Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Brad Gowans

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Genres
  
Dixieland

Died
  
September 8, 1954


Role
  
Music maker

Name
  
Brad Gowans

Brad Gowans

Born
  
December 3, 1903 (
1903-12-03
)

Origin
  
Billerica, Massachusetts

Instruments
  
valve trombone, cornet, clarinet

Similar People
  
Max Kaminsky, Bud Freeman, Dick Cary, George Wettling, Eddie Condon

Birth name
  
Arthur Bradford Gowans

Associated acts
  
Bud Freeman, Max Kaminsky

Brad gowans singin the blues vintagemusic es


Arthur Bradford "Brad" Gowans (December 3, 1903, Billerica, Massachusetts – September 8, 1954, Los Angeles) was an American jazz trombonist and reedist.

Contents

Brad Gowans BRAD GOWANS Vintage MusicVintage Music

Gowans' earliest work was on the Dixieland jazz scene, playing with the Rhapsody Makers Band, Tommy DeRosa's New Orleans Jazz Band, and Perley Breed. In 1926 he played cornet with Joe Venuti, and worked later in the 1920s with Red Nichols, Jimmy Durante, Mal Hallett (1927–29), and Bert Lown. He left music for several years during the Great Depression, then returned to play with Bobby Hackett (1936), Frank Ward, Wingy Manone (1938), Hackett again, Joe Marsala, and Bud Freeman's Summa Cum Laude Band (1939–40).

Early in the 1940s he played regularly at Nick's in Greenwich Village in New York City, and worked with Ray McKinley and Art Hodes. As a clarinetist, he played in the reconstituted Original Dixieland Jazz Band's 1940s recordings. He stopped playing again briefly in the mid-1940s, then returned to play with Max Kaminsky (1945–46), Jimmy Dorsey, and Nappy Lamare (1949–50). Following this he played freelance on the West Coast. He collapsed on stage in 1954 while playing with Eddie Skrivanek and died eight months later.

Aside from his playing, he also arranged pieces for Bud Freeman and Lee Wiley, and invented the valide trombone, a hybrid slide-valve trombone which never caught on. He recorded a few times as a leader in 1926, 1927, and 1934, and did a full LP for Victor Records in 1946.

Discography

  • Brad Gowans and his New York Nine (recorded 1946), RCA Victor 10" LP LJM 3000
  • References

    Brad Gowans Wikipedia