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Clarence Shaw

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Birth name
  
Clarence Eugene Shaw

Role
  
Musical Artist

Name
  
Clarence Shaw


Instruments
  
Trumpet

Also known as
  
Gene Shaw

Genres
  
Jazz

Clarence Shaw Absentee Monrovia Councilman Clarence Shaw Resigns Monrovia Weekly

Born
  
June 16, 1926 Detroit, Michigan, US (
1926-06-16
)

Died
  
August 17, 1973, Los Angeles, California, United States

Similar People
  
Jimmy Knepper, Dannie Richmond, Frankie Dunlop, Horace Parlan, Charles Mingus

Scenes in the City


Clarence Eugene Shaw, sometimes credited as Gene Shaw (June 16, 1926 in Detroit – August 17, 1973 in Los Angeles) was an American jazz trumpeter.

Contents

Clarence Shaw Absentee Monrovia Councilman Clarence Shaw Resigns Monrovia Weekly

Shaw played piano and trombone as a child. He began playing trumpet around 1946 after hearing Dizzy Gillespie's Hot House while recovering from injuries sustained in the Army. He attended the Detroit Institute of Music and studied under Barry Harris, and played locally with Lester Young, Wardell Gray, and Lucky Thompson.

He moved to New York City in 1956 and soon after began playing with Charles Mingus's Jazz Workshop in 1957. Among his credits with Mingus is Tijuana Moods. Later that year he destroyed his instrument and quit music over a fight with Mingus. He did not return to playing until 1962, after which time he formed his own ensemble. He retired again in 1964 and returned to music once more in 1968.

"Marj", The third track on his solo debut album Break Through was written for his wife Marjorie Belle Wilson of Kentucky. He is survived by children Keven Jean Shaw, Stacey Leah Shaw, and Lion Shaw.

Discography as leader

  • Breakthrough (Argo Records, 1962)
  • Debut in Blue (Argo, 1963)
  • Carnival Sketches (Argo, 1964)
  • References

    Clarence Shaw Wikipedia