Artist's albums
Pete Fountain Presents The Best Of Dixieland: Pete Fountain
2001 · compilation
Dixieland King
1998 · album
Live in Santa Monica - Dixie Swing
1998 · album
New Orleans All Stars
1997 · album
Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans
1996 · album
Live at Piper's Opera House
1993 · album
High Society
1992 · album
Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans
1991 · album
Pete Fountain Ultimate Collection
2023 · album
Mood Indigo
2022 · album
Super Jazz I
1975 · album
Creole Dixieland Jazz
2016 · album
Pete Fountain 1955-1957
2015 · album
Volume II
1974 · album
Music From Dixie
2011 · album
Pete's Pleasure - [The Dave Cash Collection]
2011 · album
When The Saints Go Marchin' In
2010 · album
That's A Plenty
2009 · album
Bourbon St. Magic
2008 · album
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Biography
One of the most famous of all New Orleans jazz clarinetists, Pete Fountain had the ability to play songs that he performed countless times (such as "Basin Street Blues") with so much enthusiasm that one would swear he had just discovered them. His style and most of his repertoire remained unchanged from the late '50s into the new millennium, yet he never sounded bored. In 1948, Fountain (who was heavily influenced by Benny Goodman and Irving Fazola) was a member of the Junior Dixieland Band and this was followed by a stint with Phil Zito and an important association with the Basin Street Six (1950-1954), with whom the clarinetist made his first recordings. In 1955, Fountain was a member of the Dukes of Dixieland, but his big breakthrough came when he was featured playing a featured Dixieland number or two on each episode of The Lawrence Welk Show during 1957-1959. After he left, he moved back to New Orleans, opened his own club, and played there regularly up until retiring from the nightclub business in early 2003. Fountain's finest recordings were a lengthy string for Coral during 1959-1965 (they turned commercial for a period after that). Fountain died in New Orleans in August 2016 at the age of 86. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi