Cliff Smalls

{{Short description|American jazz trombonist, pianist, and conductor}}

Clifton Arnold (3 March 1918 – 2008), better known as Cliff Smalls, Feather, Leonard and Ira Gitler. The Biographical Encyclopedia of Jazz was an American jazz trombonist, pianist, conductor and arranger who worked in the jazz, soul and rhythm & blues genres.[http://www.charlestonjazz.net/smalls-cliff/Charleston Jazz Initiative "Smalls, 'Cliff' Clifton"]{{dead link|date=August 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}Chadbourne, Eugene [http://www.allmusic.com/artist/cliff-smalls-p126106/biography Allmusic biography]

Early life

Smalls was raised in Charleston, South Carolina. His father, a carpenter, performed piano and organ for Charleston's Central Baptist Church. He taught Smalls classical music at an early age.

Later life and career

=Jazz, early years of bebop=

Smalls left Charleston with the Carolina Cotton Pickers, and also recorded with them, for instance "Off and on Blues" and "Deed I Do" (arranged by Smalls and also featuring Cat Anderson) in 1937, when Smalls was 19. His career coincided with the early years of bebop. From 1942 to 1946 he was a trombonist, arranger and also backup piano-player for band-leader and pianist Earl Hines, alongside Dizzie Gillespie and Charlie Parker, also then in the Hines band which often broadcast seven nights a week on open mikes coast-to-coast across America. Hines also used Teddy Wilson, Jess Stacy and Nat "King" Cole as backup piano-players but Smalls was his favorite. Smalls also played in the Jimmie Lunceford and Erskine Hawkins bands.

References