Max Kaminsky (musician)

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Max Kaminsky, Trumpeter, was born in Brockton, Massachusetts, on Sept. 7, 1908. He worked in Boston from 1924, in Chicago from 1928 with George Wettling and Frank Teschemaker at the Cinderella Ballroom and in New York for a brief period in 1929 with Red Nichols. For the next five years he worked in commercially oriented dance bands, at the same time recording with Eddie Condon and Benny Carter's Chocolate Dandies (1933) and with Mezz Mezzrow (1933-4). He played with Tommy Dorsey (1936, 1938)and Artie Shaw (briefly in 1938), performed and recorded with Bud Freeman (1939-40) and worked again with Shaw (1941-3), who led a navy band with which Kaminsky toured the South Pacific.

From 1942 he took part in important concerts in New York that were organized by Condon at Carnegie Hall and Town Hall, and from the following year he played Dixieland with various groups. He also worked in the 1940s with Sidney Bechet, George Brunis, Art Hodes, Joe Marsala, Willie "the Lion" Smith, and Jack Teagarden.

Later, he worked in television, and led Jackie Gleason's personal band for several seasons, toured Europe with Teagarden's and Earl Hines' All Stars (1957), and performed at the Metropole and Ryan's in New York (at intervals from the late 1960s to 1983, the Newport Jazz Festival and the New York World's Fair (1964-5).

In 1963 he published "My Life in Jazz" with V. E. Hughes, a breezy, highly readable but somewhat incomplete autobiography (out of print).

In 1975-6 he made recordings as a leader that well illustrate his style, which is full-toned, economical and swinging in the manner of King Oliver, Freddy Keppard and Louis Armstrong.