Died On This Date (January 6, 1993) Dizzy Gillespie / Jazz Great
John “Dizzy” Gillespie
October 21, 1917 – January 6, 1993

Dizzy Gillespie was one of the biggest names in jazz, period. Over a career that spanned nearly 60 years, Gillespie drew the blueprint for future jazz trumpeters to follow. A gifted improviser, composer, and bandleader, Gillespie directly influenced the likes of such greats as Miles Davis, Arturo Sandoval and Fats Navarro. When be-bop first began to rear its head, it was Gillespie that embraced it and brought it to the masses. Songs like “A Night in Tunisia” and “Groovin'” were considered outlandish at the time but have since come to represent the greatness of jazz’s first modern style. Over the course of his storied career, Gillespie collaborated with nearly every giant in jazz. That list includes John Coltrane, Cab Calloway, Billy Eckstine, Charlie Parker, and Ella Fitzgerald. Gillespie stayed very active right up to his final years. In 1989, he performed an astonishing 300 shows all around the world. On January 6, 1993, Dizzy Gillespie, age 75, died of pancreatic cancer.
What You Should Own



Marion Brown was an influential saxophonist who was closely associated with the avant-garde jazz movement of the ’60s. After settling in New York City during the early ’60s, Brown quickly began running in the same circles as 
Born into a musical family, jazz drummer Rashied Ali began to come into his own after moving to New York City in his late 20s. Within a short time, he was playing behind the likes of James Blood Ulmer, Pharoah Sanders, and eventually
George Russell was just seven years old when he walked on a stage for the first time and sang “Moon Over Miami” with 
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 