Influenced By:
Worked With:
Milt Hinton,
Billie Holiday,
Emmett Berry,
Coleman Hawkins,
Cozy Cole,
Ben Webster,
John Kirby,
Jonah Jones,
Lionel Hampton,
Chu Berry
Formal Connection With:
- Born: December 12, 1909, Scandia, IA
- Died: January 04, 1991, New York, NY
- Active: '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s
- Genres: Jazz
- Instrument: Sax (Alto), Clarinet, Sax (Tenor) Representative Album: "The Indestructible Eddie Barefield"
Biography
A fine journeyman saxophonist and arranger, Eddie Barefield never gained much fame but he had a productive 60-year career. Barefield came to musical maturity in the 1930s, playing with Bernie Young (1930) in Chicago and then with Bennie Moten (1932), Zack Whyte (1933), the McKinney's Cotton Pickers (1933), Cab Calloway (1933-1936), Les Hite (1937), Fletcher Henderson (1938), and Don Redman (1938). Barefield recorded with several orchestras, most notably those of Moten, Calloway, and Henderson.He supplied arrangements during the swing era to several top big bands (including Calloway, Glenn Miller, Benny Goodman, and Jimmy Dorsey), was a staff musician for ABC in the 1940s, and also was briefly with Benny Carter (1941), Ella Fitzgerald (1942), and Duke Ellington (1947). After playing with Fletcher Henderson's final band in 1950, Barefield mostly worked in the studios during the '50s and on Broadway, in addition to returning now and then to Cab Calloway. He also played with Sammy Price (1958), Wilbur DeParis, and the Saints and Sinners before joining the circus band of Ringling Brothers (1971-1982). Barefield freelanced in many situations during his last two decades and recorded a fine 1977 album as a leader for Famous Door. ~ Scott Yanow, All Music Guide




