound Year: 1991 Tracks: 4 Groove Blues Year: 1958 Tracks: 4 Gene Ammons, wHO had a huge and at once recognizable musical note on tenor voice, was a selfsame flexible player reality Health Organization could run bebop with the best (always battling his admirer Sonny Stitt to a tie-up) in time was an influence on the R&B military personnel. Some of his lay renditions became hits and, despite iI unfortunate interruptions in his career, Ammons remained a pop attractive force for 25 age. Boy of the capital boogie piano player Albert Ammons, Gene Ammons (wHO was nicknamed "Jugful") left Chicago at old age 18 to work with King Kolax's dance orchestra. He in the beginning came to fame as a key soloist with Billy Eckstine's orchestra during 1944-1947, trading off with Dexter Gordon on the renowned Eckstine record Blowing the Blues Away. Other than a renowned stint with Woody Herman's Third Herd in 1949 and an attempt at co-leading a two tenor group in the early '50s with Sonny Stitt, Ammons worked as a single throughout his vocation, transcription oftentimes (most notably for Prestige) in settings ranging from quartets and organ combos to all-star jam sessions. Drug problems kept him in prison house during much of 1958-1960 and, due to a particularly unshakable sentence, 1962-1969. When Ammons returned to the scene in 1969, he opened up his stylus a morsel, including some of the emotional cries of the new wave piece utilizing noisome rhythm sections, simply he was still able to struggle Sonny Stitt on his possess terms. Ironically the last song that he e'er recorded (just a short time ahead he was diagnosed with terminal cancer) was "Adios." |
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