Al Sears
Wikimp3 information about the music of Al Sears. On our website we have 6 albums and 8 collections of artist Al Sears. You can find useful information and download songs of this artist. We also know that Al Sears represents Jazz genres.
Biography
[Edit]It is ironic that tenor saxophonist Al Sears' one hit, "Castle Rock," was recorded under Johnny Hodges' name (the altoist is virtually absent on the record), denying Sears his one chance at fame. Sears had actually had his first important job in 1928 replacing Hodges with the Chick Webb band. However, despite associations with Elmer Snowden (1931-1932), Andy Kirk (1941-1942), Lionel Hampton (1943-1944), and with his own groups (most of 1933-1941), it was not until Sears joined Duke Ellington's Orchestra in 1944 that he began to get much attention. His distinctive tone, R&B-ish phrasing, and ability to build up exciting solos made him one of Ellington's most colorful soloists during the next five years, although his period was overshadowed by both his predecessor (Ben Webster) and his successor (Paul Gonsalves). Among Sears' many recordings with Ellington are notable versions of "I Ain't Got Nothing but the Blues" and a 1945 remake of "It Don't Mean a Thing." Sears worked with Johnny Hodges' group during 1951-1952, recorded a variety of R&B-oriented material in the 1950s, and cut two excellent albums for Swingville in 1960 before going into semi-retirement.
Title: Brown Boy (Remastered) [feat. Clarence Palmer] - Single
Artist: Al Sears, The Sparrows
Genre: Pop
Collections
Title: Jazz in 1958 - The Year of the First Hot 100
Genre: Jazz
Title: Autumn Spirits - Jazz for Chillin' (Extended Version)
Genre: Jazz
Title: Greatest Hits Series: Jazz
Genre: Jazz
Title: Masters of Jazz - A Tenor Sax Anthology
Genre: Jazz
Title: Wailin' Saxophone Legends (CD1)
Genre: Jazz, Instrumental
Title: Goin' Uptown: The R&B Years
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Jazz