Trumpet Players Hall of Fame

Trumpet Players Hall of Fame Honor the Greats, Inspire, Promote Trumpet Playing worldwide, 1. Honor the greats
2. Inspire
3. Thanks for Supporting Trumpet Playing worldwide.

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We are a 501 (c) 3 non profit and therefore continue operations by donations that may be fully tax deductible for your or your company.

09/05/2025

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08/26/2025

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06/04/2025
06/04/2025
06/27/2024

We just learned of the tremendous loss of Trumpet Great, Incredible Producer, and Friend, Gary Grant.

Rest In Peace

Chet!
09/03/2023

Chet!

"Chet Baker's style of singing on Chet Baker Sings (1954) finished off what Bing Crosby started. Crosby had initiated the movement from "hot" to "cool," as he taught singers how to use the microphone. But, even though Bing's style was relatively laid back, he still used "hot" techniques like vibrato, slurs and small ornamentations to "sell" the tune. This continued to be the standard, but Baker took it a step further, either eliminating or dramatically taking down the heat of these techniques. Also, in the range and timbre of his voice, he did not sound as a man singing was supposed to. Given the negative response by fellow musicians, friends and critics, it took some guts for Baker to continue to sing.

Baker was one in a long line of trumpet players who sang. Louis Armstrong, Jabbo Smith, Roy Eldridge, Bunny Berigan, Louis Prima, Hot Lips Page and Dizzy Gillespie all sang well. They thought of themselves as entertainers, liked to sing and were happy to give their chops a break. Berigan's style was lighter, but even after he had a hit with "I Can't Get Started," he almost always deferred to a band singer and just played. The rest of those guys sang with a ballsier approach, sometimes ironic or sly, often bluesy. Armstrong always sang romantic tunes, but I hear an artfulness that separates the singer from the object of his affection and the song itself becomes the object. He did sing with great tenderness in the last phase of his career. Baker's singing was the first in this lineage that said out loud: "This is what it means to be vulnerable."

It's appropriate that his most famous vocal tune is "My Funny Valentine." In this Rodgers and Hart tune, we have a psychic match between performer and song. This is a song that spells out the imperfections of the lover ("is your figure less than greek, is your mouth a little weak, when you open it to speak are you smart"). Look at the title itself-my "funny" valentine; not that the lover is funny/humorous, but funny as in—how did this happen—how did I end up with someone like you. This is love as mystery, song as mystery, sung by a musician whose life was lived publicly, but who was a mystery. Yes, we know the biographical facts of Baker's life, but the inner life was shrouded in layers of romanticism and self-protection.

By S.G Provizer / All About Jazz

Chet Baker, New York City, January 16, 1986 by Richard Avedon

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Administrative Office 9205 W. Russell Road Suite 240
Spring Valley, NV
89148

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