Red Nichols (born May 8, 1905, Ogden, Utah, USA – died June 28, 1965, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA) was an American jazz cornettist, composer, and jazz bandleader.
Jazz legend Red Nichols was perhaps one of the most prolific recording artists in history. In the 1920s alone, the cornetist appeared on over 4,000 recordings, working with almost every important musician of his time. Though his style of playing was influenced by Bix Beiderbecke, Nichols was a better, more polished musician. His contribution to the early days of jazz cannot be overstated. Few artists can even come close to equaling his accomplishments.
Nichols studied music under his father, a music professor at Weber College, and mastered a variety of instruments although he favored the cornet. As a teen he won a music scholarship to Culver Military Academy and played in its band before being expelled for smoking. Returning home to Utah, he worked in various pit orchestras, joining Ray Stillson in 1922. Later that year he left Stillson for a Midwestern ensemble called the Syncopating Five, a seven-piece group that was later billed as the Royal Palms Orchestra, and toured across country with them.
In 1923 Nichols settled in New York, where he met trombonist Miff Mole who became a permanent fixture in Nichols' various groups. Nichols most famously recorded under the name Red Nichols And His Five Pennies, but the same group of musicians also recorded under many different pseudonyms, including the Louisiana Rhythm Kings, the Charleston Seven, the Arkansas Travelers, Miff Mole's Molers, The Hottentots, The Tennessee Tooters, and The Red Heads. The list of top musicians who worked with Nichols is long. They include Benny Goodman, Jimmy Dorsey, Tommy Dorsey, Glenn Miller, Jack Teagarden, Pee Wee Russell, Eddie Lang, Joe Venuti, Adrian Rollini, and Gene Krupa. During the 1920's Nichols also led pit orchestras for two George Gershwin Broadway shows, Girl Crazy and Strike Up the Band, and played with a variety of other bandleaders, including Paul Whiteman, Donald Voorhees, Cass Hagan, Vincent Lopez, Henry Halstead, Ross Gorman, Harry Reser, and Bennie Krueger, as well as with the group the California Ramblers.
In the 1930's Nichols formed his own big band, which appeared on both Bob Hope's radio program and the Kellogg College Prom in addition to regular broadcasts from Cleveland's Golden Pheasant restaurant. Vocalists were Frances Stevens, Ernie Mathias, and Tony Sacco. Around 1940 Nichols took advantage of the swing craze and updated his sound, though he still featured a Dixieland base. The new band recorded for Bluebird (3), with Bill Darnell and Harry Jaeger providing vocals. The orchestra sounded promising when it debuted but soon floundered. By 1941 it featured an entirely new line-up, including a [a349517] sound-alike by the name of Penny Banks. After a few failed dates in Boston, Nichols gave up the band, selling it to Anson Weeks in 1942.
Nichols briefly found work as a member of the Casa Loma Orchestra before retiring to Hollywood, where he led several small groups throughout the rest of the 1940's and into the 1950's. The highly-fictional 1959 biographical film The Five Pennies, starring Danny Kaye, brought renewed interest in his career and prompted Nichols to put together a new Five Pennies.
2021
Acrobat
4xCD, Comp, RM
2013
Retrospective Records
2xCD, Comp
2011
Jazz Oracle
3xCD, Comp, Mono
2011
Jazz Oracle
3xCD, Comp, Mono
2011
Jazz Oracle
3xCD, Comp, Mono
2008
Classics (11)
CD, Comp, Mono
2005
Audiophonic (3)
2xCD, Comp
2004
Weton-Wesgram
2xCD, Comp
2004
Classics (11)
CD, Comp
2003
Classics (11)
CD, Comp
2002
Classics (11)
CD, Comp
2002
Classics (11)
CD, Comp
2001
Past Perfect Silver Line
CD, Comp
2001
Classics (11)
CD, Comp
1999
Biograph
CD, Comp
1999
Marshall Cavendish
CD, Comp
1998
History
2xCD, Comp, RM
1998
Retrieval
CD, Comp, RM
1998
Hep Records (3)
CD, Comp, Mono, RM
1996
Best Of Jazz
CD, Album
1994
Biograph
CD, Comp
1991
Tax
CD, Comp
1990
EPM Musique, Jazz Archives (2)
CD, Comp
1989
Pickwick Entertainment, Inc.
CD
1988
Broadway Intermission
LP, Album
1987
Affinity
LP, Comp
1987
1986
Classic Jazz Masters (3)
LP, Comp
1986
RCA
2xLP, Comp, RE
1986
1984
Broadway Intermission
LP, Comp, Mono
1984
Classic Jazz Masters (3)
LP, Comp
1984
Swingtime Video, Swingtime Video
VHS, Comp, NTSC
1983
Gaps
LP, Comp, Mono
1982
Saville Records
LP, Comp, Mono
1982
1980
RCA
LP, Comp
1980
Broadway Intermission
LP, Comp, Mono
1980
Classic Jazz Masters (3)
LP, Comp
1979
Jazz Archives, Jazz Archives
LP, Comp
1979
Sunbeam (3)
LP, Comp
1978
Broadway Intermission
LP, Comp
1978
Classic Jazz Masters (3)
LP, Comp, Mono
1977
1976
Calliope (3)
LP
1976
1976
1975
Jazz Studies
LP, Comp
1974
1974
1973
Fountain Records (5)
2xLP, Comp
1971
1970
VJM
LP, Comp
1962
Fontana
10", Comp
1960
1959
Dot Records
7", EP, Smplr
1959
Dot Records
7", EP
1959
Capitol Records, Capitol Records
LP, Comp, Promo
1959
1959
1959
1959
1958
1957
Capitol Records
7", EP
1955
London Records
10", Comp, Mono
1954
Riverside Records
10"
1947
V Disc
12"
1928
Vocalion (2)
Shellac, 10"
1927
World Record Club
LP, Mono, Club
Spokane Records (3)
LP
KCKN
Acetate, 12", Transcription
Coral, Coral
7", EP, Comp, Mono
Everest, Everest, Everest, Olympic Records (4)
3xLP, Comp
Riverside Records
LP, Comp, Mono
Philips, Philips
LP, Comp
Broadway Intermission
LP
Broadcast Tributes
LP, Album, Mono
Parlophone
Shellac, 10"
Capitol Records
Shellac, 10"
Jazz Oracle
CD, Comp, RM
Village
CD, Comp, Mono
Only For Collectors
10", Comp, Mono
Capitol Records
7"
Picc-A-Dilly
LP, Comp
La Brea
Reel, 4tr Stereo, 5" Reel
Bella Musica
Cass, Comp
Riverside Records
LP, Comp, Mono, Promo
The Intense Music
4xCD
Columbia
Shellac, 10"
2021
2018
Essential Jazz Classics
2xCD, Comp
2015
2014
Moochin' About
6xCD, Comp, RM + Box
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