* En anglais uniquement
Fans of modern jazz artists such as
Stan Getz,
Gerry Mulligan, and the ironic
Mose Allison may frankly have isolated
Frank Isola from the totality of credited accompaniment in their record collections. The Detroit native was one of a legion of impressionable young people who decided to become drummers after being exposed to the mighty
Gene Krupa. The dream was short-lived, however: in 1957, this artist retired after only about 15 years in the music business.
Isola was active in high-school band, then a military outfit between 1943 and 1945. He began gigging professionally after undertaking further studies in California, eventually returning to New York City and bandstands under the rule of
Johnny Bothwell and
Stan Getz, among others. By 1953
Isola had begun his rewarding collaboration with baritone saxophonist
Mulligan, which he focused fairly steadily on for several years prior to a final freelancing period of about equal duration. ~ Eugene Chadbourne