Frank Socolow

Frank Socolow

Frank Socolow ca. June 1947
(© William P. Gottlieb)
Background information
Birth name Frank Socolow
Born (1923-09-18)September 18, 1923
Origin New York City, United States
Died April 30, 1981(1981-04-30) (aged 57)
Genres Jazz
Instruments tenor saxophone, alto saxophone, oboe
Years active 19411981
Labels Duke Records, Bethlehem Records

Frank Socolow (September 18, 1923 April 30, 1981), born in New York City, was a jazz saxophonist and oboist, noted for his tenor playing.

Socolow began his career in the early 40s playing in swing bands led by Georgie Auld, Ted Fio Rito, Roy Stevens, Van Alexander and Shep Fields. In 1944 he landed the first of three stints (the others being in 1948 and 1956–57) with Boyd Raeburn's Orchestra, recording a number of records. In 1945 he recorded a session as leader (the first of only two) with Freddie Webster and a young Bud Powell for Duke Records.

He was a member of Buddy Rich's short-lived big band, toured Scandinavia 1947-48 with Chubby Jackson, joined Artie Shaw's big band 1949-50, and throughout the late 40s and the 50s recorded with a wide variety of artists including the aforementioned, Johnny Bothwell, Charlie Ventura, Gene Krupa, Sal Salvador, Maynard Ferguson, Terry Gibbs, Phil Woods, Cecil Payne, Manny Albam, Hal McKusick, Johnny Richards, Bill Russo, Joe Morello, and Bobby Scott. His second record session as leader, and only full album release, Sounds by Socolow, came in 1956 for Bethlehem Records, with arrangements by Bill Holman, Manny Albam, and Sal Salvador, the latter also contributing guitar. Socolow died in New York in 1981.[1][2]

Discography

As sideman

With Manny Albam

With Terry Gibbs

With Gene Krupa

With Phil Woods and Cecil Payne

References

  1. Pujol, Jordi (2005). New York Journeyman - Complete Recordings (CD bookle). Frank Socolow. Spain: Fresh Sound. FSR-CD 387.
  2. Yanow, Scott. "Frank Socolow". Allmusic. Retrieved 2009-05-29.
  3. 1 2 3 Togashi, Nobuaki; Matsubayashi, Kohji; Hatta, Masayuki. "Bud Powell Discography". jazzdisco.org. Retrieved 2009-05-29.
  4. Togashi, Nobuaki; Matsubayashi, Kohji; Hatta, Masayuki. "Bethlehem Deluxe series". jazzdisco.org. Retrieved 2009-05-29.


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