Word: hampton
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...Tarpon Springs, Fla. 74 Jones, Richard '61 T 6.1 212 Hasbrouck, N. J. 75 Olivar, Harry '60 T 6.4 223 Inglewood, Calif. 76 King, James '61 T 6.2 215 W. Newton, Mass. 77 Blair, McClellan '60 T 6.4 220 Indiana, Pa. 78 Puryear, Alvin '60 T 6.1 225 Hampton, Va. 79 Kickham, John '61 T 6.4 201 Westbury, N. Y. 80 Stacke, James '61 E 6.1 193 Evanston, Ill. 81 Ernst, Frederick '60 E 6.3 195 Ridgefield, Conn. 82 Hutcherson, John '61 E 6.2 195 University, Miss. 83 Riddle, Pete '60 E 6.5 198 Highland Pk., Ill. 85 Connors, James...
...Methuen, Mass. 73 Hurley, Peter H. '61 G 19 5.11 185 Rumford, R.I. 74 Coffin, Howard A. '61 T 19 6.5 220 Hudson, Ohio 75 Hoover, John S. '61 T 19 6.2 205 Altoona, Pa. 76 Glasheen, John D. '59 T 21 6.1 220 N. Hampton, Mass. 77 McNeish, Peter F. '59 T 21 5.11 210 Pittsburgh, Pa. 78 Lawler, Edward E. '60 T 20 6.3 215 Alexandria, Va. 79 Budrewicz, Thomas '60 T 19 6.2 220 Greenfield, Mass. 80 Olobri, Charles L. '60 E 21 6.1 190 Pawtucket, R.I. 81 Gundlach, Louis T. '59 E 21 6.1 190 Bronx...
...kinds of noise, from the river boat of Louis Armstrong to the leaky boat of Les Brown and his Band of Renown; among those loitering between the extremes: Lionel Hampton, Hoagy Carmichael, Gene Krupa, Bob Crosby...
Neither Harbison nor Kuhn feel there is deep interest at Harvard in modern jazz, and they point to the adverse criticism voiced over the Buck Clayton session at last year's Jubilee. (This year's replacement--Lionel Hampton and the Australian Jazz Quartet--reveals a shift to the commercial side of the jazz world.) John rates the students a shy and unsophisticated audience, who know too little of the modern style to really like it. "Progressive jazz demands concentration. It's intense, and you can't have glasses clinking all the time. There's a meanness to the music that...
...could hang out at the Moonglow or the 308 Club or one of the other wonderful, schizofrantic jazz joints that flourished in the Chicago of the '20s. Soon Big Bill was playing far and wide with the best of them-Benny Goodman, Count Basie, Jimmie Lunceford, Lionel Hampton, Louis Armstrong, Bunk Johnson, Fats Waller. And always there was time to write his own songs: Partnership Woman, House Rent Stomp, Outskirts of Town...