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  1. Jimmie Noone (born April 23, 1895, near New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S.—died April 19, 1944, Los Angeles, California) was an American jazz clarinetist noted for his lyricism and refinement of technique. He is one of the three principal clarinetists of early jazz, the other two being Johnny Dodds and Sidney Bechet.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jimmie_NooneJimmie Noone - Wikipedia

    Jimmie Noone, Jr. (1938–1991), the oldest of Noone's three children, was a jazz clarinetist who made his professional debut in 1964. He made an album with John R. T. Davies in 1985 and began working with Jeannie and Jimmy Cheatham's Sweet Baby Blues Band in 1984.

  3. En 1926, comenzó a dirigir su propia orquesta al club Apex de Chicago. El pianista Earl Hines, de Pittsburgh, formó parte de la banda durante un tiempo. En 1935, Noone se trasladó a Nueva York para dirigir una efímera orquesta con Wellman Braud.

  4. 31 de jul. de 2021 · By the early 1940s, Noone was being featured in a conventional quartet that showcased his still viable playing. In 1943 Jimmie Noone moved to Los Angeles. He was enlisted for a four-song session by the Capitol Jazzmen, an all-star group that included Jack Teagarden and Billy May on trumpet.

  5. 23 de abr. de 2024 · Jimmie Noone, a pioneering figure in early jazz, is a name that might not resonate as loudly as Louis Armstrong or Duke Ellington, but his impact on the development of jazz, particularly in the realm of clarinet playing, is profound and enduring.

  6. Born 23 April 1895 in Cut Off, Louisiana, Jimmie Noone headed to New Orleans with his family at age fifteen, whence he switched from guitar to clarinet and studied with Lorenzo Tio and Sidney Bechet (age 13 at the time).

  7. Jimmie Noone: Chicago's Classic Jazz Clarinetist Jimmie Noone (1895-1944) has been an enigmatic figure in the early history of jazz. On the one hand his credentials are nearly unsurpassed: a clarinet student of the influential musician and teacher Lorenzo Tio, Jr., and of Sidney Bechet; a performer frequently selected for jazz work