Died On This Date (June 2, 1942) Bunny Berigan / Swing Jazz Trumpeter

Rowland “Bunny” Berigan
November 2, 1908 – June 2, 1942

Rowland “Bunny” Berigan was born in Wisconsin in 1908 where he became proficient at the violin and trumpet at a very young age. By his late 20s, he was playing in a local and respected orchestra. Within a couple years, he was getting a lot work as a session man and was soon working with the Dorsey Brothers and Glenn Miller and soon he joined up with Benny Goodman to help define the swing era. As the ’30s came to a close, Berigan was a hot band leader in his own right, employing the likes of Buddy Rich and Ray Conniff. Unfortunately, Berrigan’s business sense wasn’t as strong as his playing abilities, so in 1940 he declared bankruptcy, forcing him to find work in Tommy Dorsey’s band. By this time, many years of alcohol abuse were taking its toll on his body causing him to become hospitalized while on tour. The doctors there discovered that he had a severe case of cirrhosis of the liver and advised him to give up drinking and stop playing the trumpet. Of course he didn’t listen, and on May 30, 1942, he suffered a massive hemorrhage which lead to his death two days later. Many may recognize his “I Can’t Get Started Without You,” from Roman Polanski’s Chinatown.


Died On This Date (May 26, 2008) Earle Hagen / TV Theme Composer

Earle Hagen
July 9, 1919 – May 26, 2008

Earle Hagen, was the Emmy Award-winning television composer who could count the iconic theme to The Andy Griffith Show as his own.  A talented musician himself, Hagen left home at the young age of 16 to play the trombone with Tommy Dorsey and Benny Goodman.  In the ’40s he went to work for the studios composing theme music for films and television.  Some of his more popular included Make Room For Daddy, The Dick Van Dyke Show, and That Girl.  Earle Hagen died of natural causes on May 26, 2008.

Died On This Date (May 16, 2010) Hank Jones / Acclaimed Jazz Pianist

Hank Jones
July 31, 1918 –  May 16, 2010

Hank Jones was a multi-Grammy nominated jazz pianist who came from a musical family that included brothers, Thad Jones and Elvin Jones.  An early adapter to the instrument, Jones began playing around his neighborhood in his early teens, and before he knew it, he was playing with Ella Fitzgerald.   That was from 1948 to 1953, after which he played with the likes of Charlie Parker, Benny Goodman and Cannonball Adderley, to name just of few of the greats with whom he collaborated.  Throughout the ’60s and early ’70s, Jones played in the CBS house band which afforded him the opportunity to play on the Ed Sullivan Show over the years.  One highlight was backing Frank Sinatra.  Jones released nearly 20 albums throughout his career, and played as a sideman on at least that many as well.  He stayed active nearly up to the time of his passing.  Hank Jones was 91 when he died on May 16, 2010.

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Died On This Date (May 11, 1970) Johnny Hodges / Played Sax With Duke Ellington

Johnny Hodges
July 25, 1907 – May 11, 2008

Johnny Hodges was an American saxophonist who played lead in Duke Ellington’s Orchestra for 38 years, giving it it’s signature sound.  And along the way, he wowed not only jazz fans but his contemporaries as well.  Benny Goodman once claimed that Hodges was “the greatest man on alto sax I ever heard.”  allmusic.com calls him the “Possessor of the most beautiful tone ever heard in jazz.”  Hodges stayed with Ellington until his sudden death in 1970, after which Ellington proclaimed, “Our band will never sound the same.”


Died On This Date (April 30, 2010) Gil Ellman / Big Band Musician & Instrument Retailer

Gil Ellman
August 28, 1925 – April 30, 2010

Gil Ellman was a big band musician and longtime Chicago area musical instrument  merchant.  Ellman began his life of music as a youngster when he learned to play the saxophone, clarinet and flute.  His skills developed so well, that when he hit high school, he became its concert master.  Shortly after graduating, and at just 18 years of age, Ellman opened his own shop where he repaired radios and such.  He later became an instrument tech, working with the likes of Benny Goodman and Tommy Dorsey when they came through Chicago.  Ellman played in the Coast Guard Band during WWII and continued to play in local groups well beyond that.  Over the years, he shared the stage with such legends as Patti Page, Milton Berle and Ronald Reagan.  In 1958, he opened Ellman’s Music Store  which remained an area institution up until the time of his passing.  Gil Ellman was 84 when he died in his home on April 30, 2010.

On May 7, 2007, Ellman was interviewed as part of the National Association of Music Merchants’ Oral History program.  Click here to view a 2 minute segment from his interview.

Thanks to NAMM Historian, Dan Del Fiorentino for the assist.