Hubbry Logo
search
logo

John Chilton

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers
Read side by side
from Wikipedia

Key Information

John James Chilton (16 July 1932 – 25 February 2016) was a British jazz trumpeter and writer. During the 1960s, he also worked with pop bands, including The Swinging Blue Jeans and The Escorts. He won a Grammy Award for Best Album Notes in 1983.

Biography

[edit]

Chilton was born in London on 16 July 1932,[1] to working-class parents (his father was a musical hall comedian) and was evacuated to Northamptonshire, where he began playing the cornet at the age of 12. He switched to trumpet at 17 and after doing national service in the RAF (1950–1952) he formed his own jazz band, playing at Butlins.[2]

He worked in Bruce Turner's Jump Band[2] from 1958 to 1963. A film of their exploits called Living Jazz (1961) was made by director Jack Gold. Chilton later appeared in Alex Welsh's Big Band.[1]

He later worked with Wally Fawkes,[1] also known as the cartoonist "Trog",[3] and in January 1974 formed John Chilton's Feetwarmers, who began accompanying British jazz singer and writer George Melly.[1][4] Together they made records and toured the world for nearly 30 years.[1] Chilton won a Grammy Award for Best Album Notes on Bunny Berigan (1983) and was nominated in the same category in 2000 for The Complete Lester Young Studio Sessions on Verve.[5]

As an author and researcher, Chilton published his Who's Who of Jazz: Storyville to Swing Street in 1970, and there were five updated editions until 1989. He followed this with Who's Who of British Jazz in 1997. He completed biographies of Billie Holiday, Sidney Bechet, Louis Jordan and Coleman Hawkins. He won a Grammy award for his writing on jazz, and in 2000 he won the British Jazz Award for Writer of the Year.

Bibliography

[edit]

Autobiography

[edit]

Discography

[edit]
  • Nuts (1972)
  • Son of Nuts (1973)
  • It's George (1974)
  • Making Whoopee (1982)
  • Best of Live (1995)
  • Anything Goes (1996)
  • Goodtime George
  • The Ultimate Melly, including guest Van Morrison (2006)

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
John Chilton was a British jazz trumpeter, bandleader, and author known for his long-standing role as musical director of the Feetwarmers, the backing band for singer George Melly, and for his authoritative biographies and reference works on jazz history.[1][2] Born in London on 16 July 1932, Chilton began playing cornet as a child and switched to trumpet, turning professional in the 1950s after national service in the RAF. He gained early experience with Bruce Turner's Jump Band and later led his own groups, including the Swing Kings, while performing with visiting American musicians such as Buck Clayton and Bill Coleman. From the early 1970s, his partnership with Melly defined much of his performing career, with the Feetwarmers touring internationally, recording extensively, and appearing in television and at venues including Ronnie Scott's club.[1][3] As a writer, Chilton produced influential books including Who's Who of Jazz: Storyville to Swing Street, biographies of Sidney Bechet, Coleman Hawkins, Billie Holiday, Louis Jordan, and Roy Eldridge, and his autobiography Hot Jazz, Warm Feet. He received a Grammy Award in 1983 for best album notes on a Bunny Berigan collection and was named British Jazz Writer of the Year in 2000. Chilton died in London on 25 February 2016.[2][1][3]

Early Life

John James Chilton was born on 16 July 1932 in Holborn, central London, to working-class parents. His father, Thomas Chilton, was a music-hall comedian who had been badly gassed during the First World War and injured in a bombing raid during the Second World War; his mother was Eileen (née Burke).[1] His interest in jazz began in 1944 when he heard a Jelly Roll Morton broadcast while evacuated to Yardley Gobion, Northamptonshire. After returning to London, he played locally before working in advertising and occasionally reviewing records for the Daily Telegraph.[1]

Career

Chilton completed national service in the RAF before turning professional. He played with Bruce Turner's Jump Band from 1958 to 1963 and appeared as a musician in the 1961 documentary Living Jazz. He formed the Swing Kings in 1966 and opened a specialist jazz bookshop, the Bloomsbury Bookshop, in London.[1] From 1974 until 2003, he led John Chilton’s Feetwarmers, accompanying George Melly on extensive tours across Europe, the US, Australasia, and Asia, with numerous recordings, TV appearances, and residencies at Ronnie Scott's. Their collaboration began informally in 1970.[1][2] Chilton authored several key jazz books, including Who's Who of Jazz (1970), biographies of Louis Armstrong (co-authored), Billie Holiday (Billie’s Blues, 1975), Sidney Bechet (1987), Coleman Hawkins (The Song of the Hawk, 1990), Louis Jordan (1992), Henry "Red" Allen (Ride Red Ride, 1999), and Roy Eldridge (2002), plus Who's Who of British Jazz (1997) and his memoir Hot Jazz, Warm Feet (2007). He won a Grammy in 1983 for album notes and awards for historical sound research.[2][1]

Personal Life

Chilton married photographer Teresa Kendall in 1963. They had three children—Jenny, Martin, and Barney—and six grandchildren. Teresa predeceased him in 2014.[1]

Death

John Chilton died on 25 February 2016 in London after a brief illness, aged 83. He had been suffering from pneumonia and Parkinson’s disease.[2][1]
User Avatar
No comments yet.