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Buddy Montgomery

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Birth name
  
Charles Montgomery

Name
  
Buddy Montgomery

Genres
  
Jazz

Role
  
Jazz Pianist

Occupation(s)
  
Musician

Siblings
  
Wes Montgomery

Instruments
  
Piano, vibraphone



Born
  
January 30, 1930 Indianapolis, Indiana, United States (
1930-01-30
)

Associated acts
  
Wes Montgomery, Slide Hampton, Big Joe Turner, Miles Davis

Died
  
May 14, 2009, Palmdale, California, United States

Education
  
Wisconsin Conservatory of Music

Albums
  
This Rather Than That

Similar People
  
Monk Montgomery, Wes Montgomery, Montgomery Brothers, Pony Poindexter, Harold Land

Jazz musician buddy montgomery


Charles "Buddy" Montgomery (January 30, 1930, Indianapolis, Indiana – May 14, 2009) was an American jazz vibraphonist and pianist. He was the younger brother of Wes and Monk Montgomery, both notable musicians on guitar and bass guitar respectively.

Contents

Buddy and brother Monk formed The Mastersounds in the late 1950s and produced ten recordings. When The Mastersounds disbanded, Monk and Buddy joined their brother Wes on a number of Montgomery Brothers recordings, which were mostly arranged by Buddy. They toured together in 1968, and it was in the middle of that tour that Wes died. Buddy continued to compose, arrange, perform, produce, teach and record, producing nine recordings as a leader.

Buddy montgomery polka dots and moonbeams


Biography

Buddy first played professionally in 1948; in 1949 he played with Big Joe Turner and soon afterwards with Slide Hampton. After a period in the Army, where he had his own quartet, he joined The Mastersounds as a vibraphonist with his brother Monk, pianist Richie Crabtree and drummer Benny Barth in 1957. He led the "Montgomery-Johnson Quintet" with saxophonist Alonzo "Pookie" Johnson from 1955 to 1957. His earliest sessions as a leader are from the late 1950s. He played briefly with Miles Davis in 1960. After Wes Montgomery’s death in 1968, Buddy became active as a jazz educator and advocate. He founded organizations in Milwaukee, where he lived from 1969 to 1982; and Oakland, California, where he lived for most of the 1980s, that offered jazz classes and presented free concerts.

The Mastersounds

  • Jazz Showcase (World Pacific, 1957)
  • The King and I (World Pacific, 1957)
  • Kismet (World Pacific, 1958) with Wes Montgomery
  • Flower Drum Song (World Pacific, 1958)
  • Ballads & Blues (World Pacific, 1959)
  • The Mastersounds in Concert (World Pacific, 1959)
  • Happy Holidays from Many Lands (World Pacific, 1959)
  • The Mastersounds Play Horace Silver (World Pacific, 1960)
  • Swinging with the Mastersounds (Fantasy, 1961)
  • The Mastersounds on Tour (1961)
  • A Date with The Mastersounds (Fantasy, 1961)
  • Buddy Montgomery

  • The Two-Sided Album (Milestone Records, 1968)
  • This Rather Than That (Impulse!, 1969)
  • Ties (Bean, 1977)
  • Of Love (Storyville, 1986)
  • Ties of Love (Landmark Records, 1986)
  • So Why Not? (Landmark, 1988)
  • Live at Maybeck Recital Hall (Concord Jazz, 1991)
  • Here Again (Sharp Nine, 1997)
  • Icebreaker (Staalplaat, 2001)
  • A Love Affair in Paris (Space Time, 2002)
  • A Day in the Life (Pony Canyon, 2006)
  • As sideman

  • Johnny Griffin: Do Nothing 'til You Hear from Me (Riverside, 1963)
  • Bobby Hutcherson: Cruisin' the Bird (Landmark, 1988)
  • George Shearing with the Montgomery Brothers: A Date with the Montgomery Brothers
  • Wes Montgomery: Wes & Friends (Milestone, 1961)
  • Charlie Rouse: Epistrophy (Landmark, 1988)
  • David Fathead Newman: Blue Head (Candid Records, 1990) Live, with Clifford Jordan
  • Colleen McNabb: Don't Go to Strangers (Zuccarecords, 2009)
  • References

    Buddy Montgomery Wikipedia


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