Lou Sino

Lou Sino
Birth name Louis Marcel Scioneaux
Born (1930-08-16)August 16, 1930
Algiers, Louisiana, United States
Died July 30, 1986(1986-07-30) (aged 55)
Genres Jazz, blues
Occupation(s) Musician
Instruments Trombone, guitar
Years active 1940s - 1986
Labels L.S.I, Bengal Records, Capitol
Associated acts Louis Prima, Sam Butera, Keely Smith, The Witnesses, Lou Sino And The Bengals , Rene Netto

Lou Sino (August 16, 1930 – July 30, 1986) was a jazz trombone player and singer who a member of various well-known jazz bands plus known for his time playing with Louis Prima and Sam Butera. He also released a number of recordings leading his own band, plus as a solo artist.

Background

Louis Marcel Scioneaux was born to parents Eyere and Florence Scioneaux in Algiers, Louisiana on August 16, 1930. He was the second born of six children. He went to Behrman High School and played in the high school band there. From the age of 13 he had been playing trombone and guitar.

He was married to wife Patricia for 33 years and with her he raised five children.[1]

Career

1940s to 1967

By the age of 17, he was playing at the Famous Door.[1] In 1956, Sino was in New Orleans, playing with musicians such as Dick Allen, trumpeter Stuart Bergen, banjo player, Tom Brown, and tenor saxophonist Francis A. Murray.[2]

In 1957, he joined Louis Prima's group.[3] To make Lou's surname easier to pronounce, Prima shortened the name from Scioneaux to Sino.[4] While a member of Prima's band, he was described as the rubber-faced trombonist,[5] and in a Billboard article as looking like an ultra-conservative bank clerk.[6]

Sino was also a member of The Witnesses that backed In a review of the Big Horn album by Sam Butera & The Witnesses that appeared in the October 20, 1958 edition of Billboard, Sino's trombone playing was noted on the tracks, "La Vie En Rose", "Hey There", and "Three Coins In The Fountain" [7]

In 1959, according to Down Beat magazine, the line-up of Prima's band was Sino (referred to there as Scioneaux) on trombone, Bobby Roberts on guitar, John Nagy on piano, Rolly De Orio on bass, and Paul Ferrara on drums.[8] He stayed with Loius Prima's group until 1967 which marked ten years with them.[3]

In 1967, Sino was again a member of The Witnesses, in a line up that included Sam Butera on vocals and tenor sax, Bobby Setzler on guitar, John Nagy on piano, Jimmy Vincent on drums, Rolly Dee on vocal and string bass, and Morgan Thomas on Aalto sax, valve trombone and flute.[9]

1968 onwards

By 1970, Sino was fronting his group, Lou Sino and the Bengals.[10] Their signature song was "Tiger Rag".[1] In November 1970, along with the Ronnioe Cole Trio, Maxine Sullivan and Eubie Blake, Sino and his group, Lou Sino and the Bengals played at a concert in honor of W.C. Handy in Muscle Shoals.[10] Sino and his band the Bengals were a popular host band in New Orleans. They played the Crossroads Convention in 1976.[11]

Sino's last years were spent playing with the Bengals, playing in the French Quarter of New Orleans. he played at venues such as the playing at the Mason Bourbon and at the Economy Hall in the Royal Sonesta Hotel up until 1986 which is when he died.[1]

Recordings

Solo and as bandleader

Albums
Singles

In groups

Backing

Presenting

(Note: some versions of the album have L.S.I. Presents the Sounds of Rene Netto)

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Westbank Musicians Hall of Fame, Inc. Louis Marcel Scioneaux a/k/a Lou Sino
  2. Howard-Tilton Memorial Library Hogan Jazz Archive Photography Collection, Sino, Lou (Louis M. Scioneaux)
  3. 1 2 That Old Black Magic: Louis Prima, Keely Smith, and the Golden Age of Las Vegas, By Tom Clavin Page 107
  4. Louis Prima, By Garry Boulard Page 110
  5. The Wall Street Journal, January 6, 2011 "Both Leading Man and Comic Relief" - By Will Friedwald
  6. Billboard, May 18, 1958 Page 11 Music News, NIGHT CLUB REVIEWS, Prima-Smith the Potentest at Copa
  7. 1 2 Billboard, October 20, 1958 Page 21 The Billboard's Music Popularity Charts ... PACKAGED RECORDS, THE BIG HORN, Sam Butera & The Witnesses Capitol T 1098
  8. Downbeat 75th Anniversary Collectors Edition Page 110 The Archives, Backstage With Louis Prima and Keely Smith February 19, 1959
  9. The Italian Crooners Bedside Companion, By Richard Grudens Page 50
  10. 1 2 Billboard, December 5, 1970 Page 46 Muscle Shoals Honors W.C. Handy
  11. The Rotarian, Aug 1976 Page 22
  12. Discogs Lou Sino – Now
  13. Discogs Lou Sino – A Jazzman Comes Home
  14. WorldCat Hold that tiger, By Lou Sino; Bengals (Musical group)
  15. WorldCat Lou Sino : Give me that old and new time religion with Rene Netto and The Bengals.
  16. Discogs Louis Prima And Keely Smith* With Sam Butera And The Witnesses – Las Vegas Prima Style
  17. Discogs Sam Butera And The Witnesses – Louis Prima Presents The Wildest Clan
  18. All Music Louis Prima, The King of Clubs , Credits
  19. Discogs Louis Prima With Sam Butera And The Witnesses – Strictly Prima!
  20. Discogs Louis Prima – Capitol Collectors Series
  21. Discogs Louis Prima & Keely Smith With Sam Butera And The Witnesses – On Stage
  22. Discogs Sammy Davis* Meets Sam Butera & The Witnesses* – When The Feeling Hits You
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