Joe Hostetter
Joe Hostetter (* before 1929) was an American jazz trumpeter and singer who also became famous in the 1930s under the pseudonyms Joe Host or Joe Hoste .
Live and act
Hostetter was a member of the Casa Loma Orchestra from the late 1920s , as a trumpeter on the Casa Loma Stomp , which hit the charts , as a vocalist on numbers like Any Time's the Time to Fall in Love ( Paramount 34041). In the following decade he also played as a trumpeter with Isham Jones , Joe Haymes and Charlie Barnet , as a vocalist (partly as Joe Host (e)) with Barnet ( I'm an Old Cowhand 1936), Gene Kardos ( The Breeze ( That's Bringin 'My Honey Back to Me) , Vocalion 2746) and in 1934 with Lud Gluskin ( The Continental , Columbia 2952) In the field of jazz he was involved in 29 recording sessions between 1929 and 1937.
He should not be confused with the American sound engineer of the same name, who u. a. worked with Phil Wilson , Greg Hopkins and William Parker .
Web links
- Joe Hostetter at Allmusic (English)
- Joe Hostetter at Discogs (English)
Individual evidence
- ↑ http://www.bigbandlibrary.com/glengray.html
- ↑ http://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no2006057546/
- ↑ Tom Lord : The Jazz Discography (online, accessed February 19, 2014)
- ↑ https://www.berklee.edu/bt/153/third_decade.html
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Hostetter, Joe |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Host, joe; Hoste, Joe |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | American jazz musician (trumpet, vocals) |
DATE OF BIRTH | before 1929 |
DATE OF DEATH | 20th century or 21st century |