Artist's albums
Don't Stop Now!
1994 · album
I'm Shooting High
1994 · album
Peaceful Thunder
1992 · album
Jazz Giants
1990 · album
Louie Bellson & His Jazz Orchestra
1987 · album
Cool, Cool Blue
1983 · album
Louie Bellson Jam With Blue Mitchell
1979 · album
Seven Come Eleven
2022 · album
Drum Kit Cafe
2022 · album
Breakthrough!
2022 · album
June 28-1959 At The Flamingo Hotel Volume 1
2006 · album
The Sacred Music of Louie Bellson
2006 · album
Skin Deep
1954 · album
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Biography
One of the great drummers of all time (and one of the few whose name can be said in the same sentence with Buddy Rich), Louie Bellson had the rare ability to continually hold one's interest throughout a 15-minute solo. He became famous in the 1950s for using two bass drums simultaneously, but Bellson was never a gimmicky or overly bombastic player. In addition to being able to drive a big band to exciting effect, Bellson could play very quietly with a trio and sound quite satisfied. Winner of a Gene Krupa talent contest while a teenager, Bellson was with the big bands of Benny Goodman (1943 and 1946), Tommy Dorsey (1947-1949), and Harry James (1950-1951) before replacing Sonny Greer with the Duke Ellington Orchestra. A talented writer, Bellson contributed "Skin Deep" and "The Hawk Talks" to Ellington's permanent repertoire. Bellson married Pearl Bailey in 1952, and the following year left Ellington to be her musical director. Bellson toured with Jazz at the Philharmonic (1954-1955), recorded many dates in the 1950s for Verve, and was with the Dorsey Brothers (1955-1956), Count Basie (1962), Duke Ellington (1965-1966), and Harry James (1966). He continued to be active, leading big bands (different ones on the East and West Coasts), putting together combos for record dates, giving clinics for younger drummers, and writing new music. Bellson recorded extensively for Roulette (early '60s), Concord, Pablo, and Music Masters. He died in February 2009 in Los Angeles at the age of 84. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi