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Danny Barcelona (July 23, 1929 – April 1, 2007) was a jazz drummer best known for his years with Louis Armstrong's All-Stars. He was a Filipino-American born in Waipahu, a community of Honolulu, Hawaii. He was also frequently introduced to audiences by Louis Armstrong as The Little Filipino Boy. Armstrong usually followed up by calling himself ''the little Arabian boy''.〔(Hale, James. Danny Barcelona, Drums, Armstrong All-Star ), retrieved on: July 4, 2007〕〔(Biography for Danny Barcelona, Internet Movie Database Inc. and IMdB.com, 2007 ), retrieved on: July 4, 2007〕〔(Louis Armstrong: In Chicago 1962, Tracking List and Personnel, Storyville Records and StoryVilleRecords.com (undated) ), retrieved on: July 4, 2007〕 ==Career== At the age of 18 and in his final year in high school, Barcelona was already playing music with trombonist, singer, and bandleader Trummy Young. Barcelona was a self-taught percussionist. Young and Barcelona met in the mid-1940s. Danny Barcelona was introduced to Louis Armstrong by Young in 1956 and became Armstrong's drummer for 15 years. A native Hawaiian, Barcelona had joined Young's Hawaii All-Stars in the early 1950s, later assuming leadership of the band - a sextet known as the ''Hawaiian Dixieland All-Stars'' - when Young left to join Louis Armstrong’s combo in 1952. Barcelona toured around the Hawaiian Islands, Japan and the rest of the Far East. In the fall of 1957, Barcelona moved to New York City. Barcelona, again through Trummy Young's recommendation, formally joined Armstrong's All-Stars band in February 1958 to replace retiring drummer Barrett Deems. Barcelona appears on more than 130 of Armstrong's recordings. Barcelona was only 27 years old when he was introduced by Young to Armstrong. Here are performance video clips of Danny being introduced by Louie: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wyLjbMBpGDA Danny doing a drum solo with Louie in Germany: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NNdIjngnaJI Barcelona's recording career with Armstrong included the jazz music hits "Hello, Dolly!" (1964) and "What a Wonderful World" (1968). With Armstrong and Young, Barcelona traveled the world, including trips to Denmark, Germany and Rhodesia, Africa. Barcelona's drumming style was described by T. Dennis Brown in ''The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz'' as being "characterized by extensive use of the ride cymbal, crisp, clean fills and breaks, and solos that exploit asymmetrical phrasing". After Armstrong's illness in 1971 and his death on July 6 of that year, Barcelona returned to Hawaii and became a longtime performer at the Hilton Hawaiian Village Hotel, where he played with Bernie Halmann and Melveen Leed. He also worked for many years at Harry's Music Store and the Easy Music Center. In 1979, Barcelona returned to the mainland and settled with his family in Monterey Park, California.〔〔(Chadbourne, Eugene. All Music Group, Verve, The Verve Music Group (undated) ), retrieved on: July 4, 2007〕〔(Astrid. Danny Barcelona RIP, JazzReview.com, Saturday, April 7, 2007 and Sunday, April 15, 2007 ) and (Danny Barcelona, 77, Jazz Band Drummer, The Arts/Cultural Desk, The New York Times, Late Edition - Final, Section A, Page 19, Column 1, 203 words, NYTimes.com and the Associated Press (AP), Wednesday, April 11, 2007 ), retrieved on: July 4, 2007〕〔(Star-Bulletin Staff (citydesk@starbulletin.com). Danny Barcelona /1929-2007, Jazz Drummer Played with Louis Armstrong, April 6, 2007 ), retrieved on: July 4, 2007〕〔(Danny Barcelona Photograph and Caption, StarBulletin.com, April 6, 2007 ), retrieved on: July 4, 2007〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Danny Barcelona」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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