Artist's albums
Live at the Windsor Jazz Series 1981
2000 · album
Live at Sweet Basil
1997 · album
Doc Cheatham & Nicholas Payton
1997 · album
Duets & Solos
1995 · album
Groove Move
1994 · album
Swinging Down in New Orleans
1994 · album
Shorty & Doc
1994 · album
The Eighty-Seven Years of Doc Cheatham
1993 · album
You're a Sweetheart
1992 · album
At the Vineyard
2021 · album
It's a Good Life
2016 · album
Nonette in Rare Rehearsal
2016 · album
Live in New York, 1985
2013 · album
The Fabulous Doc Cheatham
2012 · album
At the Bern Jazz Festival
2008 · album
Doc Cheatham and Sammy Price in New Orleans
2008 · album
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Biography
Doc Cheatham was without question the greatest 90-year old trumpeter of all time; in fact, no brass player over the age of 80 had ever played with his power, range, confidence, and melodic creativity. Most trumpeters fade while in their 60s due to the physical difficulty of their instrument, but Cheatham did not truly find himself as a soloist until he was nearly 70. Doc Cheatham's career reaches back to the early '20s, when he played in vaudeville theaters backing such traveling singers as Bessie Smith and Clara Smith. He moved to Chicago, recorded with Ma Rainey (on soprano sax), played with Albert Wynn, subbed for Louis Armstrong (his main idol), and had his own group in 1926. After stints with Wilbur DeParis and Chick Webb, he toured Europe with Sam Wooding. Due to his wide range and pretty tone, Cheatham worked as a non-soloing first trumpeter with McKinney's Cotton Pickers and Cab Calloway throughout the 1930s. He spent time with Teddy Wilson's big band, and was with the commercially successful Eddie Heywood Sextet (backing Billie Holiday on some recordings). In the 1950s, Cheatham alternated between Dixieland (Wilbur DeParis, guest spots with Eddie Condon) and Latin bands (Perez Prado, Herbie Mann). He was with Benny Goodman during 1966-1967, but it was not until the mid-'70s that Cheatham felt truly comfortable as a soloist. Duet sets with pianist Sammy Price launched his new career, and until his death in 1997, he recorded fairly prolifically including dates for Sackville, New York Jazz, Parkwood, Stash, GHB, Columbia, and several European labels. Cheatham was also a charming singer whose half-spoken, half-sung vocals took nothing away from his chance-taking trumpet flights. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi