| Jazz 
 Anne Bennett - Artwork
 Charles Fox - Liner Notes
 Doc Cheatham - Trumpet
 Eddie Gibbs - Banjo
 Lee Blair - Banjo
 Liz Biddle - Executive Producer
 Nathan Woodley - Bass
 Omer Simeon - Clarinet
 Sonny White - Piano
 Wendell Marshall - Bass
 Zutty Singleton - Drums
 
 Two original LPs on one CD
 
 
 
 Wilbur DeParis
 
 Active Decades: '20s, '30s, '40s, '50s and '60s
 Born: Jan 11, 1900 in Crawfordsville, IN
 Died: Jan 03, 1973 in New York, NY
 Genre: Jazz
 Styles: Dixieland
 
 Wilbur DeParis, an adequate soloist, was an excellent ensemble player and an important bandleader who helped keep New Orleans jazz alive in the 1950s. He started out on alto horn and in 1922 played C-melody sax while working with A.J. Piron before switching permanently to trombone. In 1925, DeParis led a band in Philadelphia and then had stints in the orchestras of Leroy Smith (1928), Dave Nelson, Noble Sissle, Edgar Hayes, Teddy Hill (1936-1937), the Mills Blue Rhythm Band, and Louis Armstrong (1937-1940). Not as well-known as his brother, the talented trumpet soloist Sidney DeParis, Wilbur was with Roy Eldridge's big band and Duke Ellington (1945-1947) and recorded with Sidney Bechet during 1949-1950. However, it was in 1951 when he put together a band to play at Ryan's that included his brother and clarinetist Omer Simeon that he found his niche. Wilbur DeParis' New New Orleans Jazz Band did not just play Dixieland standards but marches, pop tunes, and hymns, all turned into swinging and spirited jazz. Throughout the 1950s, the group recorded consistently exciting sets for Atlantic (all of which are unfortunately long out of print) and they were the resident band at Ryan's during 1951-1962, touring Africa in 1957. DeParis continued leading bands up until his death, but his last recordings were in 1961.
 ---Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
 |