Cliff Leeman
Drums
Label | Issue | Format | Artist | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
Audio Lab | AL1502 | LP | Pee Wee Erwin and Preacher Rollo | Dixieland Parade |
- | AL1509 | - | Dixieland All Stars | Tommy Reynolds |
- | AL1512 | - | Jimmy Rushing | Two Shades of Blues |
De Luxe | 6096 | single | Margie Day | Something told me / Dumpling dumpling |
Ember | NR5002 | LP | Various Artists | It's Real Trad, Dad |
Federal | 12275 | single | Jimmy Tyler Orchestra | Indian love call / Pink clouds |
Gusto | GD5037-X | |||
JSF | 786 | - | - | - |
- | 789 | - | - | - |
King | 4859 | single | Jack Dupree | She cooks me cabbage / Silent partner |
- | 4938 | - | - | Mail order woman / Big leg Emma's |
- | 5072 | - | Dossie Terry | Thunderbird / I got a watch dog |
- | 5086 | - | Little Jimmy Scott | When day is done / What sin |
- | 5104 | - | Jimmy Scott | Home / Somewhere down the line |
- | 5890 | - | The Lamplighters | Be bop wino / Thunderbird |
- | 15013 | - | Mary Lou Williams | Tisherome / Shorty Boo / Eccentric rag |
- | 15073 | - | Pee Wee Erwin | Music southern style |
- | 15074 | - | - | Shake it and break it / Mashuga over you |
- | 15075 | - | - | Tin roof blues / When the Saints go marching in |
- | 15076 | - | - | Tiger rag / Wolverine blues |
- | EP242 | EP | Pee Wee Erwin and The Village Five | Dixieland |
- | KS1084 | |||
- | LP510 | LP | Tommy Reynolds and his Band | Music for Happy Feet |
- | LP735 | - | Champion Jack Dupree | Champion Jack Dupree sings the Blues |
King Oldies | 15029 | single | Jack Dupree | Blues for everybody / Silent partner |
Parlophone | CGEP5 | EP | Pee Wee Erwin Village Five | |
- | GEP8521 | - | - | - |
- | PMD1063 | - | ||
Polydor | 2310110 | LP | Various Artists | Blues Story Anthology, Volume 1 |
Leader | Site | Date | Session | Role |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dossie Terry | New York, NY | July 18, 1957 | [session] | drums |
Jack Dupree | - | September 15, 1955 | [session] | - |
Jimmy Scott | - | July 26, 1957 | [session] | - |
Jimmy Tyler and his Orchestra | - | May 28, 1956 | [session] | - |
Margie Day | - | June 27, 1956 | [session] | - |
- | - | - | [session] | - |
Pee Wee Erwin & The Village Five | - | August 24, 1950 | [session] | - |
- | - | August 30, 1950 | [session] | - |
Tommy Reynolds and his Orchestra | - | October 6, 1955 | [session] | - |
- | - | December 12, 1955 | [session] | - |
Cliff Leeman (September 10, 1913 - April 26, 1986) was an American jazz drummer. His nickname was "Mr. Time".
Leeman, born in Portland, Maine played percussion with the Portland Symphony Orchestra at age 13, and toured as a xylophonist on the vaudeville circuit late in the 1920s. He first made his name in the jazz world working in the swing bands of Artie Shaw (1938–39), Glenn Miller (1939), Tommy Dorsey (1939), Charlie Barnet (1940–43), Johnny Long, and Woody Herman (1943–44). After a stint in the Army in 1944, he worked with Don Byas, John Kirby (1944–45), Raymond Scott, Jimmy Dorsey, and Ben Webster.
He left the music industry briefly before joining the Casa Loma Orchestra in 1947, later moving on to Charlie Barnet's orchestra (1949) and Bob Chester's big band ensemble (1949–50). He played on radio and television in the 1950s, in addition to playing live often with Eddie Condon and Bobby Hackett. Later associations include Pee Wee Erwin, Yank Lawson/Bob Haggart, Ralph Sutton, Billy Butterfield, Bob Crosby (1960), Wild Bill Davison (1962), Dukes of Dixieland (1963–64), Peanuts Hucko, Joe Venuti, The Kings of Jazz (1974), Bud Freeman, Don Ewell, the World's Greatest Jazz Band (1976–77), and Jimmy McPartland. He recorded several albums for Fat Cat Jazz in the 1970s. Wikipedia