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  2. Missy Higgins - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missy_Higgins

    Her Australian number-one albums are The Sound of White (2004), On a Clear Night (2007) and The Ol' Razzle Dazzle (2012). Higgins's fourth studio album, Oz, was released in September 2014. In 2018 she released a greatest hits album called The Special Ones, and in September 2024 released the album The Second Act.

  3. Dazzle (video recorder) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dazzle_(video_recorder)

    Dazzle Multimedia also sold an internal, PCI-card version of the Dazzle, under the name Snazzi. [6]: 73 Dazzle Multimedia was acquired in majority by SCM Microsystems, a German-American technology company, in 1999. [7] The first Dazzle recorder to support USB was the Digital Video Creator (DVC) 50 and 80 models, first released in March 2001.

  4. Jazz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jazz

    "The quest to make jazz more relevant to popular audiences, while retaining its artistic integrity, is a constant and prevalent theme in the history of postwar jazz." [137] During its swing period, jazz had been an uncomplicated musical scene; according to Paul Trynka, this changed in the post-war years: Suddenly jazz was no longer straightforward.

  5. Dan Siegel (musician) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dan_Siegel_(musician)

    Music career. Siegel was born in Seattle, Washington, and raised in Eugene, Oregon. When he was eight years old, he began piano lessons, and at 12 he was performing professionally in a rock band. He went to the Berklee College of Music in Boston, then studied at the University of Oregon. After college, he started recording his own compositions.

  6. Early Jazz: Its Roots and Musical Development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_Jazz:_Its_Roots_and...

    This chapter begins by pointing out the way that technological developments (radio and recordings), and the economic lift they provided to musicians, generated crosscurrents in jazz, resulting in a move towards jazz orchestras, the big bands, by the end of the 1920s. Schuller then considers two sites of big band activity: New York and Kansas City.

  7. Steve Turre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Turre

    Steve Turre on shells, with Libre at the Village Gate (1980s). Stephen Johnson Turre (born September 12, 1948, in Omaha, Nebraska) is an American jazz trombonist and a pioneer of using seashells as instruments, a composer, arranger, and educator at the collegiate-conservatory level. For sixty-one years, Turre has been active in jazz, rock, and ...

  8. Busby Berkeley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Busby_Berkeley

    Berkeley was born in Los Angeles, California, to Francis Enos (who died when Busby was eight) and stage actress Gertrude Berkeley (1864–1946). Among Gertrude's friends, and a performer in Tim Frawly's Stock company run by Busby Berkeley's father, were actress Amy Busby from whom Berkeley gained the appellation "Buzz" or "Busby" [2] [3] and actor William Gillette, then only four years away ...

  9. Quiver (Ron Miles album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quiver_(Ron_Miles_album)

    On All About Jazz, Mark F. Turner said "there are more subdued voices who let their music do the talking, as is the case for Ron Miles' Quiver, a project led by the Denver-based trumpeter and his talented cohorts, guitarist Bill Frisell and drummer Brian Blade. These gentle masters are highly respected leaders with expansive discographies and ...