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Ronnie Bedford

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Name
  
Ronnie Bedford

Instruments
  
drums

Role
  
Professor


Years active
  
1940sā€“2014

Genres
  
Jazz

Labels
  
Progressive Records

Record label
  
Progressive Records

Ronnie Bedford Jazz legend Northwest College instructor Ronnie Bedford dies


Born
  
June 2, 1931 Bridgeport, Connecticut, USA (
1931-06-02
)

Died
  
December 20, 2014, Powell, Wyoming, United States

Albums
  
My Kind of Trouble (feat. Joe Pass, Art Hillery, Andy Simpkins & Ronnie Bedford)

Similar People
  
Keith Ingham, Susannah McCorkle, Mike Lipskin

Occupation(s)
  
Musician, professor

Come along jody ronnie bedford and friends


Ronnie Bedford (June 2, 1931 ā€“ December 20, 2014) was an American jazz drummer and professor. Born in Bridgeport, Connecticut, Bedford was one of the founders of the Yellowstone Jazz Festival held annually in Cody, Wyoming, and was the recipient of the 1993 Wyoming Governor's Award for the Arts. In 1993 he released a self-published CD, Tour de West. He later produced three more albums for Progressive Records. Bedford lived in Powell, Wyoming and taught percussion at Northwest College.

Contents

Ronnie bedford and friends strollin


Discography

Drummer Ronnie Bedford was one of those excellent, but often seemingly invisible artists who form the backbone of jazz. Bedford was working at his trade since he was 16 in the 1940s, and has worked with and appeared on the albums of many of the top performers in jazz, both instrumental and vocal, comfortable in any number of jazz styles. He started early on the drums, taking lessons from Fred Albright of the NBC Orchestra when he was 10. Later he started listening to radio air checks of the great big bands on the radio which, among other things, resulted in Gene Krupa becoming his idol. Although he was already in jazz, the defining moment when he fully committed to the jazz life came in 1970 while he was with the Morris Nanton Trio. He went on to punch all the slots on the card: Broadway shows, big bands, small groups, TV, and the recording studio. A very short list of those he has sat in at drums are Hank Jones, Sylvia Sims, Arnett Cobb, Benny Carter, Walter Norris, and Bill Watrous. Bedford also performed at key jazz festivals and major concert halls, including the Newport Jazz Festival, Royal Albert Hall in London and New York's Avery Fisher Hall (both with Benny Goodman), and the Smithsonian Museum with Benny Carter.

Although Gene Krupa was his initial inspiration, others have helped shape Bedford's approach to the drums, including Buddy Rich, Big Sid Catlett, and Max Roach. Bedford also gleaned much from other instrumentalists, including Stan Getz, Lester Young, and Miles Davis. While he has recorded prolifically as a sideman, there are relatively few albums with him as leader. QuaDRUMvirate did, however, appear in 2000 for George Buck's Progressive label. Bedford moved to Wyoming in 1986. There he instructs in percussion at Northwest College in Powell. While living and working in Wyoming, Bedford has organized eight tours, calling on friends from New York and Los Angeles to join him as Ronnie Bedford & Friends, playing in the Northern Rocky Mountain region and beyond. Bedford is among the founders of the Yellow Jazz Festival, held in Cody, WY, annually since 1988. His efforts promoting music in Wyoming, jazz in particular, won him the 1993 Governor's Award for the Arts. When not performing or teaching, Bedford enjoyed listening to jazz performers, including Clifford Brown, Bill Evans, Duke Ellington, and Horace Silver, as well as to classical music.

Ronnie Bedford died at the Powell Valley Care Center in Powell, Wyoming on December 20, 2014. He was 83.

Discography

With Hank Jones

  • Arigato (Progressive, 1976)
  • With Rod Levitt

  • The Dynamic Sound Patterns (Riverside, 1963)
  • With Pee Wee Russell

  • Ask Me Now! (Impulse!, 1963)
  • References

    Ronnie Bedford Wikipedia