Sneha Girap (Editor)

Vance Wilson (musician)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Genres
  
Jazz

Name
  
Vance Wilson

Years active
  
1948-1960s

Instruments
  
Tenor sax, alto sax

Occupation(s)
  
Saxophonist


Vance wilson


Vance E. Wilson (Lancaster, 1925-10 August 2010) was a jazz alto and tenor sax player based in Philadelphia most known for playing lead tenor and alto sax on Clifford Brown's first recording in 1952, The Beginning and the End (Columbia, 1973), as a member of Chris Powell's Five Blue Flames, together with Osie Johnson at a double recording session in Chicago.

After settling in Philadelphia in around 1946, Wilson studied classical music at the Ornstein School of Music together with John Coltrane and Bill Barron. He also played in the first house band at Philadelphia's Club 421, a lineup led by Charlie Rice, and featuring Bob Bushnell (musician), Red Garland and Johnny Hughes, as well as leading his own bands there.

In 1958 he joined Steve Gibson and the Red Caps.

A friend of Count Basie's, he didn’t join his orchestra because he was tired of touring, one of the reasons he retired from the music business in the 1960s.

References

Vance Wilson (musician) Wikipedia


Similar Topics