Artist's albums
Just You Just Me
2001 · album
Easy Street
2000 · album
Ralph Sutton Quartet Featuring Ruby Braff Vol. 3
2000 · album
Sweet Sue
2000 · album
Pocketful of Dreams
1999 · album
The Ralph Sutton Quartet Vol. 2
1998 · album
A Pocketful of Dreams
1998 · album
Ralph Sutton Trio Vol. 1
1997 · album
Echoes of Swing (Live)
1997 · album
With Harlem Luckey
2022 · compilation
Little Light (Live)
2019 · album
Columbia Sessions (1950-51)
2017 · album
I Let a Song Go out of My Heart (Live)
2015 · album
Live in San Francisco: Club Hangover 1954
2011 · album
In Copenhagen
2009 · album
A Pair Of Kings
2007 · album
Rendezvous At Sunnie's 1969
2007 · album
At St. George Church
2006 · album
It's so Nice It Must Be Illegal! (Live)
2005 · album
Oh Baby
2004 · album
The Joint Is Jumpin'
2003 · album
Wondrous Piano, Private Fami
2003 · album
Live
2003 · album
Featuring Bob Wilber Vol. 4
2002 · album
Ralph Sutton with Ted Easton Jazzband
2002 · album
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Biography
Ralph Sutton was the greatest stride pianist to emerge since World War II, with his only close competitors being the late Dick Wellstood and the very versatile Dick Hyman. Nearly alone in his generation, Sutton kept alive the piano styles of Fats Waller and James P. Johnson, not as mere museum pieces but as devices for exciting improvisations. Although sticking within the boundaries of his predecessors, Sutton infused the music with his own personality; few could match his powerful left hand. Ralph Sutton played with Jack Teagarden's big band briefly in 1942 before serving in the Army. After World War II he appeared regularly on Rudi Blesh's This Is Jazz radio show and spent eight years as the intermission pianist at Eddie Condon's club, recording frequently. He spent time playing in San Francisco, worked for Bob Scobey, moved to Aspen in the mid-'60s, and became an original member of the World's Greatest Jazz Band with Yank Lawson, Bob Haggart, and Bud Freeman. In the 1970s, he recorded many exciting albums for the Chaz label and then cut albums for quite a few labels. Despite suffering a stroke in the early '90s, Sutton kept a busy schedule through the mid-'90s, playing at jazz parties and festivals. He died suddenly on December 29, 2001, in his car outside a restaurant in Evergreen, CO. Although he would have received much greater fame if he had been born 20 years earlier and come to maturity during the 1930s rather than the 1950s, at the time of his death it was obvious that Ralph Sutton had earned his place among the top classic jazz pianists of all time. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi