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Everett Robbins

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Birth name
  
Everett Robbins

Genres
  
Jazz, Blues

Instruments
  
Piano

Origin
  
Muskogee, Oklahoma, USA

Occupation(s)
  
Pianist, bandleader, composer

Similar
  
Porter Grainger, Arthur Herzog Jr, Jimmy Witherspoon, Ralph Rainger, Bob Russell

Everett "Happy" Robbins was a Chicago-based pianist, bandleader and composer.

Contents

Born in Muskogee, Oklahoma, he moved to Chicago in 1916 and studied at the American Conservatory of Music. Lineups of his bands in the 1920s, such as Everett and his Syncopated Robins, included Eddie Vincent, Benney Fields, Jimmy Dudley, William Hoy, and Henry Johnson, while Everett Robbins' Jazz Screamers included Bob Shoffner.

As well as leading his own bands, he also recorded, as a pianist, in 1922, with Mamie Smith's Jazz Hounds, coinciding with Garvin Bushell, Coleman Hawkins, Bubber Miley and Herb Flemming.

Robbins made piano rolls for the Capitol Roll & Record Company and is possibly most known for "Ain't Nobody's Business", a song he co-wrote with Porter Grainger in 1922. Both pianists played in Mamie Smith's Jazz Hounds around the same time, but as they played the same instrument, they are unlikely to have coincided.

As leader/co-leader

  • 1923: "Hard Luck Blues"
  • 1991: Boogie Woogie Blues
  • 2001: Jazz & Blues Piano, Vol. 2: 1924-1947
  • As sideman

  • 1922: with Mamie Smith's Jazz Hounds
  • Songs

    A Triflin' Daddy's Blues2005
    Hard Luck Blues2008
    Hard and Luck Blues2010

    References

    Everett Robbins Wikipedia