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・ Ike Borsavage
・ Ike Broflovski
・ Ike Brookens
・ Ike Brookes
・ Ike Brown
・ Ike Butler
・ Ike Carpenter (woodworker)
・ Ike Caveney
・ Ike Charlton
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・ Ike Clarke
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・ Ike Danning
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Ike Day
・ Ike Delock
・ Ike Dike
・ Ike Diogu
・ Ike Dixon
・ Ike Duffey
・ Ike Eichrodt
・ Ike Eisenmann
・ Ike Ekweremadu
・ Ike Fisher
・ Ike Forte
・ Ike Fowler
・ Ike Frankian
・ Ike Franklin Andrews
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Ike Day : ウィキペディア英語版
Ike Day
Isaac Day, Jr. (1925 - c. 1958),〔 better known as Ike Day, was a Chicago-based hard bop and bebop jazz drummer.
==Life==
Referred to as “legendary” by many jazz musicians, including Andrew Hill,〔(Panken, Ted. “Andrew Hill:Roots and Blue Notes” Jazz Journalists Association Library ) Jazz Journalists Association. Retrieved 3 July 2013.〕 very little is known about Day except for a few specific dates when he played with Tom Archia and his All Stars, with Gail Brockman, Andrew "Goon" Gardner or John "Flaps" Dungee, Gene Ammons, Claude McLin (possibly), Junior Mance, George Freeman and Jo Jo Adams, a line-up that recorded at the Pershing Ballroom, Chicago in early 1948,〔 and with Fats Navarro, LeRoy Jackson, Clarence "Sleepy" Anderson, Gene Ammons and Tom Archia at Leonard Chess's club, the Macomba Lounge, in 1948, where both Kenny Dorham and Max Roach went to see him,〔(Campbell, Robert L. and Leonard J. Bukowski, and Armin Büttner "The Tom Archia Discography" ) Retrieved 3 July 2013.〕 as did, according to Duke Groner, Buddy Rich and Louie Bellson.〔(Walton, Charles “The DuSable Hotel and the Drexel Square Area” ) Jazz Institute of Chicago. Retrieved 3 July 2013.〕
Ike Day started playing professionally in April 1943, at around the age of 17, when he filed a contract with the Musicians Union for a 12-week contract at the Bar o' Music. After a month, however, he was suspended by the Commissioner of Police for bad behaviour.〔(Campbell, Robert L. and Robert Pruter, George R. White, Tom Kelly, George Paulus “The Aristocrat Label” ) Retrieved 5 July 2013.〕
In April 1944, he was in a band led by Jesse Miller performing at Joe's Deluxe Club, with Albert Atkinson (sax), Kermit Scott (tenor sax), Argonne Thornton (piano), Walter Buchanan (bass).〔
He also recorded a Gene Ammons/Christine Chatman session for Aristocrat on February 28, 1949,〔 released as ''Jug and Sonny'' (Chess LP 1445), ''The Soulful Saxophone of Gene Ammons'' (Chess LP 1442) and ''Gene Ammons - Early Visions'' (Cadet 2CA 60038).〔() Jazzdisco.org. Retrieved 3 July 2013.〕)
In 1950 he led a trio featuring Sonny Rollins〔(Rosenthal, David H. (1993) ''Hard Bop: Jazz and Black Music, 1955-1965'', p. 34. Oxford University Press ) At Google Books. Retrieved 3 July 2013.〕〔 and Vernon Bivel〔(''Annual review of jazz studies, Volume 6'. Rutgers University. Institute of Jazz Studies Transaction Books, 1993 ) At Google Books. Retrieved 5 July 2013.〕 just before Rollins was convicted on a drugs charge and sentenced to eight months.〔(Mathieson, Kenny (2012) ''Giant Steps: Bebop And The Creators Of Modern Jazz, 1945-65''. Canongate Books ) At Google Books. Retrieved 3 July 2013.〕
Johnny Griffin recalls that Buddy Rich hired Day to join his big band and that Slim Gaillard took him to New York in the late 1940s, where he played at Minton's. Griffin also called on him to substitute Philly Joe Jones in the Joe Morris-Johnny Griffin band.〔Panken, Ted. (Panken, Ted. “In conversation with Johnny Griffin” ) jazz.com. Retrieved 3 July 2013.〕 and refers to Day playing as a duo with Wilbur Ware, double bassist Richard Davis recalls jamming with Ware and Day〔Panken, Ted (Richard Davis: August 18 1993, WKCR-FM New York ) Jazz Journalists Association Retrieved 3 July 2013.〕 and Ahmad Jamal mentions having played with him at the Palm Tavern.〔Panken, Ted ("It’s Ahmad Jamal’s 81st Birthday" ) Retrieved 3 July 2013.〕
Day died in his early 30s, of tuberculosis〔Panken, Ted.(“Two Interviews with Pianist Chris Anderson from 1986 on his 87th Birthday Anniversary” ) Retrieved 3 July 2013.〕 brought on by drug abuse.〔(Spencer, Frederick J. (2002) ''Jazz and Death: Medical Profiles of Jazz Greats'', p. 273. Univ. Press of Mississippi ) At Google Books. Retrieved 3 July 2013.〕 According to Roy Haynes, he was living but hospitalized with tuberculosis in the late 1950s.〔( Burt Korall, ''Drummin' Men: The Heartbeat of Jazz, The Bebop Years'', Oxford University Press, 2004, p.254 )〕

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