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Mildred Bailey
Mildred Bailey
American jazz singer
1
Lennie Hayton
Lennie Hayton
American composer and conductor (1908-1971)
2
Seger Ellis
Seger Ellis
American musician
3
Bob Zurke
Bob Zurke
American jazz pianist
4
Eddie Lang
Eddie Lang
American jazz guitarist
5
Jimmy Dorsey
Jimmy Dorsey
American clarinetist, alto saxophonist, bandleader, and composer, brother of Tommy Dorsey
6
Victor Young
Victor Young
American composer, arranger, violinist and conductor, orchestra leader (1900-1956)
7
Paul Whiteman
Paul Whiteman
American jazz musician and radio personality
8
Joe Venuti
Joe Venuti
jazz violinist
9
James P. Johnson
James P. Johnson
American pianist and composer
10
Cozy Cole
Cozy Cole
American musician
11
Fud Livingston
Fud Livingston
American jazz clarinetist, saxophonist, arranger, and composer
12
Annette Hanshaw
Annette Hanshaw
American singer
13
Isham Jones
Isham Jones
American bandleader, saxophonist, bassist and songwriter
14
Count Basie
Count Basie
American jazz musician, bandleader, and composer (1904-1984)
15
Ben Pollack
Ben Pollack
American musician
16
Big Joe Turner
Big Joe Turner
American blues shouter
17
Chummy MacGregor
Chummy MacGregor
American musician
18
Harry Edison
Harry Edison
American trumpeter
19
Red Garland
Red Garland
American modern jazz pianist (1923-1984)
20
Samuel Charters
Samuel Charters
American music historian and musician
21
Bunny Berigan
Bunny Berigan
American musician
Joe Sullivan
American musician

Joe Sullivan

Intro
American musician
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Michael Joseph O'Sullivan (November 4, 1906 – October 13, 1971) was an American jazz pianist.

Sullivan was the ninth child of Irish immigrant parents. He studied classical piano for 12 years and at age 17, he began to play popular music in silent-movie theaters, on radio stations, and then with the dance orchestras where he was exposed to jazz. He graduated from the Chicago Conservatory and was an important contributor to the Chicago jazz scene of the 1920s. Sullivan's recording career began towards the end of 1927 when he joined McKenzie and Condon's Chicagoans. Other musicians in his circle included Jimmy McPartland, Frank Teschemacher, Bud Freeman, Jim Lanigan and Gene Krupa. In 1933, he joined Bing Crosby as his accompanist, recording and making many radio broadcasts.

He contracted tuberculosis in 1936 and while he was convalescing at a sanitarium in Monrovia in 1937, Crosby organized and appeared in a five-hour benefit for him at the Pan-Pacific Auditorium in Los Angeles on May 23, 1937 in front of an audience of six thousand. The show was broadcast over two different radio stations with fourteen bands attending (including those led by Woody Herman, Ray Noble, Jimmy Dorsey, Jimmy Grier, Louis Prima, Harry Owens, and Victor Young) and other performers included Connie Boswell, Johnny Mercer, Red Norvo, and Ella Logan. Approximately $3,000 was raised for Sullivan.

After suffering for two years with tuberculosis, he briefly rejoined Bing Crosby in 1938 and the Bob Crosby Orchestra in 1939. In 1940, when leading Joe Sullivan's Cafe Society Orchestra, he had a minor hit with "I've Got a Crush on You".

By the 1950s, Sullivan was largely forgotten, playing solo in San Francisco. Marital difficulties and excessive drinking caused Sullivan to become increasingly unreliable and unable to keep a steady job, either as band member or soloist.

The British poet (and jazz pianist) Roy Fisher celebrated Sullivan's playing with a poem, "The Thing About Joe Sullivan", regarded by some critics as one of the best poems about jazz. Fisher also used that title for a book of his selected poems, because (he said) he felt Sullivan was a neglected master who deserved to have his name on the cover of a book.