Artist's albums
Live In Philly (Live / Philadelphia, PA / 1980)
1998 · album
Elegiac
1996 · compilation
Suddenly It's Spring
1992 · album
Two Jims and Zoot
1991 · album
For Lady Day
1991 · album
Zoot Sims And The Gershwin Brothers
1990 · album
Zoot Sims Plays Johnny Mandel: Quietly There
1984 · album
I Wish I Were Twins
1981 · album
The Swinger
1981 · album
Passion Flower - Zoot Sims Plays Duke Ellington
1980 · album
The Sweetest Sounds
1979 · album
Hawthorne Nights
1976 · album
Basie & Zoot
1976 · album
Soprano Sax
1976 · album
The Tenor Giants Featuring Oscar Peterson
1975 · album
Blinuet
2012 · compilation
Storyville Presents The A-Z Jazz Encyclopedia-YZ
2009 · compilation
Live At Falcon Lair
2004 · album
American Swinging In Paris
2002 · album
Choice
1961 · album
Inter-Action
1965 · album
Waiting Game
1966 · album
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Biography
Throughout his career, Zoot Sims was famous for epitomizing the swinging musician, never playing an inappropriate phrase. He always sounded inspired, and although his style did not change much after the early 1950s, Zoot's enthusiasm and creativity never wavered. Zoot's family was involved in vaudeville, and he played drums and clarinet as a youth. His older brother, Ray Sims, developed into a fine trombonist who sounded like Bill Harris. At age 13, Sims switched permanently to the tenor, and his initial inspiration was Lester Young, although he soon developed his own cool-toned sound. Sims was a professional by the age of 15, landing his first important job with Bobby Sherwood's Orchestra, and he joined Benny Goodman's big band for the first time in 1943; he would be one of BG's favorite tenormen for the next 30 years. He recorded with Joe Bushkin in 1944, and even at that early stage, his style was largely set. After a period in the Army, Sims was with Goodman from 1946-1947. He gained his initial fame as one of Woody Herman's "Four Brothers" during his time with the Second Herd (1947-1949). Zoot had brief stints with Buddy Rich's short-lived big band, Artie Shaw, Goodman (1950), Chubby Jackson, and Elliot Lawrence. He toured and recorded with Stan Kenton (1953) and Gerry Mulligan (1954-1956). Sims was also a star soloist with Mulligan's Concert Jazz Band of the early '60s and visited the Soviet Union with Benny Goodman in 1962. A freelancer throughout most of his career, Sims often led his own combos or co-led bands with his friend Al Cohn; the two tenors had very similar sounds and styles. Zoot started doubling on soprano quite effectively in the '70s. Through the years, he appeared in countless situations, and always seemed to come out ahead. Fortunately, Zoot Sims recorded frequently, leading sessions for Prestige, Metronome, Vogue, Dawn, Storyville, Argo, ABC-Paramount, Riverside, United Artists, Pacific Jazz, Bethlehem, Colpix, Impulse, Groove Merchant, Famous Door, Choice, Sonet, and a wonderful series for Pablo. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi