RED MACK aka McCLURE MORRIS

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Red Mack standing to the far left on the picture.

Red Mack, trumpet, is appearing on ”Benny Goodman Story , while Alvin Alcorn played on the soundtrack. 1955_MOVIE_B_G_Story.html
See also ”1940s Tip Toe Inn ”  where Red Mack was  the trumpet player.1940s_Tip_Toe_Inn.html1940s_Tip_Toe_Inn.htmlshapeimage_4_link_0

http://bebopwinorip.blogspot.com/2010/01/luke-jones-red-mack-west-coast-r-1947.html

Red Mack continued his career in the West Coast R&B business.

Red Mack plays ”If you love me baby”.



Red Mack


BY PETER VACHER July 12th, 1993, issue of The Independant :

(http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/obituary-red-mack-1484442.html)


McCLure Morris (Red Mack), trumpeter, pianist/organist, drummer, vocalist and bandleader: born Memphis, Tennessee 18 January 1912; died Los Angeles, California 14 June 1993.

RED MACK was with Kid Ory's Creole Jazz Band when it appeared in the 1955 bio-pic The Benny Goodman Story, helping to give authenticity to the actor Steve Allen's simulated attempts at traditional jazz. It was the trumpeter's reddish complexion and freckles which gave him the stage name he used throughout a long and musically distinguished career in black jazz in California.

Mack's family went West before the First World War hoping to pick cotton, oddly enough, but soon found other work and settled. He took up trumpet at school, inspired by a celebrated local player, Claude Kennedy, and was adept enough to work with territory bands while still in his teens. By 1930, he was with Louis Armstrong at the Cotton Club in Culver City and was called on to play his idol's solo specialities over the air while the great man was serving a nine-day jail sentence for marijuana possession, deceiving all but the best- informed of listeners. Mack later said of Louis, 'I tried to sing like him, play like him, walk and talk like him.'

From then on, he performed with every prominent black orchestra on the coast, including those led by Sonny Clay, Charlie Echols, Lorenzo Flennoy and the young Lionel Hampton. The Basie trumpeter Buck Clayton considered Mack 'the champion trumpet player in Los Angeles' in the Thirties and always spoke appreciatively of his beautiful instrumental tone. By the end of the decade, Mack had become a successful bandleader himself, participating in the entertainment scene on Central Avenue, the focus of the city's black night life.

He recorded frequently, appeared in the 1941 Fred Astaire film You'll Never Get Rich, was briefly with the tenor-saxophonist Lester Young and then with the clarinettist Barney Bigard's All Stars, a swing group which included bassist Charles Mingus and re-introduced the veteran trombonist Kid Ory to active performance. According to Bigard, Ory had been 'sweeping the city morgue for dollars 12 a week' prior to this engagement. Mack also gained some notoriety when he became one of a handful of top black musicians to play with otherwise all-white orchestras, touring as a featured artist with Will Osborne's band just prior to Pearl Harbor.

Mack's post-war career was more fragmented as bebop became the dominant force in jazz. He continued to front combos in clubs and on tour but achieved only modest success, even though he took up vibes and organ to supplement his trumpet and vocals. Later he chose to concentrate on his real-estate interests after his health failed, although he did visit Europe in 1963 to perform in Switzerland and Paris, stopping off in London. Among his last engagements were a number with the pianist-vocalist Nellie Lutcher, who was a regular guest at the jam sessions which he liked to host in the vast music room at his home in Central Los Angeles.

Red Mack, trumpet, is appearing on ”Benny Goodman Story.

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Red Mack - Chapter 7


Down Beat, August 15, 1942.

Los Angeles Band Briefs by Hal Holly.

Barney Bigard debuted his own quartet at the Trouville. With Barney is Red Mack on trumpet, a top man in anyone’s band.


Down Beat, September 1, 1942

Kid Ory Comes Back to Bizz; Los Angeles-Barney Bigard, whose new seven-piece  combo was scheduled to open August 20 at the Trouville, sharing the spot with Stuff Smith, will have on trombone none other than Kid Ory, who is coming  out  of retirement to take a last fling at jazz before putting his old horn away for good .

In addition to Ory, Barney has Red Mack, trumpet; Jack Kelso, alto and

clarinet; Henry Tucker, drums; Charlie Engels [sic], bass; and Garland Finney, piano.


Down Beat, September 15, 1942

Los Angeles-The small band spotlight is shared by the new combos launced  here last month by Barney Bigard and Murray McEachern. Barney has backed  his clarinet with Kid Ory’s trombone, Red Mack’s trumpet and an alto sax. Barney takes his band to the Capri this month.


Metronome, September 1942 

Kid Ory returns to active duty as a member of Barney Bigard’s new seven-piece band, currently at the Trouville. He is now fifty-two years old, and hasn´t been

heard as a regularly active musician in many years.

He’s killing the cats in these parts. So is Barney, of course, who left  Duke [Ellington] recently. Also in the band are trumpeter Red Mack, altoist Jack Kelso, drummer Tommie Tucker (actually Henry Tucker Greeni) bassist Charles Ingles 

[actually Mingus] and pianist Garland Finney.


Down Beat, November 15, 1942

Los Angeles Band Briefs by Hal Holly

Red Mack, trumpet player featured with Barney Bigard’s erstwhile band at the Trouville, has stepped out with his own combo of Local 767 cutters at Central Avenue’s Club Plantation. Sitting proudly and ably at the tubs [drums] in Red’s new band is Local 47’s Walt Sherman. Hat’s off to a boy who recognizes only One Big Union for musicians-the Musicians’ Union.


Later Red played with Cee Pee Johnson’s band again at the Trouville and took an outfit to Victorville with Dorothy Broil on piano. By then Red was playing vibes and drums as well as trumpet. Few of these short-lived come recorded, and it’s hard to pin down dates and durations for many of these engagements.

In 1945, he made a USO tour to Alaska with his old friend altoist Luke Jones in his band, plus dancers Earl and Francis and comedian Nick “Nicodemus” Stewart.

 
 
 
 
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