Word: sullivans
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
PHILIP B. SULLIVAN Madison...
...noteworthy chef d'oeuvre since his 'discharge, Mr. Freeman is featured with various other Town Hall concert artists on Keynote Album Number 127. His cohorts are a heterogeneous lot. Trumpeters Charley Shavers, the modernist; "Wild Bill" Davison, the archaie; clarinetist Ernic Caccies, the smooth and polished; and pianist Joe Sullivan, the heavy handed, are all in the melting pot. The residue is for the most part interesting, yet restful, and certainly not run of the mill...
...Midnite at Eddie Condon's" and "Inside on the Outside" clarinetist Ed Hall pulling for the old timers and Charley Shavers for the new-have a seesaw tug of war over a weird New Orleans type of riff intricately decorated by Dave Tough's exotic drumming. Joe Sullivan's piano solo on the second chorus of "Honey Suckle Rose" is an imaginative recollection of Fats Waller and "Wild Bill" ploughs a safe and sane path through the final chorus of "Sentimental Baby." It almost sounds as if, God forbid, he was reading it off a score, there...
...Borg, Dana F. Bresnahan. Robert Cowen, Victor J. Critchlow, W. L. Jack Edwards, William B. Fosler, Sidney F. Greeley, Jr., Richard A. Green, John P. McMorrow, Thomas L. P. O'Donnell. Roswell B. Perkins, E. Barr Peterson, Clinton M. Ritchie, Saul L. Sherman. Philip M. Stern, James M. Sullivan, and Nathan Weston...
...right now that I am not a Roman Catholic, and do not intend to vote for Mr. Sullivan. But I feel that it is a perfectly proper thing that the Catholic Club has done, and that the Crimson editorial is at best foolish, and perhaps malicious. If the Liberal Union, for instance, had seen fit to notify its members who "their" candidate was, would the Crimson have been so quick to cry, "Shame"? I doubt...