Anne Marie Moss

Anne Marie Moss (February 6, 1935 February 29, 2012) was a Canadian-born jazz vocalist and music educator.

She was born in Toronto. She did not study music formally except for some lessons on breath control from Portia White. Moss began performing at a young age.[1]

During the early 1950s, she performed in Toronto with groups led by American pianists Calvin Jackson and Joey Masters. She also sang with big bands led by Ron Collier, Ferde Mowry and Benny Louis and appeared on variety shows on CBC television. From 1956 to 1958, she toured in the United States and Canada with saxophonist Don Thompson. In 1959, she joined the big band of Maynard Ferguson. Moss also performed with the Count Basie Orchestra, Rob McConnell and the Boss Brass, Phil Nimmons, Moe Koffman and the Bernie Senensky Trio. For a time, she replaced Annie Ross in the vocal trio Lambert, Hendricks & Ross.[1][2]

She married Jackie Paris in 1961 and began performing and touring with him. In 1980, she began performing as a solo artist again.[1] The couple divorced in the late 1980s.[3]

Moss gave private voice classes. In 1987, she began teaching at the Manhattan School of Music.[1] Her students included Roseanna Vitro, Judi Silvano and Jane Blackstone.[3]

She died in New York City at the age of 77.[3]

Selected recordings

  • Live at the Maisonette, with Jackie Paris (1974)
  • Don't You Know Me? (1981)
gollark: Like apparently lots of English things it runs on bizarre informal consensus which kind of holds together.
gollark: They should publish the grammar as BNF or something.
gollark: I'd assume *not*, since they mostly developed before there was sufficient global communication to make it work nicely.
gollark: Is this just a normal thing for most other languages which English is totally missing?
gollark: English is apparently more hellishly convoluted than most, given its history.

References

  1. "Anne Marie Moss". The Canadian Encyclopedia.
  2. "Anne Marie Moss". Canadian Jazz Archive.
  3. "What Are our Goals?". New Music USA. March 2, 2012.
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