0
Marshal Royal
Marshal Royal
American musician
1
Buddy Collette
Buddy Collette
American musician
2
Curtis Mosby
Curtis Mosby
American musician
3
Jake Porter
Jake Porter
American musician, record label owner
4
Ed Cassidy
Ed Cassidy
American rock musician
5
Dick Jurgens
Dick Jurgens
American swing music bandleader and composer
6
Paul Desmond
Paul Desmond
American recording artist; jazz musician
7
Kai Eckhardt
Kai Eckhardt
German musician
8
Phil Lesh
Phil Lesh
American musician
9
Roscoe Mitchell
Roscoe Mitchell
American jazz musician
10
Donald Garrett
Donald Garrett
American musician and clarinetist
11
Frank Emilio Flynn
Frank Emilio Flynn
Cuban composer, pianist and jazz musician (1921-2001)
12
Darnell Howard
Darnell Howard
American musician
13
Jack Purvis
Jack Purvis
American musician
14
Lu Watters
Lu Watters
American mineral collector, jazz trumpeter, bandleader
15
Cal Tjader
Cal Tjader
American Latin jazz musician, recording artist
16
John Serry Jr.
John Serry Jr.
American pianist and composer; son of John Serry, Sr.
17
Barre Phillips
Barre Phillips
American bassist
18
Don Byron
Don Byron
American musician
19
James Reese Europe
James Reese Europe
American jazz musician and United States Army officer
20
Jimmy Dorsey
Jimmy Dorsey
American clarinetist, alto saxophonist, bandleader, and composer, brother of Tommy Dorsey
21
Jimmie Noone
Jimmie Noone
American musician
22
Stefan Lessard
Stefan Lessard
American musician
23
Jimmy Witherspoon
Jimmy Witherspoon
American jump blues singer
24
Bunny Berigan
Bunny Berigan
American musician
25
Rent Romus
Rent Romus
American musician
26
Johnny Heartsman
Johnny Heartsman
American electric blues and soul blues musician
27
Buster Williams
Buster Williams
American musician
28
We Five
We Five
American folk rock group
29
Count Basie
Count Basie
American jazz musician, bandleader, and composer (1904-1984)
30
Pete Sears
Pete Sears
British musician
31
Milt Hinton
Milt Hinton
American musician and photographer
32
Machito
Machito
Latin jazz musician
33
The Klezmorim
The Klezmorim
klezmer band
34
William Manuel Johnson
William Manuel Johnson
American double bassist
35
John Kahn
John Kahn
American bass guitarist
36
Benny Goodman
Benny Goodman
American jazz musician, band leader
37
Jerry Dodgion
Jerry Dodgion
American musician
38
Bob Stewart
Bob Stewart
American musician
39
Pony Poindexter
Pony Poindexter
American musician
40
Don Byas
Don Byas
American musician
41
Gregg Bissonette
Gregg Bissonette
American drummer
42
Jess Stacy
Jess Stacy
American musician
43
Don Burrows
Don Burrows
Australian jazz musician
Vernon Alley
American jazz bassist

Vernon Alley

Intro
American jazz bassist
Genres
Music
Member of, past and present
Bohemian Club

Bohemian Club

San Francisco Arts Commission

San Francisco Arts Commission

San Francisco Human Rights Commission

San Francisco Human Rights Commission

Vernon Alley (May 26, 1915 – October 3, 2004) was an American jazz bassist.

Alley was born in Winnemucca, Nevada, and played football in high school and college. His brother, Eddie Alley, was a drummer; they played together often. Vernon played with Wes People in 1937 and with Saunders King (whose band was interracial) until the end of the decade. He briefly led his own band in 1940.

Around 1940, while in Lionel Hampton's band, Alley switched from double bass to electric upright bass, one of the first musicians to do so. In 1942 he moved to Count Basie's ensemble, where he played only for a few months and appeared in the film Reveille with Beverly.

Alley enlisted in the U.S. Navy as a musician in 1942 and after training at Camp Robert Smalls, he was assigned as part of a 45-piece regimental band to the Navy's PreFlight School located at St. Mary's College, in Moraga, California. Others who served in this band included Ernie and Marshal Royal, Jackie Kelso, Wilbert Baranco, Earl Watkins, and Buddy Collette.

After returning to civilian life, Alley put together an ensemble in San Francisco. He continued to play there and was an active member on local radio and in civic arts into the 1990s. He died there in 2004, having become "the most distinguished jazz musician in San Francisco history."