George Tyndale

George Tyndale (Sibornia) [Sky] (15 June 1913 in Manchester, Jamaica – 4 December 1991 in Dorking, England) was a Jamaican tenor saxophonist and clarinetist.

George Tyndale

Early career

He started on clarinet and worked in Bermuda and on Canadian cruise ships before taking up saxophone. As a key soloist in the society band of the pianist Milton McPherson, he became a leading tenor saxophonist in Jamaica.

Move to England

In 1945, he moved to England to join Jiver Hutchinson, with whom he remained for five years and made tours of India and Europe. He then worked in Cambridge with the trumpeter Ken Turner. With Cab Kaye he toured Belgium and the Netherlands (1950–51), after which he rejoined Hutchinson to tour Sweden and worked with Joe Harriott.

Performances

An expansive soloist in the style of Ben Webster, Tyndale developed a reputation for reliability as a section player and worked with Ted Heath, Harry Gold, and the Squadronaires. He recorded with Caribbean singers and appeared extensively at nightclubs, in particular with Joe Appleton's band and for a period as a leader at the Sunset, a rendezvous popular with London's black population. Tyndale changed to baritone saxophone on joining John Dankworth’s orchestra in 1960;[1] he then spent several years with semi-professional groups.

Selected recordings

gollark: ???
gollark: CPU companies have stronger incentives to avoid bloat.
gollark: Like what?
gollark: x86 has of course eternally been accursedly CISCy.
gollark: Well, a few iterations back high-performance ARM cores got micro-op things despite a theoretical advantage of ARM being easier and simpler instruction decoding.

References

  1. Dankworth, John (1998). Jazz in revolution (1. publ. ed.). London: Constable. p. 139. ISBN 0094775702.

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.