Died On This Date (April 27, 1999) Al Hirt / Jazz Icon
Al Hirt
November 7, 1922 – April 27, 1999
Al Hirt was given his first trumpet at six and by sixteen, he and friend Pete Fountain were already playing professionally around New Orleans. After a tour of duty as a bugler in WWII, went to work in various swing bands, backing the likes of Benny Goodman, Tommy Dorsey and Jimmy Dorsey. He settled back in New Orleans by the ’50s, becoming an integral part of the city and its musical heritage. Over the next two decades, more than twenty of his albums appeared on the Billboard pop charts. One of Hirt’s other loves was football, and in 1967, he became a minority owner of the New Orleans Saints. Al Hirt died at 76 of liver failure after spending a year in a wheelchair due to edema in his leg.
What You Should Own



Rubin Zarchy was a jazz trumpeter who made his mark in the big bands of the ’30 and ’40s. Over the years he’s played lead trumpet with jazz’s biggest names including
Red Norvo was a pioneering musician who helped introduce the xylophone and vibraphone into jazz. Throughout a long and successful career that he launched in 1925, Norvo played with the likes of Paul Whiteman,
Louie Bellson was one of jazz’s greatest drummers. If there were a Mt. Rushmore of jazz drummers, Bellson would likely sit there alongside 
