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Lloyd Scott (musician)

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69:. As Lloyd Scott and His Orchestra, they recorded in 1927; these were Wells's first appearance on record. After 1929 Lloyd gave up active performance in the band and became its manager, and it performed as Cecil Scott's Bright Boys until its dissolution. 45:. At various times they performed as Cecil Scott and His Bright Boys and Lloyd Scott's Symphonic Syncopators, changing their name often (as was common among early jazz ensembles). Among the sidemen in this ensemble were 72:
While Cecil went on to perform widely as a sideman, Lloyd did little further work in music and was generally forgotten until a resurgence in interest in
103: 242: 217: 227: 247: 116: 207: 237: 232: 212: 98: 54: 159: 133: 222: 108: 8: 73: 112: 23: 188: 37:
co-led an ensemble which initially played locally in Ohio, then moved on to play in
50: 201: 94: 62: 58: 46: 34: 38: 66: 192: 42: 27: 199: 104:The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 93:Rye, Howard (2001). "Scott, Lloyd". In 200: 243:20th-century American male musicians 92: 33:In the 1920s Lloyd and his brother 13: 14: 259: 160:"Cecil Scott and his Bright Boys" 218:Musicians from Springfield, Ohio 134:"Lloyd Scott and his Orchestra" 228:20th-century American drummers 152: 126: 86: 1: 182: 248:American male jazz musicians 7: 10: 264: 208:American jazz bandleaders 76:jazz bands in the 1980s. 22:(born August 22, 1902 in 238:Jazz musicians from Ohio 107:(2nd ed.). London: 79: 30:drummer and bandleader. 233:American male drummers 213:American jazz drummers 16:American jazz musician 164:Red Hot Jazz Archive 138:Red Hot Jazz Archive 109:Macmillan Publishers 74:Harlem Renaissance 26:) was an American 166:. 3 November 2020 140:. 3 November 2020 118:978-1-56159-239-5 24:Springfield, Ohio 255: 176: 175: 173: 171: 156: 150: 149: 147: 145: 130: 124: 122: 90: 263: 262: 258: 257: 256: 254: 253: 252: 198: 197: 185: 180: 179: 169: 167: 158: 157: 153: 143: 141: 132: 131: 127: 119: 91: 87: 82: 17: 12: 11: 5: 261: 251: 250: 245: 240: 235: 230: 225: 220: 215: 210: 196: 195: 184: 181: 178: 177: 151: 125: 117: 95:Sadie, Stanley 84: 83: 81: 78: 51:Frankie Newton 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 260: 249: 246: 244: 241: 239: 236: 234: 231: 229: 226: 224: 221: 219: 216: 214: 211: 209: 206: 205: 203: 194: 190: 187: 186: 165: 161: 155: 139: 135: 129: 120: 114: 110: 106: 105: 100: 99:Tyrrell, John 96: 89: 85: 77: 75: 70: 68: 64: 63:Johnny Hodges 60: 56: 52: 48: 44: 40: 36: 31: 29: 25: 21: 168:. Retrieved 163: 154: 142:. Retrieved 137: 128: 102: 88: 71: 59:Roy Eldridge 55:Bill Coleman 32: 19: 18: 223:1902 births 189:Lloyd Scott 47:Dicky Wells 35:Cecil Scott 20:Lloyd Scott 202:Categories 183:References 170:3 November 144:3 November 39:Pittsburgh 67:Chu Berry 41:and then 193:Allmusic 101:(eds.). 115:  65:, and 43:Harlem 80:Notes 172:2020 146:2020 113:ISBN 28:jazz 191:at 204:: 162:. 136:. 111:. 97:; 61:, 57:, 53:, 49:, 174:. 148:. 123:‎ 121:.

Index

Springfield, Ohio
jazz
Cecil Scott
Pittsburgh
Harlem
Dicky Wells
Frankie Newton
Bill Coleman
Roy Eldridge
Johnny Hodges
Chu Berry
Harlem Renaissance
Sadie, Stanley
Tyrrell, John
The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians
Macmillan Publishers
ISBN
978-1-56159-239-5
"Lloyd Scott and his Orchestra"
"Cecil Scott and his Bright Boys"
Lloyd Scott
Allmusic
Categories
American jazz bandleaders
American jazz drummers
Musicians from Springfield, Ohio
1902 births
20th-century American drummers
American male drummers
Jazz musicians from Ohio

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