Freddy Grant

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Frederick Josiah Grant (1905 – 1986) was a British Guiana-born jazz and calypso musician who played saxophone and clarinet. Between the mid-1930s and mid-1950s he was active in Britain, before moving to the United States.

Biography

Grant was born in British Guiana. He toured South America as a member of

Leslie "Jiver" Hutchinson.[1]

Immediately after the end of the Second World War, in 1945, he featured with his own band, the West Indian Calypsonians, in concerts organised by record producer

Parlophone Records as the Grant-Lyttelton Paseo Jazz Band.[1][2] Promoted by Preston, the band toured with singers Young Tiger and Bill Rogers.[3] Grant recorded with calypso star Lord Kitchener, and worked in other bands and in nightclubs in London.[1] He also appeared on such BBC radio programmes as London Jazz and Calling the West Indies.[4]

In 1953,[5] he moved to the US, where he was credited as Sir Freddy Grant and led his own calypso band.[1] He appeared at Carnegie Hall in 1955,[4] and in 1957 recorded the album Calypso for Bethlehem Records.[6][7]

Grant died in

Westchester, New York, in 1986.[1]

References