* En anglais uniquement
A mellow, lyrical cool jazz trumpeter in the vein of
Chet Baker,
Tony Fruscella unfortunately lived a similarly addictive lifestyle that led to a tragically premature death.
Fruscella was born in Orangeburg, NY, on February 4, 1927, and gained his first important experience playing in an Army band. His cool tone -- influenced by
Miles Davis and swing-era veteran
Joe Thomas, and also reminiscent of
Bix Beiderbecke's fluidity -- made him a nicely compatible sideman in the early '50s for artists like
Charlie Barnet,
Lester Young,
Gerry Mulligan, and
Stan Getz. In 1955, the same year he recorded with
Getz,
Fruscella led the only session officially released during his lifetime, I'll Be Seeing You (also re-released as
Tony Fruscella). Drugs and alcohol had already begun to take their toll, however, and
Fruscella's subsequent activity was mostly limited to a few dates with fellow cool trumpeter Don Joseph during the late '50s. He was out of jazz by the '60s and died in New York of cirrhosis in 1969. In the wake of his death,
Fruscella's lovely but slim recorded legacy was fleshed out somewhat with the release of several live and studio dates. ~ Steve Huey