Dicky Wells

Dicky Wells

Genres: swing, jazz, trombone, oldies

About Dicky Wells

Dicky Wells (sometimes Dickie Wells) (born as William Wells, June 10, 1907 or 1909 - November 12, 1985) was an American jazz trombonist. Dickie Wells was born in Centerville, Tennessee. He moved to New York City in 1926, and became a member of the Lloyd Scott band. He played with Count Basie between 1938–1945 and 1947-1950. He also played with Cecil Scott, Spike Hughes, Fletcher Henderson, Benny Carter, Teddy Hill, Jimmy Rushing, Buck Clayton and Ray Charles. In his later years, Wells suffered a severe beating that affected his memory, but he recovered and continued to perform. He played frequently at the West End jazz club at 116th and Broadway, most often with a band called The Countsmen, led by alto saxophonist Earle Warren, his colleague from Count Basie days. A trademark was Wells's "pepper pot" mute which he made himself. He died on November 12, 1985, in New York City. Shortly after his death, Wells's family donated his trombone to Rutgers University.

Taken from Last.fm

1,119 listeners  ·  6,502 plays via Last.fm

On RadioStar

5
stations playing
3
countries
10
tracks tracked
most active station (France)

Dicky Wells — Top 10 songs

Artist Song title Like / Dislike
Dicky Wells Sweet daddy SPO-DE-O
Dicky Wells Hello Babe
Dicky Wells Hot Club blues
Dicky Wells Come and get it
Dicky Wells Wine-O Junction
Dicky Wells Dicky Wells Blues
Dicky Wells The Swing Era 0695
Dicky Wells Dinah
Dicky Wells I'm fer it too
Dicky Wells Linger awhile
Sweet daddy SPO-DE-O
Hello Babe
Hot Club blues
Come and get it
Wine-O Junction
Dicky Wells Blues
The Swing Era 0695
I'm fer it too
Linger awhile