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Boyce Brown

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American jazz saxophonist
Boyce Brown
Birth nameBoyce Brown
Born(1910年04月16日)April 16, 1910
OriginUnited States Chicago, Illinois
DiedJanuary 30, 1959(1959年01月30日) (aged 48)
GenresJazz
OccupationSaxophonist
InstrumentAlto saxophone
Formerly ofWingy Manone
Musical artist

Boyce Brown (April 16, 1910 – January 30, 1959) was an American jazz dixieland alto saxophonist born in Chicago, Illinois.

Brown worked with Wingy Manone, Paul Mares, and Danny Alvin. His best-known recordings are a 1935 session with Paul Mares and his Friars Society Orchestra (first issued on LP in 1955 as part of Columbia's Chicago Style Jazz album) and a 1939 session with Jimmy McPartland & his Jazz Band, which was first released as part of Decca's Chicago Jazz album. In both sessions, Brown demonstrates a driving, harmonically advanced style.

In 1953, Brown entered a monastery of the Roman Catholic Servite Order, but returned in 1956 to release his one and only album as Brother Matthew, backed by a band organized by Eddie Condon.[1]

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