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Jazz musicians from St. Louis (32 P) M. Musical groups from St. Louis (1 C, 70 P) S. Singers from St. Louis (1 C, 65 P) Pages in category "Musicians from St. Louis"
Tom Hartman - piano, guitar; Bob "Ferd" Frank - guitar; Mike Lombardo - drums; Gary Goelzhauser- drums; Bill Lombardo - bass (*Phil Edholm - guitar) In the summer of 2021, a new release called "A Little More" came out to positive reviews with several songs on it written just after their return from England, along with a song called "Swinging London" which speaks about their experience in England.
The Bottle Rockets were an American rock band formed in Festus, Missouri in 1992, and was based in St. Louis.Its founding members were Brian Henneman (guitar, vocals), Mark Ortmann (drums), Tom Parr (1992–2002, guitar, vocals) and Tom Ray (1992–1997, bass guitar); the most recent lineup consisted of Henneman, Ortmann, John Horton (joined 2003, guitar) [1] and Keith Voegele [2] [3] (joined ...
In 2011, he was the winner of the St. Louis Blues Society International Blues Challenge, and went on to the semi-finals to represent St. Louis in Memphis, Tennessee. [5] In early 2009, Johnson relocated back to St. Louis, [6] and formed the Jeremiah Johnson Band shortly thereafter.
The band is the subject of the documentary El Monstero: The Movie, directed by St. Louis native Mark Halski. [5] Inspired by his first El Mon concert experience, Halski began production in 2013 [6] and was in post production as of August 2015. The 2016 band lineup is as follows: [7] Mark Thomas Quinn - vocals, guitar, lap steel
Jazz musicians from St. Louis (32 P) Pages in category "Jazz musicians from Missouri" The following 90 pages are in this category, out of 90 total.
Saint Louis Chamber Chorus; Scene of Irony; The Sharpees; So Many Dynamos; So They Say; Solar Trance; Son Volt; St. Louis Symphony Orchestra; St. Louis Symphony Youth Orchestra; St. Lunatics; Stir (band) Story of the Year; Sullen (band)
Johnson moved to St. Louis, Missouri in 1952; he immediately assembled a jazz and blues group called the Sir John Trio [6] with the drummer Ebby Hardy and the saxophonist Alvin Bennett. The three had a regular engagement at the Cosmopolitan Club in East St. Louis. On New Year's Eve 1952, Bennett suffered a stroke and could not perform.