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Phillip Wilson - Wikipedia Phillip Sanford Wilson (September 8, 1941 – March 25, 1992) [1] was an American blues and jazz drummer, a founding member of the Art Ensemble of Chicago, and a member of the Paul Butterfield Blues Band
Phillip Wilson Profiles - Facebook View the profiles of people named Phillip Wilson Join Facebook to connect with Phillip Wilson and others you may know Facebook gives people the power
Perfect Sound Forever: Phillip Wilson interview In this interview (done in NYC, around the time of Down By Law), Philip Wilson tells his own story, from his first high school groups through much of the amazing history outlined above
Phillip Wilson bio - JazzInfo Phillip Wilson (sometimes referred to as Philip Wilson or Phil Wilson but not to be mistaken with the trombonist of the same name) was a top drummer of his generation in jazz, blues and rock He was born Phillip Sanford Wilson in St Louis, Missouri in 1941
St. Louis Jazz Notes: Phillip Wilson remembered - Blogger Phillip Wilson, the drummer and St Louis native who was an early member of the Art Ensemble of Chicago, broke into the musical big time with the Butterfield Blues Band, and went on to play with many of the important free jazz musicians of the 1970s and 1980s, is remembered fondly in a recent post by Brian Olewnick at his blog Just Outside
Tribute to Drummer Phillip Wilson - Scott K Fish In my view, Phillip Wilson’s playing on Pigboy Crabshaw and the group’s 1968 follow-up album, In My Own Dream, took the innovations of the great Chicago blues drummers to a new level Mr Wilson blazed a trail in a direction opposite his plodding, balls-to-the-wall blues drumming contemporaries
Phillip Wilson is perhaps best known today as the drummer on . . . Phillip Wilson is perhaps best known today as the drummer on Dogon A D , alto saxophonist and composer Julius Hemphill’s 1972 avant-garde masterpiece featuring himself and Wilson with Abdul Wadud on cello and Baikida Carroll on trumpet