Stanley Turrentine: tenor saxophone
Billy Kaye: drums
Butch Cornell: organ
Lonnie L. Smith Jr.: electric piano
George Benson: guitar
Freddie Hubbard: trumpet
Ron Carter: bass
Richard "Pablo" Landrum: conga
Track Listing
Side 1
Sugar,
Sunshine Alley
Side 2
Impressions
Personnel: Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis (tenor
saxophone); Clark Terry, Richard Williams, Bob Bryant (trumpet); Melba
Liston, Jimmy Cleveland (trombone); Jerome Richardson, Oliver Nelson,
Eric Dolphy, George Barrow, Bob Ashton (reeds); Richard Wyands (piano);
Wendell Marshall (bass); Roy Haynes (drums).
Also check out www.jazzstage.net
Before he had an airport named after him, before he was on a postage stamp, before he became a universally celebrated star, before he recorded dozens of hits, before he changed the course of jazz and popular music, before he ever picked up a trumpet or a cornet, Louis Armstrong had a hard-scrabble upbringing in his beloved hometown of New Orleans. Read complete story from gibson.com.
Comments:
"Great
place to visit, especially the stainless steel kitchen. "Pops" could
have lived anywhere in the world (he was easily a millionaire), but, he
chose to stay in that Corona, Queens neighborhood. You have got to go! --" Larry Reni Thomas
"Yes, it's a beautiful historic place ... very intimate look into a icon's everyday life." -- Barry Stuldivant
"Larry, yes the Corona - East Elmhurst neighborhood provided back and
front yards for the movers and shakers of migrating people of color
coming up from the south working and operating in Harlem.. He could
have lived anywhere .. but was at home here." -- Barry Stuldivant
"Does
anyone know how to direct My Family in making The Childhood Home Of Sir
Miles Dewey Davis..in East St. Louis Ill... a National Landmark?.... I
have talked to Everyone from Jesse Jackson Sr. to the former and
current Mayors.. Of E. St Louis.........Please contact Me @
Nefdrum@mac.com." -- Vince Wilburn, Jr. "I
forgot to mention the patio and garden next to the house. "Pops" bought
the house next to his and converted it into a beautiful Japanese garden
where he would entertain guests. Very nice and pleasant setting." --Larry Reni Thomas