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Musicians - Kenny Dorham


McKinley Howard (Kenny) Dorham (August 30, 1924 - December 5, 1972) was an American jazz trumpeter, singer, and composer born in Fairfield, Texas.

Dorham was one of the most active bebop trumpeters. He played in the Dizzy Gillespie
and Billy Eckstine
orchestras, Kenny Clarke
's Be Bop Boys, the Lionel Hampton
and Mercer Ellington orchestras, the Charlie Parker
quintet, and the original Jazz Messengers
. He also backed Thelonious Monk
and Sonny Rollins
, and replaced the recently deceased Clifford Brown in the Max Roach
Quintet. A curiosity from this period is a 1958 session featuring Cecil Taylor
and John Coltrane
, artists with a style quite different from Dorham's. In addition to sideman work, he led his own groups, including the Jazz Prophets (formed shortly after Art Blakey
took over the Jazz Messengers name). The Jazz Prophets can be heard on the 1956 Blue Note live album Round About Midnight at the Cafe Bohemia.

In 1963 Dorham added the 26-year-old tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson
to his group, which later recorded Una Mas (the group also featured a young Tony Williams
). The friendship between the two musicians led to a number of other albums, such as Henderson's Our Thing and In'n'Out. Dorham recorded frequently throughout the sixties for Blue Note and Prestige Records, as leader and as sideman for Henderson, Jackie McLean
, Cedar Walton
, Andrew Hill, Milt Jackson
and others.

Dorham's talent is frequently lauded by critics and other musicians, but he never received the kind of attention from the jazz establishment that many of his peers did. For this reason, his name has become (in the words of writer Gary Giddins) "virtually synonymous with 'underrated.'"

During his final years Dorham suffered from kidney disease, of which he died.

He composed the jazz standard "Blue Bossa," which appears on Joe Henderson's album "Page One."

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[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Kenny Dorham ]



Some related entries: William Walker | BBC Radiophonic Workshop | Sergio George | Etilmon J. Stark | Toshihiko Sahashi | Renata Končić | Philippe de Monte | Chris Laythorpe | Bill Macrae | Lili Boulanger | Bob Martin

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