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  1. Vido William Musso (* 13. Januar [1] 1913 in Carrini, Sizilien; † 9. Januar 1982 in Rancho Mirage, Kalifornien) war ein US-amerikanischer Tenorsaxophonist, Klarinettist und Bandleader des Swing und Modern Jazz . Inhaltsverzeichnis. 1 Leben und Wirken. 2 Auswahldiskographie. 3 Literatur. 4 Quellen. 5 Weblinks. Leben und Wirken.

  2. 1929. Vido’s mother had named him ‘Vito’ but changed it to Vido in America because the former ‘sounded too Mafia’, according to Vido’s daughter, JoAnn Musso. Vido attended Highland Park High school in Detroit. The Mussos then moved to Los Angeles in 1930. Vido gained an instant love of American swing music

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Vido_MussoVido Musso - Wikipedia

    Biography. Discography. As leader. As sideman. References. Vido Musso. Vido William Musso (January 16, 1913 – January 9, 1982) was an American jazz saxophonist. Biography. Musso and his family relocated from Sicily to the U.S. in July 1920, arriving at the Port of New York aboard the Italian steamship Patria.

  4. 17. Aug. 2020 · Mike Zirpolo. 1.97K subscribers. 38. 2.3K views 3 years ago. "Jersey Bounce" (1941) Benny Goodman/Mel Powell, with Vido Musso and Lou McGarity ...more. "Jersey Bounce" (1941) Benny...

    • 3 Min.
    • 2,3K
    • Mike Zirpolo
  5. He is ingaged by Benny Goodman in 1936, 1939, and 1942, by Gene Krupa (1938), by Harry James (1940 and 1941), by Woody Herman (1942 and 1943), by Tommy Dorsey (1945), pratically by all major orchestras of the swing era.

    • circa January 25, 1913
    • Father of Private
    • January 09, 1982 (64-72)
    • Randy Schoenberg
  6. 18. Aug. 2020 · L-R: front: vocalist Art Lund; pianist Mel Powell; vocalist Peggy Lee; BG; saxophonists Vido Musso, Clint Neagley, Julie Schwartz, George Berg and Chuck Gentry; middle: bassist Sid Weiss; trombonists Lou McGarity and Cutty Cutshall; back: trumpeters Jimmy Maxwell, Billy Butterfield and Al Davis. Guitarist Tom Morgan is hidden behind ...

  7. After a period with Gene Krupa 's new band (1938), Musso rejoined Goodman a couple times (1939 and 1941-1942). He also had stints with Harry James (1940-1941), Woody Herman (1942-1943), and Tommy Dorsey (1945) between attempts to lead his own big band (none of which succeeded).