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Wellman Braud
Wellman Braud
American musician
1
Allan Jaffe
Allan Jaffe
African-American jazz musician
2
Steve Brown
Steve Brown
jazz musician best known for his work on string bass
3
George Lewis
George Lewis
American musician
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Walter Page
Walter Page
American jazz musician
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Sammy Rimington
Sammy Rimington
British musician
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Kid Howard
Kid Howard
American musician
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Placide Adams
Placide Adams
American jazz musician
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Josiah "Cie" Frazier
Josiah "Cie" Frazier
New Orleans jazz musician
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George "Sheik" Colar
New Orleans jazz musician
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Tony Garnier
Tony Garnier
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Kenny Clarke
Kenny Clarke
American jazz drummer
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Kid Thomas Valentine
Kid Thomas Valentine
American jazz musician
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Frank Foster
Frank Foster
American jazz musician and bandleader
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Reginald Veal
Reginald Veal
American musician
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Alcide "Slow Drag" Pavageau
Alcide "Slow Drag" Pavageau
New Orleans jazz musician
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John Kirby
John Kirby
jazz bassist
17
Chink Martin
Chink Martin
American jazz tuba player
18
Freddie Keppard
Freddie Keppard
American jazz musician
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Sidney Bechet
Sidney Bechet
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Louis Johnson
Louis Johnson
American bass guitarist, songwriter
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Cleveland Eaton
Cleveland Eaton
American musician
22
William Manuel Johnson
William Manuel Johnson
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Emanuel Sayles
Emanuel Sayles
American musician
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Walter Payton
American musician
25
Steve Masakowski
Steve Masakowski
musical artist
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Pops Foster
Pops Foster
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27
Charlie Haden
Charlie Haden
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28
John Robichaux
John Robichaux
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Richard Davis
Richard Davis
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30
Gregg Stafford
Gregg Stafford
American jazz musician and educator
31
Olympia Brass Band
Olympia Brass Band
musical group
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Rufus Reid
Rufus Reid
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Red Allen
Red Allen
American jazz musician, band leader
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Raymond Burke
Raymond Burke
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35
Jimmie Noone
Jimmie Noone
American musician
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Ray Brown
Ray Brown
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Nat Towles
Nat Towles
jazz musician
38
Lars Edegran
Lars Edegran
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Leroy Jones
Leroy Jones
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40
Albert Burbank
Albert Burbank
American jazz clarinetist
41
King Oliver
King Oliver
American jazz cornet player and bandleader
42
Joe Wilder
Joe Wilder
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43
Dirty Dozen Brass Band
Dirty Dozen Brass Band
American musical group; New Orleans, Louisiana, brass band
44
Red Callender
Red Callender
American string bass and tuba player, member of The Wrecking Crew
45
Percy Heath
Percy Heath
American musician
46
Frank Fields
Frank Fields
American musician
47
Buddy Collette
Buddy Collette
American musician
48
Punch Miller
Punch Miller
American musician
49
Thad Jones
Thad Jones
American jazz trumpeter
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Ray Anderson
Ray Anderson
American trombonist/jazz/trumpet player
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Pete Fountain
Pete Fountain
American clarinetist (1930-2016)
Chester Zardis
American jazz double-bassist

Chester Zardis

Intro
American jazz double-bassist
Genres
Music

Chester Zardis (May 27, 1900, New Orleans - August 14, 1990, New Orleans) was an American jazz double-bassist.

Zardis played bass from a young age, and studied under Billy Marrero of the Superior Orchestra. In his teens he was involved in a fistfight at a New Orleans theater, which resulted in his being sent to the Jones Waif Home. While there he began playing with another of the Home's residents, Louis Armstrong. He joined Buddy Petit's orchestra at age 16, and worked as a bassist in nightclubs and a tubist in brass bands in New Orleans in the 1920s, playing with Kid Rena, A.J. Piron, Punch Miller, Kid Howard, Jack Carey, Fate Marable, and Duke Dejan's Dixie Rhythm Band.

He was given the nickname "Little Bear" by Fats Pichon, a bandleader with whom Zardis played on the riverboat S.S. Capital in the 1930s. During that decade he also played with Count Basie in New York City, and recorded with George Lewis and Bunk Johnson. During the Second World War Zardis served in the Army, then worked briefly as a sheriff in the Western United States. Upon his return to New Orleans he played with Andy Anderson, but quit music between 1954 and 1964. Zardis worked as a Jailer in Jefferson Parish for several years.

When he returned to active performance, Zardis played often at Preservation Hall with Lewis and Percy Humphrey among many others. He continued to be a fixture of the New Orleans jazz scene up until his death in 1990, including several international tours.

Zardis was a master of the original New Orleans - style slap bass, achieving both clarity of intonation and a strong percussive beat. His skill placed him easily on a par with better known New Orleans slap bassists of his era like Pops Foster and Wellman Braud. Unlike Foster and Braud, however, Zardis remained in his home-town throughout his playing career and consequently was not as widely recorded or appreciated. Playing un-amplified string bass using gut strings in large halls or rooms with quirky acoustics posed significant challenges to New Orleans bassists. The short-statured Zardis, who was a powerful player and a creative soloist, overcame these handicaps by frequently turning his back to the audience in order to face his instrument into the back wall of the bandstand, thus bouncing his notes off the wall, and projecting his sound up and over the competing sounds of the louder front-line brass horn players and out over a room full of loud patrons. He employed this simple trick night after night during his years performing at Preservation Hall on St. Peter Street in the French Quarter.

Zardis was regularly featured in documentaries; he is himself the subject of three of them, Liberty Street Blues, Chester Zardis: Spirit of New Orleans, and Three Men of Jazz.