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・ Sonny Sharrock
・ Sonny Shepherd
・ Sonny Shroyer
・ Sonny Siaki
・ Sonny Side Up
・ Sonny Side Up (Roost album)
・ Sonny Siebert
・ Sonny Silooy
・ Sonny Simmons
・ Sonny Sixkiller
・ Sonny Skinner
・ Sonny Smith
・ Sonny Smith (musician)
・ Sonny Spoon
・ Sonny Stevens
Sonny Stitt
・ Sonny Stitt & the Top Brass
・ Sonny Stitt (album)
・ Sonny Stitt / Live at Ronnie Scott's
・ Sonny Stitt at the D. J. Lounge
・ Sonny Stitt Blows the Blues
・ Sonny Stitt Plays
・ Sonny Stitt Plays Arrangements from the Pen of Quincy Jones
・ Sonny Stitt Sits in with the Oscar Peterson Trio
・ Sonny Stitt Swings the Most
・ Sonny Stitt with the New Yorkers
・ Sonny Stitt/Bud Powell/J. J. Johnson
・ Sonny Strait
・ Sonny Sumo
・ Sonny T.


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Sonny Stitt : ウィキペディア英語版
Sonny Stitt

Edward "Sonny" Stitt (born Edward Boatner, Jr.; February 2, 1924 – July 22, 1982) was an American jazz saxophonist of the bebop/hard bop idiom. He was one of the best-documented saxophonists of his generation, recording over 100 albums. He was nicknamed the "Lone Wolf" by jazz critic Dan Morgenstern, in reference to his relentless touring and devotion to jazz.
==Early life==
Edward Boatner, Jr. was born in Boston, Massachusetts, and grew up in Saginaw, Michigan. He had a musical background; his father, Edward Boatner, was a baritone singer, composer and college music professor, his brother was a classically trained pianist, and his mother was a piano teacher.〔
Sonny was given up for adoption in 1924 by his father. No one seems to know why Boatner gave his son away, but the child was adopted by the Stitts family, who raised him in Saginaw, Michigan.() He later began calling himself "Sonny". While in high school in Saginaw, Stitt played in the Len Francke Band, a local popular swing band.
In 1943, Stitt first met Charlie Parker, and as he often later recalled, the two men found that their styles had an extraordinary similarity that was partly coincidental and not merely due to Stitt's emulation. Parker is alleged to have remarked, "Well I'll be damned, you sound just like me", to which Stitt responded "Well, I can't help the way I sound. It's only way I know how to play." Kenny Clarke remarked of Stitt's approach that, "Even if there had not been a Bird, there would have been a Sonny Stitt".
Stitt's earliest recordings were made in 1945 with Stan Getz and Dizzy Gillespie. He had also played in some swing bands, though he mainly played in bop bands. Stitt was featured in Tiny Bradshaw's big band in the early forties. Stitt replaced Charlie Parker in Dizzy Gillespie's band in 1945.〔
Stitt played alto saxophone in Billy Eckstine's big band alongside future bop pioneers Dexter Gordon and Gene Ammons beginning in 1945 when he started to play tenor saxophone more frequently, in order to avoid being referred to as a Charlie Parker imitator. Later on, he played with Gene Ammons and Bud Powell. Stitt spent time at the Federal prison in Lexington Kentucky between 1948–49 for selling narcotics.
Stitt, when playing tenor saxophone, seemed to break free from some of the criticism that he was imitating Charlie Parker's style, although it appears in the instance with Ammons above that the availability of the larger instrument was a factor. Indeed, Stitt began to develop a far more distinctive sound on tenor.〔 He played with other bop musicians Bud Powell and Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, a fellow tenor with a distinctly tough tone in comparison to Stitt, in the 1950s and recorded a number of sides for Prestige Records label as well as albums for Argo, Verve and Roost. Stitt experimented with Afro-Cuban jazz in the late 1950s, and the results can be heard on his recordings for Roost and Verve, on which he teamed up with Thad Jones and Chick Corea for Latin versions of such standards as "Autumn Leaves."
Stitt joined Miles Davis briefly in 1960, and recordings with Davis' quintet can be found only in live settings on the tour of 1960. Concerts in Manchester and Paris are available commercially and also a number of concerts (which include sets by the earlier quintet with John Coltrane) on the record ''Live at Stockholm'' (Dragon), all of which featured Wynton Kelly, Jimmy Cobb and Paul Chambers. However, Miles fired Stitt due to the excessive drinking habit he had developed, and replaced him with Hank Mobley. Later in the 1960s, Stitt paid homage to one of his main influences, Charlie Parker, on the album ''Stitt Plays Bird'', which features Jim Hall on guitar.
He recorded a number of memorable records with his friend and fellow saxophonist Gene Ammons, interrupted by Ammons' own imprisonment for narcotics possession. The records recorded by these two saxophonists are regarded by many as some of both Ammons and Stitt's best work, thus the Ammons/Stitt partnership went down in posterity as one of the best duelling partnerships in jazz, alongside Zoot Sims and Al Cohn, and Johnny Griffin with Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis. Stitt would venture into soul jazz, and he recorded with fellow tenor saxophonist Booker Ervin in 1964 on the ''Soul People'' album. Stitt also recorded with Duke Ellington alumnus Paul Gonsalves in 1963 for Impulse! on the ''Salt And Pepper'' album in 1963. Around that time he also appeared regularly at Ronnie Scott's in London, a live 1964 encounter with Ronnie Scott, ''The Night Has A Thousand Eyes'', eventually surfaced, and another in 1966 with resident guitarist Ernest Ranglin and British tenor saxophonist Dick Morrissey. Stitt was one of the first jazz musicians to experiment with an electric saxophone (the instrument was called a Varitone), as heard on the albums ''What's New'' in 1966 and ''Parallel-A-Stitt'' in 1967.

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