| John Chilton |
| Background
information |
| Birth name |
John James Chilton |
| Born |
July 16, 1932 (1932-07-16) (age 75)
London |
| Genre(s) |
Jazz |
| Occupation(s) |
songwriter and composer |
| Instrument(s) |
Trumpet |
| Years active |
1944 - present |
Associated
acts |
Swinging Blue Jeans
Alex Welsh's Big Band
John Chilton's Feetwarmers |
John James Chilton (born 16 July 1932 in London,
England) is a British jazz trumpeter and writer. During the 1960s he
also worked with pop bands, including the Swinging Blue Jeans.
He was born in London to working-class parents (his father was
a musical hall comedian) and was evacuated to Northamptonshire, where
he began playing the cornet at the age of 12. He switched to trumpet at
17 and after doing national service in the RAF
(1950-1952) he formed his own jazz band, playing at Butlins in
Skegness with a troupe that included comedian Dave Allen.
He worked in Bruce Turner's Jump Band from
1958-1963. A movie of their exploits called Living Jazz
was made in 1961 by director Jack Gold. Chilton later appeared in Alex
Welsh's Big Band. He played piano on some pop recordings in the 1960s
while also working for Mike Daniels' Big Band. In the late 1960s he
formed his own Swing Kings band which backed some leading American
jazzmen who toured Britain, including Buck
Clayton, Ben
Webster, Bill Coleman and Charlie
Shavers. He also recorded The Song of a Road, one
of the radio
ballads of folk singers Ewan MacColl and Peggy
Seeger in the 1950s for the BBC.
He later worked with Wally Fawkes, also known as the
cartoonist 'Trog', and in January 1974 formed John Chilton's
Feetwarmers, who began accompanying British jazz singer and writer George
Melly. Together they made records and toured the world for
nearly 30 years including trips to America, Australia, China and New
Zealand. In 1983 and 1984 they had their own BBC television series
called Good Time George. They appeared on countless
other TV shows, including Parkinson,
The
Wheeltappers and Shunters Social Club, Aspel,
This is Your Life
and Pebble Mill at One.
Chilton is also a songwriter and composer and one of his
songs, "Give Her A Little Drop More", was used in the 1985 film St
Elmo's Fire, sung by the Hollywood Brat Pack including Demi Moore
and Rob
Lowe.
Chilton is one of the few European writers to win a Grammy
award for his album notes on Bunny Berigan (1983) and was runner-up
for a further Grammy award in 2000. In the same year he won the British
Jazz Award for 'Writer of the Year'. His Who's Who of Jazz
was described by the poet Philip Larkin as "one of the essential
jazz books". His books on Coleman Hawkins and Louis
Jordan have both won for Chilton the prestigious American Association
for Recorded Sound Collections' Award for Historical Recorded Sound
Research. Jazz magazine Down Beat called him "a
master of the craft of research". The Jazz Rag
recently described Chilton as "one of the world's top jazz writers".
For his books on Sidney Bechet and Louis
Armstrong he was given the freedom of New Orleans.
In March 2007, Northway Books published his autobiography, Hot
Jazz, Warm Feet. John Chilton continues to play trumpet with
the clarinetist Wally Fawkes in London.
Bibliography
- Louis: The Louis Armstrong Story
- Ride Red Ride - the Life of Henry 'Red'
Allen
- Roy Eldridge, Little Jazz Giant
- McKinney's Music - A bio-discography of McKinney's
Cotton Pickers
- A Jazz Nursery - The Story of Jenkins' Orphanage
Band
- Teach Yourself Jazz
- Stomp Off, Let's Go: The Story of Bob
Crosby's Bob Cats
- Who's Who of Jazz
- Let the Good Times Roll: The Story of Louis
Jordan
- Billie's Blues - A survey of Billie
Holiday's Career
- The Song of the Hawk - The Life and Recordings of Coleman
Hawkins
- Sidney Bechet - the Wizard of Jazz
- Who's Who of British Jazz
Autobiography
- Hot
Jazz, Warm Feet. London: Northway
Publications, 2007. ISBN
978 0955090837.
Discography
- Nuts (1972)
- Son of Nuts (1973)
- It's George (1974)
- Making Whoopee (1982)
- Best of Live (1995)
- Anything Goes (1996)
- Goodtime George
- The Ultimate Melly, including guest Van
Morrison (2006)