Label | Issue | Format | Artist | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ace | CDCHD830 | CD | Various Artists | Queens Of King - The King Girl Groups |
- | CDCHD1048 | - | - | Hunky Dory: King Vocal Groups, Vol. 3 |
Audio Lab | AL1524 | LP | Bull Moose Jackson | Bull Moose Jackson Sings his All-Time Hits |
Bethlehem | 1291 | single | Chris Connor | Blue silhouette / Miser's serenade |
- | 1293 | - | - | Ask me / Chiquita from Chi-Wah-Wah |
- | B1295 | |||
- | BCP56 | LP | Chris Connor | Chris |
- | BCP6004 | - | - | Lullabies of Birdland |
- | BEP114 | EP | - | |
Ember | EMB3347 | LP | #MISS | #MISS |
King | 1404 | single | Hot Lips Page | The Cadillac song / Ain't nothing wrong with that baby |
- | 4213 | - | Bull Moose Jackson | Three bones / All my love belongs to you |
- | 4373 | - | - | Sometimes I wonder / Time alone will tell |
- | 4412 | - | - | My beloved / Big fat Mamas are back in style again |
- | 4422 | - | - | Have you no mercy / Without your love |
- | 4433 | - | - | My little baby / Forget and forgive |
- | 4451 | - | - | Trust in me / Wonder when my baby's coming home |
- | 4462 | - | - | Unless / End this misery |
- | 4472 | - | - | I'm lucky I have you / Cherokee boogie |
- | 4616 | - | Hot Lips Page | What shall I do? / Jungle king |
- | 4792 | - | Lucky Millinder | It's a sad, sad feeling / Ow! |
- | 4803 | - | - | I'm here love / Goody good love |
- | 5244 | - | Beverly Ann Gibson | Call on me / Give me a chance |
- | 5258 | - | - | A heart full of you / Oh yes I love |
- | 5288 | - | - | Light up the fire / Wait and see |
- | 5315 | - | - | No other but you / The love we shared |
- | EP261 | EP | Bull Moose Jackson | |
London | HB-N1074 | LP | Chris Connor | - |
Parlophone | MSP6172 | single | Hot Lips Page | The Cadillac song / Ain't nothing wrong with that baby |
- | R4030 | - | - | The devil's kiss / Casanova cricket / The Cadillac song / Ain't nothing wrong with that baby |
Queen/King | 4100 | - | 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 |
- | 4124 | - | Annisteen Allen | Give it up / She lost her Re-bop |
- | 4126 | - | Sam Taylor | Big foot Sam from Birmingham / Bluer than blue |
- | 4128 | - | Annisteen Allen | Arkansas |
Route 66 | KIX-14 | LP | Bull Moose Jackson | Bull Moose Jackson(further titles not from King labels) |
Vogue | V3109 | single | - | Cherokee boogie / Nosey Joe |
Westside | WESA923 | CD | Various Artists | Fine Fine Baby: King's Queens |
Artist | Leader | Site | Date | Session |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ben "Bull Moose" Jackson | Bull Moose Jackson & his Buffalo Bearcats | New York, NY | August, 1945 | [session] |
Bernie Mackay | - | - | - | - |
Beverly Peer | - | - | - | - |
Burnie Peacock | - | - | - | - |
Harold "Money" Johnson | - | - | - | - |
Panama Francis | - | - | - | - |
Sir Charles Thompson | - | - | - | - |
Samuel Leroy Taylor, Jr. (July 12, 1916 – October 5, 1990), known as Sam "The Man" Taylor, was an American jazz and blues tenor saxophonist, whose honking style set the standard for tenor sax solos in both R&B and jazz.
Taylor was born in Lexington, Tennessee. He attended Alabama State University, where he played with the Bama State Collegians. He later worked with Scatman Crothers, Cootie Williams, Lucky Millinder, Cab Calloway, Ray Charles, Buddy Johnson, Louis Jordan and Big Joe Turner. Taylor was one of the most requested session saxophone players in New York recording studios in the 1950s. He also replaced Count Basie as the house bandleader on Alan Freed's radio series, Camel Rock 'n Roll Dance Party, on CBS.
Taylor played the saxophone solo on Turner's "Shake, Rattle and Roll". He also played on "Harlem Nocturne"; on "Money Honey", recorded by Clyde McPhatter and the Drifters in 1953; and on "Sh-Boom" by the Chords.
During the 1960s, he led a five-piece band, the Blues Chasers. In the 1970s, he frequently played and recorded in Japan.
Taylor died in 1990 in Crawford Long Hospital, Atlanta, Georgia. Wikipedia