Cal Collins

Cal Collins (May 5, 1933 – August 27, 2001) was an American jazz guitarist. Born in Medora, Indiana, United States, Collins first played the mandolin professionally as a bluegrass musician in the early 1950s. After service in the Army, he moved to Cincinnati, Ohio, and switched to jazz guitar after hearing swing guitarists Charlie Christian, Irving Ashby, and Oscar Moore. He played in Cincinnati for twenty years. His first recording was on the Airtown label, a 45RPM, #JB2006 that was released in 1968. One side features a Jazzed version of Duane Eddy's "40 Miles of Bad Road", the other side of the recording features a version of the Santo & Johnny hit, "Sleepwalk" combined into a medley with "Peg of My Heart". Benny Goodman hired him in 1976 at the age of 43. He spent three years with the Goodman orchestra and then three years making albums for Concord Jazz. As a leader and sideman, he worked with Scott Hamilton, Warren Vache, Rosemary Clooney, Ross Tompkins, Woody Herman, John Bunch, and Marshal Royal. In the early 1980s, Collins returned to Cincinnati and slowed down his career. He joined the Masters of the Steel String Guitar Tour in 1993 with Jerry Douglas and Doc Watson and recorded his last album in 1998. In 2001, he died of liver failure.

Slick Funk - 2022-07-26T00:00:00.000000Z

J. Curve Cincinnati Jazz Collection, Vol II - 2011-05-23T00:00:00.000000Z

S'us Four: Jazz Guitar Cincinnati Style - 1970-01-01T00:00:00.000000Z

Similar Artists

Tom Dempsey

David Mooney Trio

Frank Potenza Quartet

John Stein Trio

Jim Mullen

Nikolai Gromin

Joaquín Chacón

Dominic Egli

Peter Almqvist

Ed Cherry Special Trio

Ryan Fourt

Giuseppe Continenza

Hermanos Gonzalez Goytia Trio

Bob DeVos

The Jim Mullen Organ Trio

Peter Eigenmann Trio

Randy Johnston

Jim Mullen Quartet

Bennett Brandeis

George Cotsirilos