Avon Cities Jazz Band
Appearance
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The Avon Cities Jazz Band was a jazz band from Bristol, England, from 1949 to 2000. The band performed jazz standards such as "Cotton Tail" and their own songs.
One example of their compositions is "African Song" from their album Tempo Fugit, which was released in the 1990s. The Avon Cities were successful in the 1970s and 1980s.[citation needed]
Members
[edit]The core members of the band:
- Geoff Nichols – trumpeter and writer of many of pieces
- Mike Hitchings – trombone, soprano saxophone, alto saxophone, and mandolin player, who also wrote somepieces
- Ray Bush – clarinet player who occasionally sang (left in 1984 when he moved to the U.S.)
Other notable members of the band included:
- Chris Pope – drummer from 1964 until 1995
- Frank Feeney – guitarist from 1961 until 1988
- Dave Collett – main pianist from 1963 onward
- Clive Morton – bassist for over 20 years
- Basil Wright – drummer before Chris Pope
- Malcolm Wright – bass player (brother of Basil)
- Jan Ridd – pianist in the late 1950s
- Wayne Chandler – banjo and guitar player in the late 1950s
- Martin Genge – saxophone player from the 1980s onward
- Frank Woodford – drummer from 1995 onward
Geoff Nichols and Mike Hitchings never left the band, playing from 1949 until 2000. In 1952, Nichols, Hitchings, Bush, and Wright formed the Avon Cities Skiffle Group.
References
[edit]- Chilton, John (2004). Who's who of British jazz (2nd ed.). Continuum International Publishing Group. pp. 12–13. ISBN 978-0-8264-7234-2.