Charlie Shavers lyrics
Artist · 3 788 listeners per month
Artist's albums
Charlie Shavers and the Blues Singers 1938-1939
1995 · album
Blue Stompin' (Reissue)
1994 · album
Live at the London House
1980 · album
Long Way Home
2021 · album
Funny Time
2021 · album
Charlie Shavers 1960
1975 · album
Undecided
2017 · album
Early Skylark and Tampa Eps
2017 · album
At Le Crazy Horse Saloon In Paris
2017 · album
Swinging Trumpet
2016 · album
It Feels Good
2013 · album
Charlie Shavers - Volume 1
2012 · album
Trumpet Masters
2010 · album
The Last Session (Bordeaux, 1970)
2008 · album
Sweet Georgia Brown (The Best Of)
2008 · compilation
The Everest Years: Charlie Shavers
2006 · album
Charlie Shavers: Shavers Shivers
2004 · album
Like Charlie
1961 · album
Independence Day Hora / Like a Young Man
1961 · single
The Music from Milk & Honey
1961 · album
At Le Crazy Horse Saloon in Paris
1962 · album
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Biography
Charlie Shavers was one of the great trumpeters to emerge during the swing era, a virtuoso with an open-minded and extroverted style along with a strong sense of humor. He originally played piano and banjo before switching to trumpet, and he developed very quickly. In 1935, he was with Tiny Bradshaw's band and two years later he joined Lucky Millinder's big band. Soon afterward he became a key member of John Kirby's Sextet where he showed his versatility by mostly playing crisp solos while muted. Shavers was in demand for recording sessions and participated on notable dates with New Orleans jazz pioneers Johnny Dodds, Jimmy Noone, and Sidney Bechet. He also had many opportunities to write arrangements for Kirby and had a major hit with his composition "Undecided." After leaving Kirby in 1944, Charlie Shavers worked for a year with Raymond Scott's CBS staff orchestra, and then was an important part of Tommy Dorsey's Orchestra from 1945 until past TD's death in 1956. Although well-featured, this association kept Shavers out of the spotlight of jazz, but fortunately he did have occasional vacations in which he recorded with the Metronome All-Stars and toured with Jazz at the Philharmonic; at the latter's concerts in 1953, Shaver's trumpet battles with Roy Eldridge were quite exciting. After Dorsey's death, Shavers often led his own quartet although he came back to the ghost band from time to time. During the 1960s, his range and technique gradually faded, and Charlie Shavers died from throat cancer in 1971 at the age of 53. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi