Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Babs Gonzales

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Babs Gonzales


Role
  
Vocalist

Babs Gonzales Sonny Rollins Babs Gonzales Real Crazy

Died
  
January 23, 1980, Newark, New Jersey, United States

Albums
  
Strictly Bebop, Weird Lullaby, Broadway 4 A M

Similar People
  
Sonny Rollins, Tadd Dameron, Slim Gaillard, Dizzy Gillespie, Jimmy Smith

Babs gonzales the preacher


Babs Gonzales (October 27, 1919 – January 23, 1980), born Lee Brown, was an American jazz vocalist of the bebop era notable for writing the song "Oop-Pop-A-Da", which was recorded and performed by his band, Three Bips and a Bop, and was later made famous by Dizzy Gillespie.

Contents

Babs Gonzales Babs Gonzales RecordingsBABS GONZALES LIVE AT SMALL39S

Babs gonzales professor bop


Biography

Babs Gonzales wwwgeocitiesjpbabsgonzalesbabsgonzalesbebop

Gonzales was born Lee Brown in Newark, New Jersey, but he and his brothers were all called Babs. He studied piano at an early age and learned to play drums. Looking for whatever money-making opportunities he could find, he made his way to Los Angeles, as he recalls in his memoir I Paid My Dues.... Wearing a turban in Hollywood in the 1940s, he called himself Ram Singh. His networking and hustling talents landed him the job as Errol Flynn's "foreign" chauffeur. He adopted the name Ricardo Gonzales to pass himself off as Mexican rather than black in to get a room in a good hotel. He got a break as a vocalist when he was asked to fill in for Mel Tormé.

Singing career

Babs Gonzales Babs Gonzales Artists Blue Note Records

Gonzales worked with Charlie Barnet and Lionel Hampton's big bands before forming and leading his own group, Bab's Three Bips & a Bop (1946–49). They recorded for Blue Note, including the earliest version of "Oop-Pop-A-Da" and such songs as “Weird Lullaby” (a composition covered on Wynton Kelly's 1961 album Someday My Prince Will Come), “Real Crazy,” “Professor Bop”, “Prelude to a Nightmare”, and "Cool Whalin'". His sidemen on these dates included Tadd Dameron, Tony Scott, Roy Haynes, James Moody, J.J. Johnson, Julius Watkins, Sonny Rollins (making his recording debut), Art Pepper, Wynton Kelly, and Don Redman. Cash Box Magazine January 29, 1955 The Alan Freed "Rock 'n Roll" Ball at St. Nicholas Arena, New York show composed of Babs Gonzales on January 14, 1955

Babs Gonzales Babs Gonzales Biography Albums amp Streaming Radio

He was an exponent and pioneer of vocalese, an example of which is his version of the Charlie Parker bop standard "Ornithology". From 1950 to 1953, Gonzales was road manager and vocalist for the James Moody band and later gigged and recorded with musicians such as Jimmy Smith, Bennie Green, Lenny Hambro, Johnny Griffin, and Bennie Green on the 1958 Blue Note album Soul Stirrin' (which took its name from and included Gonzales' eponymous composition). Spending time in Europe, Gonzales performed at Ronnie Scott's in London in 1962, where he picked 22-year-old Brian Auger to be his piano accompanist. He was also a Beat poet.

Books

Babs Gonzales BABS GONZALES 19 vinyl records amp CDs found on CDandLP

  • 1967: I, Paid My Dues: Good Times...No Bread. East Orange, NJ: Expubidence Publishing Corporation
  • 1975: Movin' on Down De Line
  • References

    Babs Gonzales Wikipedia