Simmons, John (Jacob)
(Haskell, OK, 14 June 1918 - Los Angeles, 19 Sept 1979)
Double bass player
He first played trumpet, then took up double bass. He worked
with Nat "King" Cole and recorded in Los Angeles with Teddy Wilson's
quintet (1937), then moved to Chicago, where he played in the bands of Johnny Letman (1940), Roy Eldridge (1940-41), Benny Goodman
(1941), and Cootie Williams and Louis Armstrong (both 1942). He worked in CBS
radio orchestras, performed briefly with Duke Ellington (1943), appeared in the
acclaimed film Jammin' the
Blues (1944), then played with Eddie Heywood in Los
Angeles and Illinois Jacquet
in New York (both 1945). Between
1944 and 1946 he also recorded with James P. Johnson, Hot Lips Page, Sid
Catlett, Ben Webster, Billie Holiday, the Kansas City Six, Heywood, Sidney De
Paris, Erroll Garner, Al Casey, Coleman Hawkins, Don Byas, Benny Carter, and Bill De Arango.
Later he recorded with Ella Fitzgerald (1947), Sir Charles Thompson (1947-8),
and Thelonious Monk (1948) and played in Garner's trio in New York
(1949-52). In 1955 he performed with Harry Edison and in Scandinavia
with the quintet led by Rolf Ericson and Duke Jordan;
the following year he recorded with Tadd Dameron. Illness prevented Simmons from working steadily
thereafter but he recorded with Edison in 1958 and
played with Phineas Newborn in 1959-60. He was
equally at home working with mainstream and bop groups; his round tone and
sensitive, solid playing is heard to advantage on the recordings he made with
Catlett.
Johnny Simmen
The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, ©