Artist's albums
Swing Is The Thing!
2000 · album
John & Joe
1995 · album
At the Helm
1994 · album
Flip Wails: The Best Of The Verve Years
1994 · compilation
Try A Little Tenderness
1992 · album
フィリップス・ヘッド
1988 · album
The Claw (1986)
1986 · album
On the Flipside
2021 · album
Spanish Eyes
1975 · album
Your Place or Mine?
2017 · album
Flipenstein
2017 · album
Flip Phillips Celebrates His 80th Birthday
2007 · album
Live At The Beowulf
2007 · album
Collates
1951 · album
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Biography
Flip Phillips, who angered some critics early on because he gained riotous applause for his exciting solos during Jazz at the Philharmonic concerts, for over 50 years was an excellent tenor saxophonist equally gifted on stomps, ballads, and standards. He played clarinet regularly in a Brooklyn restaurant during 1934-1939, was in Frankie Newton's group (1940-1941), and spent time in the bands of Benny Goodman, Wingy Manone, and Red Norvo. However, it was in 1944 that he had his breakthrough. As a well-featured soloist with Woody Herman's Herd (1944-1946), Phillips became a big star. His warm tenor was most influenced by Ben Webster but sounded distinctive even at that early stage. He toured regularly with Jazz at the Philharmonic during 1946-1957, scoring a bit of a sensation with his honking solo on "Perdido" and holding his own with heavy competition (including Charlie Parker and Lester Young). He occasionally co-led a group with Bill Harris, and that band was the nucleus of the ensemble that Benny Goodman used in 1959. Phillips then retired to Florida for 15 years, playing on just an occasional basis, taking up the bass clarinet as a double and making only a sporadic record date. But by 1975 he was back in music full-time, making quite a few records and playing at festivals and jazz parties. Even as he passed his 80th birthday, Flip Phillips had lost none of the enthusiasm or ability that he had a half-century earlier. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi