0
Red Nichols
Red Nichols
American jazz musician
1
Jim Lowe
Jim Lowe
American singer-songwriter
2
The Four Aces
The Four Aces
American male traditional pop music quartet
3
Art Mooney
Art Mooney
American singer
4
Bobby Day
Bobby Day
American rock and roll and R&B musician
5
The Love Unlimited Orchestra
The Love Unlimited Orchestra
Pop orchestral group
6
Bobby Lewis
Bobby Lewis
American musician
7
Papa Bue
Papa Bue
Danish trombonist and bandleader
8
Ralph Marterie
Ralph Marterie
Italian musician
9
Edna Béjarano
Edna Béjarano
German singer
10
LeRoy Holmes
LeRoy Holmes
American conductor
11
Eddie Heywood
Eddie Heywood
American jazz pianist, songwriter
12
Warren Covington
Warren Covington
American big band trombonist
13
Don Azpiazú
Don Azpiazú
Cuban musician
14
Al Hirt
Al Hirt
American trumpeter and bandleader
15
Elton Britt
Elton Britt
country music guitarist and singer-songwriter
16
George Morgan
George Morgan
American musician
17
Jack Scott
Jack Scott
Canadian singer
18
Cozy Cole
Cozy Cole
American musician
19
Jimmy Elledge
Jimmy Elledge
American country musician
20
Nino Tempo
Nino Tempo
American actor, musician and singer
21
Franck Pourcel
Franck Pourcel
French easy listening musician
22
Ohio Players
Ohio Players
American funk and R&B band
23
Rhythm Heritage
Rhythm Heritage
24
The Tempters
The Tempters
Japanese Group Sounds Band (1967-1970)
25
Hugo Winterhalter
Hugo Winterhalter
American musician
26
Harry James
Harry James
American trumpeter, big band leader
27
The J.B.'s
The J.B.'s
band
28
Otis Williams and the Charms
Otis Williams and the Charms
29
Robert John
Robert John
American singer-songwriter
30
Joey Dee and the Starliters
Joey Dee and the Starliters
American musical group
31
Joe Dowell
Joe Dowell
American singer
32
Gary Puckett & The Union Gap
Gary Puckett & The Union Gap
American pop/rock band
33
Lucille Starr
Lucille Starr
Canadian singer
34
Neil Reid
Neil Reid
Scottish singer; child singing star
35
Ernie Fields
Ernie Fields
African American trombonist, pianist, arranger and bandleader
36
Gene Austin
Gene Austin
American singer and songwriter (1900-1972)
37
R. B. Greaves
R. B. Greaves
American singer
38
J. Frank Wilson and the Cavaliers
J. Frank Wilson and the Cavaliers
39
Joe Hinton
Joe Hinton
American musician
40
Freddy Cannon
Freddy Cannon
American rock and roll singer
41
Buddy Greco
Buddy Greco
American singer and pianist
42
Ned Miller
Ned Miller
American country music singer-songwriter
43
Marvin Rainwater
Marvin Rainwater
American country and rockabilly singer and songwriter
44
The Hilltoppers
The Hilltoppers
45
Brian Hyland
Brian Hyland
American pop singer
46
Jewel Akens
Jewel Akens
American singer and record producer
47
Emilio Pericoli
Emilio Pericoli
Italian singer
48
Jerry Keller
Jerry Keller
American musician
Pee Wee Hunt
American musician

Pee Wee Hunt

Intro
American musician
Genres
Record Labels
Awards Received
star on Hollywood Walk of Fame

Walter Gerhardt "Pee Wee" Hunt (May 10, 1907 – June 22, 1979) was an American jazz trombonist, vocalist, and bandleader. Hunt was born in Mount Healthy, Ohio. He developed a musical interest at an early age, as his mother, Sadie, played the banjo and his father, Edgar C., played violin. He had a younger sister, Marian, and younger brother, Raymond. The teenage Hunt was a banjoist with a local band while he was attending college at Ohio State University where he majored in Electrical Engineering, and during his college years he switched from banjo to trombone. He graduated from the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music. He joined Jean Goldkette's Orchestra in 1928.

Pee Wee Hunt was the co-founder and featured trombonist with the Casa Loma Orchestra, but he left the group in 1943 to work as a Hollywood radio disc jockey before joining the Merchant Marine near the end of World War II. He returned to the West Coast music scene in 1946. His "Twelfth Street Rag" was a three million-selling, number one hit in September 1948. He was satirized as Pee Wee Runt and his All-Flea Dixieland Band in Tex Avery's animated MGM cartoon Dixieland Droopy (1954). His second major hit was "Oh!" (1953), his second million-selling disc, which reached number three in the Billboard chart.

At age 72, Hunt died after a long illness in Plymouth, Massachusetts. Hunt and his wife, Ruth, had a daughter, Holly, and a son, Lawrence.