Foremost of the WWII-era "Texas tenor titans," an influential figure in both jazz and R&B saxophone.
Illinois Jacquet, known as the foremost of the "Texas tenor titans," is one of the most influential figures in both jazz and R&B saxophone. He started out playing in "territory bands" for the likes of Milt Larkins, but first came to fame in the early 1940s with the Lionel Hampton band. His solo on the 1942 Hampton cut "Flying Home" made him a star of the jazz world, and remains one of his signature pieces. Throughout the '40s he worked with Count Basie, Cab Calloway, and others, eventually leading his own band. His innovations of "honking" on the sax's low end and "squealing" octaves above the instrument's normal range were adopted by countless younger jazz and R&B sax players, and his playing provided a significant bridge between jazz and blues, wailing solos and tender ballads.
JSP
2007
Legacy / Sony Music Distribution
2006
Groove Note
1999
Le Jazz
1996
Classic Jazz Music
1976
Classic Jazz Music
1973
Black Lion
1971
Prestige Records
1969
Original Jazz Classics
1968
GRP
1965
Argo
1965
RCA
1965
Universal/Polygram
1964
Argo
1963
Original Long Play
1957
Clef Records
1956
1956
1955
Clef Records
1954
Clef Records
1954
Verve
1953
Mercury
1953
Verve
1951
1951
Apollo Music
1951








