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Jimmy Wyble

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Name
  
Jimmy Wyble


Role
  
Guitarist

Jimmy Wyble Jimmy Wyble All About Jazz

Died
  
January 16, 2010, Los Angeles, California, United States

Albums
  
Live In Basel 1959, No More Blues

Similar People
  
Red Norvo, Jerry Dodgion, Flip Phillips, Benny Goodman, Russ Freeman

Jimmy wyble speaks guitar


James Otis Wyble (January 25, 1922 – January 16, 2010) was an American guitarist noted for his contributions to jazz and Western swing.

Contents

Jimmy Wyble An Appreciation Jimmy Wyble by Larry Koonse The

Jimmy wyble solo guitar


Career

Jimmy Wyble An Appreciation Jimmy Wyble by Larry Koonse The

A native of Port Arthur, Texas, Wyble worked in his early years for a radio station in Houston. He and guitarist Cameron Hill played Western swing in a band led by Burt "Foreman" Phillips. The sound of two guitars attracted Bob Wills, another fan of Western swing, and he hired both men for his band, the Texas Playboys.

Jimmy Wyble Jimmy Wyble

Wyble's music career was interrupted by World War II. He served in the Army from 1942 to 1946, and he returned to music after he came home. Although he continued to play in Western swing bands, his interest in jazz surfaced on his debut album, The Jimmy Wyble Quintet (1953). Soon after, he worked with Barney Kessel and Benny Goodman, and played with Red Norvo for eight years, including on a tour of Australia accompanying Frank Sinatra.

Wyble took a job as a studio musician in Los Angeles during the 1960s, working as a guitarist for movies and television. Wyble played guitar on movie soundtracks, including The Wild Bunch, Ocean's Eleven, Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex and Kings Go Forth, and played on TV shows such as The Flip Wilson Show and Kraft Music Hall. On the side, he took classical guitar lessons from Laurindo Almeida, then taught guitar to other students, among them Larry Koonse, Howard Roberts, and Steve Lukather.

In the 1970s he developed a two-line contrapuntal approach to guitar and composed numerous etudes in this style. Many of these pieces were published in Classical/Country (Howard Roberts-Playback, 1973), The Art of Two-Line Improvisation (PMP, 1979), and Concepts for the Classical and Jazz Guitar (Mel Bay, 2000).

During the 1980s, he left the music business to take care of his ailing wife. He returned to performing in 2005. Larry Koonse, his former student, issued the album What's in the Box (2007) with compositions by Wyble based on his book of etudes. Wyble was a teacher and performer until his death in 2010.

As leader

  • The Jimmy Wyble Quintet (1957)
  • Jimmy Wyble & Love Brothers (1977)
  • Diane (2003)
  • As sideman

    With Red Norvo

  • 1957 The Forward Look
  • 1962 The Red Norvo Quintet
  • With Benny Goodman

  • 1959 In Stockholm 1959
  • 1959 The Sound of Music
  • 1960 Swing, Swing, Swing
  • With others

  • 1958 I'll Sail My Ship Alone, Moon Mullican
  • 1979 Extensions, The Manhattan Transfer
  • 1988 Cool It Baby, The Treniers
  • 1988 Hey Sister Lucy, The Treniers
  • 1997 Live in Australia 1959, Frank Sinatra
  • 2003 King of Lone Star Swing, Bob Wills
  • 2004 Art of Tony Rizzi, Tony Rizzi
  • 2005 West Coast Jazz, Shorty Rogers
  • References

    Jimmy Wyble Wikipedia