Col Nolan
Col Nolan was an Australian jazz organ and piano player. He was nominated for the 1997 ARIA Award for Best Jazz Album with Nolan's Groove, recorded with David Seidel on bass and Laurie Bennett on drums along with guest musicians.[1] The Nolan-Buddle Quartet's (Nolan, Errol Buddle, Dieter Vogt and Warren Daly) 1976 single release of the theme from Picnic at Hanging Rock charted in the Australian top 40.[2]
Col Nolan | |
---|---|
Born | 16 April 1938 |
Origin | Australia |
Died | 26 May 2019 Lewisham, NSW |
Genres | Jazz |
Occupation(s) | Organist, pianist |
Instruments | Organ, piano |
Discography
Col Nolan
Col Nolan & The Soul Syndicate
- "Buckingham Palace"/"What's The Use" (1973) - Avan-Guard
- Crazy Crochet (1966) - CBS
- Whatever It's Worth (1968) - CBS
- Live At Jason's (1973) - Avan-Guard
Col Nolan Quartet
- "Love In Spring"/"Dry Country" (1977) - M7
- Arangements (1976) - M7
The Nolan-Buddle Quartet
- "My Machine"/"Killing Me Softly With His Love" (1975) - M7
- "Picnic At Hanging Rock" (1976) - M7Aus #15
- The Odd Couple (1976) - M7
gollark: Well, I think most cases would be fine with 1 to 3 bracketless arguments.
gollark: Technically, that was two other values, but hħhħhh.
gollark: So `<bee apio` = `(bee apio)`.
gollark: And similar things for other brackets.
gollark: Or you could make `<` be "( then ) after one other value"?
References
- Nathan, Dave. "Col Nolan. Nolan's Groove". Allmusic.
- Morris, Barry (17 January 2001). "Lasting sax appeal". Daily Telegraph.
- Shand, John (29 July 1996), "Simmering Very Nicely", The Sydney Morning Herald
- Gettler, Leon (7 November 1996), "Jazz", The Age
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.