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Arthur Prysock
During his prolific 43-year recording career, romantic crooner Arthur Prysock was heard primarily in the company of big bands or string sections. On his nearly 60 albums, mostly for the Old Town label, Prysock found his deep, velvety tones cushioned with violins or brass. His tender music has been a staple of jazz radio in the wee hours of the morning, and of cheek-to-cheek dancing in smoke-filled cocktail lounges. Arthur Prysock, Jr. was born in South Carolina and raised on a farm in North Carolina. Leaving home at age 16, he landed a job with an aircraft company in Hartford, Connecticut, which lasted until the firm found out he was underage. He then found a job as a cook and, at night, sang with a band around Hartford. "I became the biggest thing up there in a year’s time," he recalls. "One day, Buddy Johnson’s band came through, and his singer was sick, so I asked Buddy if I could sing a song with him. And he said. ‘Do you know any of my songs?’ I said, ‘Yes, I know them all; I sing them nightly.’ When he introduced me, the auditorium went wild, because I was a local boy. In the end, I sang with him all night. He paid me 25dollars, and that was the most money I had ever made." Johnson’s blues-based orchestra was one of the most popular black big bands in America, and Prysock remained with it from 1944 until 1952, scoring such hits as "They All Say I’m the Biggest Fool," "I Wonder Where Our Love Has Gone," "Jet, My Love," and "At Last." Though Prysock’s hits with Johnson helped to establish his reputation as one of the quintessential balladeers in the history of American popular music, he received no royalties for them. "I was just a band vocalist," he explains. "The bandleader made all the money." Since leaving Johnson in 1952, Prysock was his own boss. He recorded for Decca and Mercury before beginning a long association with the Old Town label. Prysock’s 1962 Old Town recording of "I Worry About You" became his biggest hit, and he remade the song a few years later with the Count Basie band for Verve. In his 43 years on the road, Prysock lost none of his vocal strength or rich resonance. Indeed, he gained greater control of his voice since he gave up smoking in ’85.
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Arthur Prysock: The Milestone Years
by Dave Nathan
Arthur Prysock lived in that murky area between jazz and R & B. He had a romantic bass/baritone voice which he applied with distinction to ballads in a manner comparable to Johnny Hartman. Prysock was less smooth than Hartman and had more of a throbbin' hitch in his voice which one also hears in Lou Rawls. At the same time he could go to upbeat R & B without missing a beat, working well with the instruments which characterize that ...
Continue ReadingJazz Musician of the Day: Arthur Prysock
Source:
Michael Ricci
All About Jazz is celebrating Arthur Prysock's birthday today!
During his prolific 43-year recording career, romantic crooner Arthur Prysock was heard primarily in the company of big bands or string sections. On his nearly 60 albums, mostly for the Old Town label, Prysock found his deep, velvety tones cushioned with violins or brass. His tender music has been a staple of jazz radio in the wee hours of the morning, and of cheek-to-cheek dancing in smoke-filled cocktail lounges. Arthur Prysock, ...
read more
Jazz Musician of the Day: Arthur Prysock
Source:
Michael Ricci
All About Jazz is celebrating Arthur Prysock's birthday today!
During his prolific 43-year recording career, romantic crooner Arthur Prysock was heard primarily in the company of big bands or string sections. On his nearly 60 albums, mostly for the Old Town label, Prysock found his deep, velvety tones cushioned with violins or brass. His tender music has been a staple of jazz radio in the wee hours of the morning, and of cheek-to-cheek dancing in smoke-filled cocktail lounges. Arthur Prysock, ...
read more
Jazz Musician of the Day: Arthur Prysock
Source:
All About Jazz is celebrating Arthur Prysock's birthday today!
During his prolific 43-year recording career, romantic crooner Arthur Prysock was heard primarily in the company of big bands or string sections. On his nearly 60 albums, mostly for the Old Town label, Prysock found his deep, velvety tones cushioned with violins or brass. His tender music has been a staple of jazz radio in the wee hours of the morning, and of cheek-to-cheek dancing in smoke-filled cocktail lounges. Arthur Prysock, ...
read more
Jazz Musician of the Day: Arthur Prysock
Source:
All About Jazz is celebrating Arthur Prysock's birthday today!
Arthur Prysock
Arthur Prysock - vocals (1929 - 1997) During his prolific 43-year recording career, romantic crooner Arthur Prysock was heard primarily in the company of big bands or string sections. On his nearly 60 albums, mostly for the Old Town label... more
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Jazz Musician of the Day: Arthur Prysock
Source:
Michael Ricci
All About Jazz is celebrating Arthur Prysock's birthday today!
JAZZ MUSICIAN OF THE DAY Arthur Prysock
Arthur Prysock - vocals (1929 - 1997) During his prolific 43-year recording career, romantic crooner Arthur Prysock was heard primarily in the company of big bands or string sections. On his nearly 60 albums, mostly for the Old Town label... more
Website | Videos | Articles
Follow Arthur Prysock
Put AAJ's Musician of the ...
read more
Jazz Musician of the Day: Arthur Prysock
Source:
Michael Ricci
All About Jazz is celebrating Arthur Prysock's birthday today!
JAZZ MUSICIAN OF THE DAY Arthur Prysock
Arthur Prysock - vocals (1929 - 1997) During his prolific 43-year recording career, romantic crooner Arthur Prysock was heard primarily in the company of big bands or string sections. On his nearly 60 albums, mostly for the Old Town label... more
Website | Videos | Articles
Join Arthur Prysock's fan network
Put AAJ's Musician ...
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