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Al Klink

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Name
  
Al Klink


Al Klink httpsdjweinfileswordpresscom201503gmray1

Died
  
March 7, 1991, Bradenton, Florida, United States

Music groups
  
Glenn Miller Orchestra (1939 – 1942), World's Greatest Jazz Band

Similar People
  
Bill Finegan, George Duvivier, Bucky Pizzarelli, Mel Powell, Benny Goodman

Al cohn and friends zoot sims memorial concert 1986


Al Klink (December 28, 1915 in Danbury, Connecticut – March 7, 1991 in Bradenton, Florida) was an American swing jazz tenor saxophonist.

Contents

Career

Klink played with Glenn Miller from 1939 to 1942, and is heard trading solos with Tex Beneke on the most well-known version of "In the Mood". When Miller started playing in the U.S. military, Klink played with Benny Goodman and Tommy Dorsey, and did work as a session musician after World War II. From 1952 to 1953 he played with the Sauter-Finegan Orchestra. In 1955, he recorded his only session as a bandleader, doing six songs for a Bob Alexander album which won a Grammy award. In the late-1960s to early-1970s, he was a tenor saxophone doubler on the staff of NBC's Tonight Show Band under Doc Severinsen where he was an occasional featured soloist. After the 1950s he disappeared from the record until 1974, when he began playing with the World's Greatest Jazz Band. Later in the 1970s he played with Glenn Zottola and George Masso, and continued playing until the mid-1980s, when he retired in Florida. He died there in 1991.

Movie appearances

Al Klink appeared in the following movies in 1941 and 1942:

  • Sun Valley Serenade (1941)
  • Orchestra Wives (1942)
  • Discography

  • Satan in High Heels (1961)
  • Ping Pong Percussion (1961)
  • Swing into Spring (1958)
  • With Mundell Lowe

  • Guitar Moods (Riverside, 1956)
  • Progressive Jazz (1956)
  • Satan in High Heels (soundtrack) (Charlie Parker, 1961)
  • With Gerry Mulligan

  • Holliday with Mulligan (DRG, 1961 [1980]) with Judy Holliday
  • References

    Al Klink Wikipedia