Toni Aubin
{{for|Tony Aubin (1907–1981), the French composer|Tony Aubin}}
{{Infobox musical artist
| name = Toni Aubin
| image = Toni Aubin publicity photo.jpg
| birth_name = Maria Antoinette Rubio
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1927|09|22|mf=y}}
| birth_place = Antioch, California, U.S.
| death_date = {{Death date and age|mf=yes|1990|02|10|1927|09|22}}
| death_place = San Joaquin, California
| genre = Vocal jazz, swing
| occupation = Singer
| instrument = Vocals
| years_active = 1947–1950
| label = Black & White
| past_member_of = Earle Spencer
}}
File:Toni Aubin (L) Art Pepper (R).jpg
Toni Aubin (née Maria Antoinette Rubio; 22 September 1927 – 10 February 1990) was an American jazz vocalist who sang with big bands in the 1940s.
Career
Aubin is most known as a featured singer with Earle Spencer and His Orchestra, with whom she began performing in 1949. Before that, from about 1946 to about 1947, she toured with the Louis Ohls Orchestra out of Arkadelphia.
In 1947, Aubin, while singing with the Louis Ohls Orchestra, shared a featured billing with Art Pepper, who, at the time, was arranger and saxophonist with the orchestra. Aubin had also sang with the Phil Carreon Big Band out of Los Angeles.
= Pseudonym =
Her stage name is that of the French composer Tony Aubin.
Family
Both of Aubin's parents – Mike Rubio (né Miguel Rubio Peña; 1882–1933) and Frances Espinosa Rubio (1891–1985) – were born in the Andalusia region of southern Spain and immigrated to the United States in 1913. Aubin (Maria Antoinette Rubio) was married from 1947 to 1949 to Howard Ansley Phillips (1929–2010), who played baritone saxophone in the Spencer Orchestra from 1947–49, and then settled in Las Vegas, where he would play for all of the major hotels for the next four plus decades. Ms Aubin (Rubio) gave birth to a girl in 1951, but gave her up for adoption (identity and whereabouts unknown). She also had a son, Ian Charles Phillips (born 30 Sep 1949 Pasadena, California), whom she raised.
In 1954, she married Jack Stanley Lanning (1923–2000), they had 4 more children, 2 sons and 2 daughters. They remained married until her death.
Discography
{{Ordered list|list_style_type=decimal|start=1
|Earle Spencer and His Orchestra (78 rpm)
Recorded February 7, 1949, Hollywood, California
{{Ordered list|list_style_type=upper-alpha|start=1
|"Box Lunch" ("At the Factory"), Paul Nelson (arranger)
|"Sunday afternoon," {{unbulleted list|Toni Aubin (vocalist)
|Seely, Blackburn (w&m)
|Paul Nelson (arranger)}}
{{YouTube|XLvfgnUX78c|audio}}
}}
Black & White 875
{{Ordered list|list_style_type=upper-alpha|start=1
|Matrix No.: BW 733-1
|Matrix No.: BW 732-1
}}
"Sunday Afternoon" has been re-issued in the following compilations:
{{Ordered list|list_style_type=lower-roman|start=1
|The Almost Forgotten Pioneer of Modern Big Band Jazz Earle Spencer And His Orchestra
1988: IAJRC 41 (LP)
|The Almost Forgotten Pioneer of Modern Big Band Jazz Earle Spencer and His Orchestra
2011: Essential Media Group LLC (CD)
|Earle Spencer and His New Band Sensation of the Year 1946 – Complete Black & White Reocrdings 1946–1949
Fresh Sound (Sp) FSR 2501 (2 CDs)
{{OCLC|19638188|25051047|982192542}}
}}
}}
Notes and references
= Notes =
= References =
{{reflist|30em|refs=
American Big Bands, by William Franklin Lee III, PhD (1929–2011), Hal Leonard Corporation (2005), p. 307; {{ISBN|0634080547}}; {{ISBN|9780634080548}}
[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XCXT-ZJX "US Census, 1930,"] (database), FamilySearch, "Mike Rubio, Antioch, Contra Costa, California"
The Jazz Discography Online, Tom Lord (ed.), Lord Music (retrieved January 22, 2018); {{OCLC|182585494|690104143}}
"Louis Ohls" (advertisement), Arkansas Gazette, February 23, 1947, p. 57
"A Successful Failure:
}}
{{authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Aubin, Toni}}
Category:Singers from California
Category:American women jazz singers
Category:American jazz singers
Category:20th-century American singers
Category:20th-century American women singers