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・ Sonny Stitt / Live at Ronnie Scott's
・ Sonny Stitt at the D. J. Lounge
・ Sonny Stitt Blows the Blues
・ Sonny Stitt Plays
・ Sonny Stitt Plays Arrangements from the Pen of Quincy Jones
・ Sonny Stitt Sits in with the Oscar Peterson Trio
・ Sonny Stitt Swings the Most
・ Sonny Stitt with the New Yorkers
・ Sonny Stitt/Bud Powell/J. J. Johnson
・ Sonny Strait
・ Sonny Sumo
・ Sonny T.
・ Sonny Tanabe
・ Sonny Terry
・ Sonny the Cuckoo Bird
Sonny Thompson
・ Sonny Thoss
・ Sonny Throckmorton
・ Sonny Til
・ Sonny Tilders
・ Sonny Trinidad
・ Sonny Truitt
・ Sonny Tufts
・ Sonny Tuigamala
・ Sonny Turner
・ Sonny Umpad
・ Sonny Vaccaro
・ Sonny Valentine
・ Sonny Vincent
・ Sonny Waaldijk


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Sonny Thompson : ウィキペディア英語版
Sonny Thompson

Alfonso "Sonny" Thompson (August 22, 1916〔〔( Robert Pruter and Robert L. Campbell, ''The Sultan label )〕 or 1923〔( Biography by Ron Wynn at Allmusic.com )〕 – August 11, 1989)〔(Thedeadrockstarsclub.com - January 2010 )〕 was an American R&B bandleader and pianist, popular in the 1940s and 1950s.
Born in Centreville, Mississippi,〔 he began recording in 1946, and in 1948 achieved two #1 R&B chart hits on the Miracle label – "Long Gone (Parts I and II)" and "Late Freight", both featuring saxophonist Eddie Chamblee. The follow-ups "Blue Dreams" and "Still Gone" were smaller hits.〔
By 1952 he had moved on to King Records. There, he had further R&B Top 10 successes with the singer Lula Reed, the biggest hit being "I'll Drown in My Tears" (Thompson married Reed sometime in the early 1950s). He continued to work as a session musician, and to perform with Reed into the early 1960s. He also had success as a songwriter, often co-writing with blues guitarist, Freddie King.
Thompson died in 1989 in Chicago.〔
==References==




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