Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Fats Pichon

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Birth name
  
Walter Pichon

Role
  
Jazz Pianist

Name
  
Fats Pichon


Instruments
  
Vocals, Piano

Occupation(s)
  
Singer, Pianist

Genres
  
Jazz

Fats Pichon httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Origin
  
New Orleans, Louisiana, United States

Died
  
February 26, 1967, Chicago, Illinois, United States

Education
  
New England Conservatory of Music

Albums
  
Space Race, Deep South Boogie

Similar People
  
Red Allen, Fate Marable, Teddy Bunn, Luis Russell, Papa Celestin

Fats Pichon (I'm Gonna Move) To The Outskirts Of Town (DE LUXE 1072) (1947)


Walter Gabriel "Fats" Pichon (April 3, 1906 – February 25, 1967) was an American jazz pianist, singer, bandleader, and songwriter.

Contents

Biography

Pichon was born and raised in New Orleans, Louisiana, and began playing piano in his childhood. He also played baritone horn in brass bands in his youth, already a professional musician by 1920.

He first went north about 1922, playing at various venues in New York City and New Jersey before settling in Boston for a few years where he studied at the New England Conservatory of Music. After touring the United States and Mexico with various bands in the mid-1920s, he settled again his home town of New Orleans for the later part of the decade, leading bands under his own name at dance halls and on river boats on the Mississippi River. On visits back to New York he made some recordings, mostly as a vocalist on novelty numbers, with Luis Russell and other New Orleans groups.

In the 1930s Fats Pichon led what some considered the best big band in New Orleans; it also made Mississippi Riverboat excursions. Musicians included young Dave Bartholomew. This band never recorded. In the 1940s he began a long gig as the house pianist at The Old Absinthe House, a popular venue on Bourbon Street in the French Quarter, where he remained until about 1960, with occasional tours of other parts of the U.S., Latin America, and the Caribbean. Pinchon moved into the role of Eddie the Waiter, replacing comedian Eddie Green on the NBC weekly radio comedy Duffy’s Tavern during the show's last season, 1950-1951. After several episodes the waiter's name was changed from 'Eddie' to 'Fats'.

He died in Chicago in 1967, aged 60.

References

Fats Pichon Wikipedia