Billy Valentine

Musical artist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

William A. Valentine (born December 16, 1925), also known as Billy Valentine and Billy Vee,[1] is an American blues, R&B and jazz pianist and singer.

Born
William A. Valentine

(1925-12-16) December 16, 1925 (age 100)
Genres
  • Blues
  • R&B
  • jazz
OccupationMusician
InstrumentPiano
Quick facts Born, Genres ...
Billy Valentine
Born
William A. Valentine

(1925-12-16) December 16, 1925 (age 100)
Genres
  • Blues
  • R&B
  • jazz
OccupationMusician
InstrumentPiano
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Valentine was born in Birmingham, Alabama on December 16, 1925.[1][2] In 1948, Valentine replaced Charles Brown in Johnny Moore's Three Blazers,[3] then featuring jazz guitarist Oscar Moore. In 1950 that line-up did a couple of recording sessions for RCA Victor before embarking on a 50-date tour.[4] The "R & B Blue Notes" section of the May 27, 1950 issue of The Billboard, in announcing the tour, stated that Valentine had also recorded for Mercury Records[4] (Mercury 8173[5]). The note added that the Blazers would be joined by Hal "Cornbread" Singer for part of the tour.[4] The same line-up accompanied Mari Jones, Maxwell Davies (probably) and the former Nat King Cole Trio bassist Johnny Miller for a recording session in Los Angeles in 1952.[6]

In 1956, as Billy Vee, he recorded for King Records.[1]

In 1958, Valentine appeared as pianist on a February 1958 New York recording session with Bubber Johnson, Eric Dixon, Charles Jackson, Skeeter Best, Ruth Berman, Wendell Marshall and Panama Francis, accompanied by a choir.[6]

Coltrane

Jazz saxophonist Big Nick Nicholas mentioned to jazz archivist Phil Schaap a 1949/1950 New York recording session at which Valentine led a group featuring John Coltrane.[7] Other musicians at session were possibly John Collins or Floyd Smith on guitar, possibly Ray Brown on bass and possibly Charles "Specs" Wright on drums.[7]

References

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