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Pages in category "Musicians from Baltimore" The following 196 pages are in this category, out of 196 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. Aaron Frazer;
19th-century Baltimore music publisher and store owner Collette, Calvin: Member of the Baltimore-based African American doo wop group The Swallows, best known from their 1950s recordings [15] Collins, Brad: Baltimore-area jazz saxophonist [3] Combs, Greg: Guitarist for the Rockville, Maryland-based experimental band Dog Fashion Disco ...
Baltimore Colored City Band: African American group, led by A. Jack Thomas [4] Baltimore Colored Symphony Orchestra: African American orchestra, founded by Charles L. Harris, from 1929 to 1939 [3] Baltimore Opera Company: Baltimore-based opera company Baltimore Symphony Orchestra: Baltimore-based symphony Baltimore's Marching Ravens
Baltimore's indigenous music media includes The City Paper, The Baltimore Sun, and Music Monthly, which frequently advertise local music shows and other events. [25] The Baltimore Blues Society also distributes one of the more well renowned blues periodicals in the country. [44]
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Jeff Siegel (born 1970), musician, writer, investment analyst and renewable energy expert; coined the phrase "green chip stocks" Hubert Simmons (1924–2009), Negro league baseball pitcher for the Baltimore Elite Giants; David Simon (born 1960), journalist for The Baltimore Sun, author, television writer, producer, creator of The Wire
The documented music history of Maryland begins during the colonial era, in the 18th century. The capital city of Annapolis was a major center for music during the colonial era; the city's Tuesday Club left behind documentation of musical life in Annapolis, one of the most complete sources for musical knowledge about that era in the United States.