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Although he released only six albums under his own name during a career that spanned as many decades, he was a crucial presence on the city’s bop scene. (Sadly, only his excellent 1959 album, Serenata, on Delmark, is currently in print.) He was a product of Du Sable High School, under the leadership of the legendary Captain Walter Dyett, and he got his first serious professional experience as a member of Andy Kirk’s orchestra in the early 40s. By the decade’s end he was back in town working with everyone from saxophonists Eddie Chamblee and Von Freeman to blues guitarist T-Bone Walker to singers Lorez Alexandria and Nancy Wilson. In the liner notes to his 1963 trio album, A Touch of Pepper (Argo), Jazz Showcase proprietor Joe Segal observed, “He is constantly sought for all types of live and recording dates; from preferred anonymity on rock ‘n’ roll gigs to ‘elite’ pleasing fashion and club dances.”
Here’s hoping that his passing will prompt the reissue of some of his records, because he’ll certainly live on through their contents.