Biography
Ray Nance was a multi-talented individual. He was a fine trumpeter who not only replaced Cootie Williams with Duke Ellington's Orchestra, but gave the "plunger" position in Duke's band his own personality. In addition, Nance was one of the finest jazz violinists of the 1940s, an excellent jazz singer, and even a dancer. He studied piano, took lessons on violin, and was self-taught on trumpet. After leading a small group in Chicago (1932-1937), spending periods with the orchestras of Earl Hines (1937-1938) and Horace Henderson (1939-1940), and a few months as a solo act, Nance joined Duke Ellington's orchestra. His very first night on the job was fully documented as the band's legendary Fargo concert. A very valuable sideman, Nance played a famous trumpet solo on the original version of Take the 'A' Train and proved to be a fine wa-wa player; his violin added color to the suite Black, Brown and Beige (in addition to being showcased on numerous songs), and his singing on numbers such as A Slip of a Lip Will Sink a Ship and Tulip or Turnip was an added feature. Nance was with Ellington with few interruptions until 1963; by then the returning Cootie Williams had taken some of his glory. The remainder of Nance's career was relatively insignificant, with occasional small-group dates, gigs with Brooks Kerr and Chris Barber (touring England in 1974), and a few surprisingly advanced sideman recordings with Jaki Byard and Chico Hamilton. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi



 
Videos
Close
Ray Nance-Duke Ellington
Ray Nance Just Jazz
Ray Nance & Roland Hanna - Take The 'A' Train [May 1969]
Duke Ellington w. Ray Nance - It don't mean a thing
Cat Anderson, Shorty Baker, Ray Nance and Clark Terry
Duke Ellington ( C Jam Blues) Ray Nance, Rex Stewart, Ben Webster, Joe Nanton, Barney Bigard
Take the "A" Train - Ray Nance Solo Transcription
Download SoundHound
The only App that can give you results through singing and humming search!
You can sing any song from this artist to help SoundHound users find it!