Died On This Date (November 25, 2013) Chico Hamilton / Jazz Legend

Foreststorn “Chico” Hamilton
September 20, 1921 – November 25, 2013

chico-hamiltonChico Hamilton was an influential American jazz drummer who helped define the West Coast cool jazz style of the 1950s.  Born and raised in Los Angeles, California, Hamilton played in the same high school band as future greats, Charles Mingus and Dexter Gordon before going on to play with the likes of Lionel Hampton, T-Bone Walker, and Gerry Mulligan.  In 1948, he was hired to tour with Lena Horne with whom he performed for over six years, thus establishing himself as one of the era’s top sidemen.  In 1955, he recorded his first album under his own name and continued to do so more than 60 times throughout the rest of his career.  Hamilton also appeared as a drummer in the film Sweet Smell of Success and others.  During the ’60s, he scored numerous movies and television programs.  In 1987, he co-founded the jazz department at New School University.  Chico Hamilton was 92 when he passed away on November 25, 2013.

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Died On This Date (August 4, 2012) Johnnie Bassett / Detroit Blues Great

Johnnie Bassett
October 9, 1935 – August 4, 2012

Johnnie Bassett was an American electric blues guitarist, singer and songwriter who, over the course of a career that spanned some 60 years, worked as a band leader as well as an in-demand session player for many of music’s biggest names.  The list of those that the self-taught guitarist played with includes B.B.King, T-Bone Walker, John Lee Hooker, Smokey Robinson, and Ruth Brown.  After moving from Florida to Detroit during the mid ’40s, Bassett began making a name for himself at area talent shows and backing local singers.  After a stint in the Army, he found work back in Detroit as a session player for the great Fortune Records and later, Chess Records.  It was while at Chess that Barrett played on The Miracles’ first single, 1958’s “Get A Job.”  He eventually found himself in Seattle where he played with Ike & Tina Turner and Little Willie John.  He also ran with a young local up-and-coming guitarist by the name of Jimi Hendrix.  Bassett landed back in Detroit where, during the mid ’90s, he began releasing his own albums.  His last album was the excellent I Can Make That Happen, released just a few weeks before he passed away.  Johnnie Bassett died of cancer on August 4, 2012.  He was 76.

Thanks to Harold Lepidus for the assist.

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I Can Make That Happen - Johnnie Bassett

Died On This Date (July 25, 2008) Johnny Griffin / Tenor Sax Great

Johnny Griffin
April 24, 1928 – July 25, 2008

Known as the “Little Giant,” Johnny Griffin was a tenor saxophonist of the bop and hard bop idioms of jazz.  Griffin began playing music while in school, and was playing in a band with T-Bone Walker while still in high school.  Shortly after graduation, he joined Lionel Hampton’s band.  He was just 17.  In 1956, he began recording a series of landmark jazz albums for the storied Blue Note label.  Over the course of his career, he has played or recorded with such icons as Art Blakey, Wes Montgomery, Nat Adderley, Thelonious Monk, and John Coltrane.  Johnny Griffin died of a heart attack just four days after what would be his last concert.  He was 80 years old.

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A Blowin' Session (The Rudy Van Gelder Edition Remastered) - Johnny Griffin


Died On This Date (May 18, 1985) Pee Wee Crayton / Texas Blues Great

Connie “Pee Wee” Crayton
December 18, 1914 – May 18, 1985

Pee Wee Crayton was a brilliant Texas blues guitarist stylistically similar to T-Bone Walker but a bit more soul leaning. One of his first recordings landed at the top of the Billboard R&B charts in 1948. Crayton continued to record and tour well into the ’70s. In recent years, Morgana Kennedy at Vanguard Records exposed Crayton’s music to new fans around the world.  He died of a heart attack on May 18, 1985.

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Died On This Date (March 16, 1975) T-Bone Walker / Blues Icon

Aaron “T-Bone” Walker
May 28, 1910 – March 16, 1975

T-Bone Walker was a highly influential Texas blues guitarist, songwriter and singer.  His electrifying blues solos laid the foundation for such future disciples as Stevie Ray Vaughan, Billy Gibbons, Chuck Berry, and Jimi Hendrix.  Walker learned to play the guitar while in his teens, getting a helping hand from family friend, Blind Lemon Jefferson.  He moved to Los Angeles and began making records in 1929.  He soon became a popular draw along the city’s fabled Central Avenue jazz scene.  He made several albums through the early ’70s, with his 1971 release, Good Feelin’ earning him his only Grammy.  Health issues dogged Walker during his later years which no doubt, lead to a stroke in 1974. In March of 1975, T-Bone Walker suffered a second stroke and ultimately died of bronchial pneumonia on March 16, 1975. He was 64 years old.

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Complete Imperial Recordings, 1950-1954 - T-Bone Walker