Jean-Marie Ingrand (musician)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jean-Marie Ingrand (* 1934 ) is a French jazz musician ( double bass ).

Live and act

Jean-Marie Ingrand began his career in the Parisian modern jazz scene in the early 1950s; In 1953 he was involved in recordings by Jean Pierre Sasson and Gigi Gryce with the Henri Renaud Quintet. In 1954 he and Jean-Louis Viale accompanied the pianist Thelonious Monk on radio recordings from the Salle Pleyel , which were produced by Joachim-Ernst Berendt . From the mid-1950s he worked in Paris a. a. with Bernard Peiffer , Jimmy Raney , Martial Solal , The Herdsmen Claude Bolling , Fats Sadi , Frank Foster , Roy Haynes , Hubert Fol , René Thomas and Michel Attenoux . In 1959 he toured with Sidney Bechet , the following year he played with Lester Young on his last visit to Paris (" There Will Never Be Another You "), also with Stan Getz and in 1960 in Lou Bennett's organ trio (Amen, RCA) and in Trio by Bud Powell with Kenny Clarke ("I Want to Be Happy"). In the field of jazz he was involved in 37 recording sessions between 1953 and 1969, most recently with Francois Guin et Les Swingers + The Four Bones.

Web links

Notes and individual references

  1. Chris Sheridan: Brilliant Corners: A Bio-discography of Thelonious Monk . 2001, p. 45
  2. Under this band name Cy Touff (b-tp), Jerry Coker (ts), Ralph Burns (p), Jimmy Gourley (git), Jean-Marie Ingrand (bass) and Chuck Flores (dr) recorded for disques Vogue .
  3. TV recording of the title
  4. Tom Lord : The Jazz Discography (online, accessed May 1, 2016)