Bob Haggart

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Biography Wikipedia

Group Members: The John Bunch Trio, Gus Johnson, John Bunch With Phil Flanigan, Bud Freeman, Bobby Hackett & Vic Dickenson, Bobby Hackett, Bobby Hackett & His Orchestra, Bobby Hackett & Bob Wilber Sextet, Bobby Hackett (trompette) et son orchestre, Bobby Hackett And His Jazz Band, Ralph Sutton, Ralph Sutton & Kenny Davern, Ralph Sutton, Jay McShann, Ralph Sutton And Johnny Varro, Ralph Sutton And Dick Cary, Ralph Sutton & His Allstars, Ralph Sutton feat. Jon-Erik Kellso, Brian Ogilvie, Marty Grosz, Ralph Sutton Trio, Bob Wilber And The Scott Hamilton Quartet, Bob Wilber, Bob Wilber And the International March Of Jazz All-Stars, Bob Wilber And Dick Hyman, Bob Wilber And The Tuxedo Big Band Of Toulouse France, Bob Wilber & Kenny Davern, The Bob Wilber Big Band, The Bob Wilber & Dany Doritz Quintet, Bob Wilbur, Billy Butterfield, Billy Butterfield And His Orchestra, Billy Butterfield and His Modern Dixie Stompers, Bob Haggart's Swing Three, The All-Stars, Lou McGarity Quintet, John Bunch

Wikipedia:

Robert Sherwood Haggart (March 13, 1914, New York City – December 2, 1998, Venice, Florida) was a dixieland jazz double bass player, composer and arranger. Although he is associated with dixieland he was in fact one of the finest rhythm bassists of the Swing Era.

Haggart was a founder-member of the Bob Crosby Band (1935), arranging and part-composing several of the band's big successes, including "What's New?", "South Rampart Street Parade", "My Inspiration", and "Big Noise from Winnetka".

He remained with the band until 1942. He then worked as a studio musician in New York and recorded with Billie Holiday, Duke Ellington, Benny Goodman and Ella Fitzgerald; his arrangements can be heard on Ella's Decca release "Lullabies of Birdland". During the 1950s, Haggart organised, with Yank Lawson, a regular series of small band recordings and also arranged many of the tunes for Louis Armstrong's 1956-7 four-volume LP recreation set.

Bob Crosby also used this ensemble as the core of many groups, including the band that recorded Haggart's arrangement of Porgy and Bess (1958). During the late 1960s he played frequently in bands organised by Bob Crosby.

He co-led, with Yank Lawson, The World's Greatest Jazz Band (1968–1978). From 1978 until shortly before his death, Haggart worked with own groups or as a free-lance musician in several jazz groups and toured all over the world. He wrote a tutor for double bass which has become a standard text.

Bibliography

Kragting, Ben. "Bob Haggart Interview" in Doctor Jazz Magazine 145 (1994), p. 10-13 (part 1) / Doctor Jazz Magazine 146 (1994), p. 10-15. (part 2) (Note: This is a Dutch jazz magazine, but the interview has been published in English)