Stanley Brinks | pt

Stanley William Turrentine (5 de Abril 1934 – 12 de setembro 2000) foi um saxofonista de jazz norte-americano. Turrentine nasceu em Pittsburgh Colina do distrito em uma família musical. Seu pai, Thomas Turrentine, Sr., foi um saxofonista com Sultans Al Cooper Savoy, sua mãe tocava piano stride, e seu irmão mais velho Tommy Turrentine também se tornou um trompetista profissional. Ele começou sua carreira prolífica com bandas de blues e rhythm and blues, e foi a primeira grandemente influenciado por Illinois Jacquet. Na década de 1950, ele passou a jogar com os grupos de Lowell Fulson, Earl Bostic, e na...
Stanley Cowell (born 1941 in Toledo, Ohio) is an American jazz pianist and founder of the Strata-East Records label. He played with Roland Kirk while studying at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music, and later with Marion Brown, Max Roach, Bobby Hutcherson and Harold Land. Cowell played with trumpeter Charles Moore and others in the Detroit Artist's Workshop Jazz Ensemble in 1965-66. .
Well known for his monologues before and during the 39-45 war, and on the Moss Empire circuit in variety for many years, he came to world wide attention as Julie Andrews father, the dustman in My Fair Lady on Broadway and Drury Lane, London, and reprised the part in the subsequent film. .
1. Stanley Ross was a moniker for Chicago based songwriter Nicholas Meiers who began playing as Stanley Ross in 2004, ending in 2011. 2. There is also a European house/techno music artist that goes by Stanley Ross. .
Stanley Myers (October 6, 1930 – November 9, 1993), was a prolific British film composer who scored over sixty films. Born in Birmingham, Myers went to the prestigious King Edward's High School in Edgbaston as a teenager, a suburb of Birmingham. He is related to the popular musician Andrew Myers from Nettleham Lincolnshire. He is indisputably best known for Cavatina, an evocative guitar piece that served as the signature theme for Michael Cimino's 1978 film The Deer Hunter, and for which Myers won the Ivor Novello Award. A somewhat different version of this work, performed by John Williams, had appeared...