Artist's albums
Hot Snow
1999 · album
Bill Coleman Plus Four
1993 · album
Learning How to Disappear
2022 · album
Best Laid Plans
2022 · single
Street Life
2022 · single
In the Forties
2022 · compilation
Milestones of Legends Jazz Trumpets, Vol.5
2021 · album
Bill Coleman, trompette, Bill Coleman en France
2014 · single
Boogie To Funk - That's The Way I Like It
2013 · album
From Boogie To Funk
2013 · album
Jazz In Paris
2013 · album
Down by the Riverside (Evasion 1977)
2013 · album
Looking for What I Find
2012 · single
Rockabilly Woody
2012 · single
You Can't Buy Back Your Life
2010 · album
Black and Blue - EP
2010 · EP
Black and Green - EP
2010 · EP
Black and Red - EP
2009 · EP
Really I Do (Toulouse 1980)
2008 · album
Front Porch Songs
2007 · album
I'll Tear My Own Walls Down
2007 · album
The Complete Philips Recordings
2005 · album
The Three C's
2003 · album
A Long Time Coming
2003 · single
Turn Your Radio On!
2003 · album
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Biography
A mellow-toned swing trumpeter with a distinctive sound and a lyrical style, Bill Coleman was a consistent if never particularly famous musician. In 1927, he went to New York with Cecil and Lloyd Scott's band, with whom he made his recording debut. He worked with Luis Russell (1929-1932) and Charlie Johnson, and then in 1933 traveled to France with Lucky Millinder. Coleman recorded with Fats Waller (1934) and played with Teddy Hill's Orchestra (1934-1935), but then moved to France for the first time in 1935. While overseas, he recorded frequently as a leader (really coming into his own), with Willie Lewis' Orchestra, and on dates with Django Reinhardt. He ventured as far as Bombay, and spent 1938-1940 in Egypt with Herman Chittison. Returning to New York, Coleman played with Benny Carter, Teddy Wilson, Andy Kirk, Mary Lou Williams, and John Kirby during 1940-1945, and recorded with Lester Young and Coleman Hawkins (both in 1943). However, he preferred life in Europe and, after a period with groups led by Sy Oliver and Billy Kyle, in 1948, Coleman moved permanently back to France, staying active and recording fairly regularly up until his death in 1981. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi