Burnie Peacock
Alto Saxophone
Redirected from 'Bernie Peacock et son Orchestre'.Label | Issue | Format | Artist | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ace | CDCHD843 | CD | Wynonie Harris | Lovin' Machine |
Audio Lab | AL1524 | LP | Bull Moose Jackson | Bull Moose Jackson Sings his All-Time Hits |
- | AL1530 | - | Various Artists | The Great Swing Bands of The Forties |
Gusto | GD5040-X | |||
King | 4213 | single | Bull Moose Jackson | Three bones / All my love belongs to you |
- | 4359 | - | Henry Glover | I love you, I love you, I do / Baby, you've been wrong |
- | 4398 | - | Lucky Millinder | Who said Shorty wasn't coming back? / Clap your hands |
- | 4413 | - | Jimmie Mitchell | Song of the wanderer / Birmingham |
- | 4428 | - | - | When Summer is gone / Tonight you belong to me |
- | 4436 | - | Lucky Millinder | Mr. Trumpet man / The jumping jack |
- | 4462 | - | Bull Moose Jackson | Unless / End this misery |
- | 4472 | - | - | I'm lucky I have you / Cherokee boogie |
- | 4476 | - | Lucky Millinder | No one else could be / The grape vine |
- | 4496 | - | - | The right kind of lovin' / It's been a long, long time |
- | 4505 | - | Burnie Peacock | (It's no) Sin / Jealousy |
- | 4506 | - | - | Memories of you / Charmaine |
- | 4524 | - | Bull Moose Jackson | Nosey Joe / Sad |
- | 4543 | - | Burnie Peacock | El choclo / Here in my heart |
- | 4551 | - | Bull Moose Jackson | Bearcat blues / There is no greater love |
- | 4552 | - | Burnie Peacock | Dog days / My blue heaven |
- | 4555 | - | Wynonie Harris | Night train / Do it again, please |
- | 4557 | - | Lucky Millinder | Lord knows I tried / Heavy sugar |
- | 4565 | - | Wynonie Harris | Drinking blues / Adam come and get your rib |
- | 4571 | - | Lucky Millinder | Please be careful / Backslider's ball |
- | 4589 | - | - | When I gave you my love / Old spice |
- | 4634 | - | Bull Moose Jackson | Meet me with your black dress on / Try to forget him baby |
- | 4655 | - | - | If you'll let me / Hodge podge |
- | EP261 | EP | - | |
- | EP336 | - | Lucky Millinder | - |
- | LP627 | LP | Various Artists | Battle of the Blues, Volume 2 - Roy Brown vs. Wynonie Harris |
- | LP1086 | - | Wynonie Harris | Good Rockin' Blues |
Queen/King | 4100 | single | Bull Moose Jackson | Honeydripper / Hold him Joe |
- | 4102 | - | - | We ain't got nothin' but the blues / Bull Moose Jackson blues |
- | 4109 | - | - | Embraceable you / Just in case you change your mind |
- | 4112 | - | - | Buffalo shuffle / Shorty's got to go |
- | 4117 | - | Panama Francis | Three bones / Sweet slumber |
Route 66 | KIX-14 | LP | Bull Moose Jackson | Bull Moose Jackson(further titles not from King labels) |
Vogue | EPV1103 | EP | Wynonie "Mr. Blues" Harris | |
- | V2133 | single | - | Night train / Do it again, please |
- | V2166 | - | - | I like my baby's pudding / Adam come and get your rib |
- | V2168 | - | Bernie Peacock and his Orchestra | Dog days / My blue heaven |
- | V9021 | - | Lucky Millinder and his Orchestra | No one else could be / The grape vine |
- | LD115 | LP | Various Artists | Rendez-Vous Dansant a New-York |
- | V3053 | single | Lucky Millinder and his Orchestra | No one else could be / The grape vine |
- | V3090 | - | Bernie Peacock et son Orchestre | (It's no) Sin / Jealousy |
- | V3109 | - | Bull Moose Jackson | Cherokee boogie / Nosey Joe |
- | V3171 | - | Bernie Peacock | El choclo / Here in my heart |
- | V3184 | - | Wynonie "Mr. Blues" Harris | Night train / Do it again, please |
- | V3197 | - | Lucky Millinder and his Orchestra | Lord knows I tried / Heavy sugar |
- | V3211 | - | Wynonie "Mr. Blues" and his Orchestra | Drinking blues / Adam come and get your rib |
- | V3228 | - | Bernie Peacock | Dog days / My blue heaven |
- | V3324 | - | Bernie Peacock and his Orchestra | Memories of you / Charmaine |
- | V3325 | - | Lucky Millinder and his Orchestra | Please be careful / Backslider's ball |
Artist | Leader | Site | Date | Session |
---|---|---|---|---|
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Bernard L. "Burnie" Peacock (or Bernie, or Burney) (born June 2, 1921, Columbia, Tennessee) was an American jazz saxophonist.
Peacock learned to play clarinet in his youth before starting on alto saxophone as a teenager. By 1938 he had quit school in Tennessee to move to Detroit, playing in local bands, then joined Jimmy Raschel's band in Chicago. He enlisted in the United States Navy in 1942, playing in military bands until 1945. After the end of the war he played with Don Redman and worked extensively with Lucky Millinder's band between 1945 and 1953, including on smaller sessions with Millinder sidemen, directed by Panama Francis and Bull Moose Jackson. He then worked with Cab Calloway and joined Count Basie's orchestra briefly in 1948-49. He was with Bull Moose Jackson again in the early 1950s, and also led Earl Bostic's band while Bostic recovered from a car crash. Starting in 1952 he led his own band, which did USO tours for troops during the Korean War. Wikipedia