「Milt」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 225件
| According to Disney Legend | Milt Albright, Holidayland's manager, "It wasn't any |
| Hentoff "You Can't Steal a Gift: Dizzy, Clark, | Milt and Nat" |
| Milt Bailey, Ruth Horn, Gary Morris, Sarah Westphale | |
| When | Milt Barlow left the troupe in 1882, Primrose and We |
| Milt Bauguess | |
| Milt Bernhart - Trombone (tracks 1, 3, 4, 7, 9, 13, | |
| Milt Bernhart | |
| Milt Bernhart - trombone | |
| Milt Bernhart - Trombone | |
| artists as Buddy Childers, Maynard Ferguson and | Milt Bernhart, was much-respected by symphony brass |
| Bert Remsen as | Milt Bisby |
| April 29, 1957: Faye Throneberry, | Milt Bolling and Russ Kemmerer were traded by the Re |
| or the Philadelphia Phillies in 1945; Frank and | Milt Bolling, with the Detroit Tigers in 1958, and B |
| Along with | Milt, both have a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame |
| Milt Britton as Himself (leader, Milt Britton's Band | |
| Milt Britton's Band as Themselves | |
| turned to Wisconsin as an assistant coach under | Milt Bruhn for two seasons after which he was promot |
| He worked with | Milt Buckner in 1950, then returned to duty under Ha |
| oogie Woogie" is a 1944 instrumental written by | Milt Buckner and Lionel Hampton and performed by Lio |
| he returned to full-time playing, touring with | Milt Buckner in France in 1971, then played in Paul |
| Milt Buckner | |
| While in France he played with Al Grey, | Milt Buckner, and Floyd Smith. |
| kins, Lee Konitz, Roy Eldridge, Michel Legrand, | Milt Buckner, Jay McShann and Quincy Jones in the 19 |
| g Bill Coleman, Don Byas, Ben Webster, Kid Ory, | Milt Buckner, Buddy Tate, and T-Bone Walker. |
| He was the brother of | Milt Buckner. |
| C - | Milt Crain, Montreal Alouettes |
| Milt Davis, NFL AP All Pro 1957; taught and coached | |
| Sam Flint - | Milt Dawson |
| he promotion; former Toronto Star sports editor | Milt Dunnell said that "He received more ink than Si |
| Milt Erhart | |
| Milt Erhart, perennial candidate | |
| Milt Fankhouser (29 October 1915 New York City - 26 | |
| Musical Direction: | Milt Franklyn |
| eorge Daugherty with music by Carl Stalling and | Milt Franklyn. |
| y Michael Maltese, with musical arrangements by | Milt Franklyn. |
| setts, and son of the goodly old-time minstrel, | Milt G. Barlow (1843-1904), he made his stage debut |
| nown as Primrose and West starring entertainers | Milt G. Barlow and George Wilson, under the manageme |
| The soundtrack was produced by | Milt Gabler and recorded at Polydor Studios, Hamburg |
| The third credited songwriter was | Milt Gabler (1911-2001), then the vice-president of |
| During Lion's war service, Wolff worked for | Milt Gabler at the Commodore Music Store, and togeth |
| E" is a jazz song written by Bert Kaempfert and | Milt Gabler for American singer-pianist Nat King Col |
| rsion of "Shake, Rattle and Roll", but producer | Milt Gabler denied this; Francis is also believed to |
| s Page; some of their sessions were recorded by | Milt Gabler and released on Commodore Records. |
| "In a Mellow Tone" (Duke Ellington, | Milt Gabler) |
| "In a Mellow Tone" [Take 1] (Ellington, | Milt Gabler) - 3:14 |
| "In a Mellow Tone" ( | Milt Gabler) - 5:07 |
| "In a Mellow Tone" (Ellington, | Milt Gabler) - 2:54 |
| "L-O-V-E" (Bert Kaempfert, | Milt Gabler) |
| "In a Mellow Tone" (Duke Ellington, | Milt Gabler) - 4:17 |
| "In a Mellow Tone" (Duke Ellington, | Milt Gabler) - 5:39 |
| His uncle was musician and songwriter | Milt Gabler, and his brother, Richard "Rip" Crystal, |
| "Love" ( | Milt Gabler, Bert Kaempfert) - 5:57 |
| ded two singles with Decca Records, produced by | Milt Gabler. |
| e Senators to Boston along with Elliot Bigelow, | Milt Gaston, Hod Lisenbee and Bobby Reeves, in the s |
| o, Ghee noted, "In the huddle, our quarterback, | Milt Ghee, an All-America from Dartmouth, said, 'Gre |
| Milt Grayson - background vocals | |
| Betty Neals, Maeretha Stewart, | Milt Grayson, Arthur Williams, Randy Peyton, Hilda H |
| strip called Then The Fun Began, inherited from | Milt Gross. |
| On March 23, 1955, | Milt had a career-threatening injury when he broke h |
| the Progressive Conservative Party, now led by | Milt Harradence, resulting in the party losing its s |
| be Lyman 8-29-1939, (Bluebird 10321) and by the | Milt Herth Trio 10-19-1939 (DECCA 2964A) |
| h, Smith, and drummer O'Neil Spencer formed the | Milt Herth Trio. |
| Milt Herth | |
| recorded an album under his own name alongside | Milt Hinton in 1955 for RCA Records entitled Basses |
| Liston, Phil Woods, Julius Watkins, and bassist | Milt Hinton and pianist Patricia Brown on two sessio |
| ackson, saxophone player Junie Cobb and bassist | Milt Hinton are exceptions. |
| Milt Hinton | |
| Milt Hinton - double bass | |
| Milt Hinton - Bass | |
| Milt Hinton - bass | |
| 1955: | Milt Hinton Quartet Bethlehem High Fidelity |
| He taught younger Chicago musicians (like | Milt Hinton) his "slap" style of string bass playing |
| Kenny Burrell, Buck Clayton, Dickie Wells, and | Milt Hinton) and one for Atlantic Records in 1962 (f |
| Among his other jazz associations are | Milt Hinton, Buddy Tate, Clark Terry, and Louis Arms |
| , Coleman Hawkins, pianist Sammy Price, bassist | Milt Hinton, and drummer Jo Jones. |
| lude his father Bucky Pizzarelli, Dave McKenna, | Milt Hinton, Clark Terry and Connie Kay. |
| th Harry Belafonte, Etta Jones, Nellie Lutcher, | Milt Hinton, Osie Johnson, Paul Quinichette, Jimmy R |
| cians, including Anthony Braxton, Paul Dunmall, | Milt Hinton, Fred Frith, David Krakauer, Joelle Lean |
| dor, Betty Neals, Maeretha Stewart, Hank Jones, | Milt Hinton, Fred Moore, Wilton Eaton, Trudy Pitts, |
| ne, Sol Schlinger, Bill Evans, Barry Galbraith, | Milt Hinton, Charlie Persip and narrated by Jon Hend |
| son, Teddy Harris, Roy Brooks, Big John Patton, | Milt Hinton, Grant Green, Pharaoh Saunders, Sonny Ro |
| Milt Hinton, bass | |
| Milt Hinton: East Coast Jazz /5 (Rhino, 1955) | |
| Milt Hinton: bass | |
| Milt Hinton: bass (track 2) | |
| c guitar; Voormann - bass; Jim Keltner - drums; | Milt Holland - percussion; Horns - Tom Scott |
| Milt Holland - percussion | |
| Milt Holland (percussion) | |
| Milt Holland - Percussion | |
| Milt Holland - Percussion, conga | |
| Milt Holland - vibes and marimbas | |
| Milt Holland - Chimes on "Court and Spark" | |
| Grant Withers as | Milt Howe |
| Milt is an M.D. who practices board-certified Family | |
| Contains samples from | Milt Jackson as "People Make The World Go Around" |
| This line-up recorded as the | Milt Jackson Quartet in 1951. |
| Trane is an album by American jazz vibraphonist | Milt Jackson and saxophonist John Coltrane. |
| Milt Jackson and Paulinho da Costa recorded for Pabl | |
| Milt Jackson was added to the quintet due to Parker' | |
| Samba is an album by American jazz vibraponist | Milt Jackson featuring performances recorded in 1964 |
| itically acclaimed session with Ray Charles and | Milt Jackson in 1957 called Soul Brothers. |
| "Bags' Groove" is a jazz composition by | Milt Jackson and first recorded by Miles Davis's qui |
| a Few of Us Left is an album by jazz musicians | Milt Jackson and Oscar Peterson, released in 1981. |
| as a sideman on records for Savoy Records with | Milt Jackson as leader. |
| usic review by Scott Yanow states "Vibraphonist | Milt Jackson and tenor saxophonist John Coltrane mak |
| ing Jackson, Johnson, Brown & Company featuring | Milt Jackson on vibes, J. J. Johnson on trombone, Ra |
| Christlieb (1978), Bob Florence (1979-81), and | Milt Jackson (1981). |
| Milt Jackson | |
| Milt Jackson - vibraphone | |
| With | Milt Jackson |
| Milt Jackson - vibes | |
| Vibraphone - | Milt Jackson |
| Milt Jackson - vibes (tracks 1-4) | |
| Statements | Milt Jackson (1962; Impulse! |
| All compositions by | Milt Jackson except as indicated |
| Much in Common with | Milt Jackson (1962), Polygram |
| Credited to "Miles Davis and | Milt Jackson", this was an "all-star" session, and d |
| In 1988 he had his recording debut and joined | Milt Jackson's Quartet. |
| n on December 24, 1954 ("Bags" was vibraphonist | Milt Jackson's nickname). |
| The song was named for vibraphonist | Milt Jackson's nickname "Bags". |
| "Ain't But a Few of Us Left" ( | Milt Jackson) - 7:26 |
| "Bluesology" ( | Milt Jackson) - 9:23 |
| "Reunion Blues" ( | Milt Jackson) - 6:45 |
| "Bags' Groove" ( | Milt Jackson) - 7:17 |
| "Ralph's New Blues" ( | Milt Jackson) - 7:08 |
| "Reunion Blues" ( | Milt Jackson) - 13:29 |
| "Heart Strings" ( | Milt Jackson) - 4:38 |
| "Reunion Blues" ( | Milt Jackson) - 8:50 |
| "Reunion Blues" ( | Milt Jackson) - 7:17 |
| "Ralph's New Blues" ( | Milt Jackson) 9:52 |
| "Blues Oriental" ( | Milt Jackson) - 5:03 |
| "Blues for Joe Turner" (Count Basie, | Milt Jackson) - 5:59 |
| "Blues for the Stone" ( | Milt Jackson) - 6:16 |
| Statements is an album by jazz vibraphonist | Milt Jackson, released in 1962 on Impulse! |
| Lionel Hampton, | Milt Jackson, and Cal Tjader were early inspirations |
| He made recordings with | Milt Jackson, J. J. Johnson, Al Cohn, Oscar Pettifor |
| Milt Jackson, John Lewis, and Kenny Clarke had origi | |
| Angeles late in the 1960s, where he played with | Milt Jackson, George Duke, Cal Tjader, Jean-Luc Pont |
| p American visitors such as Zoot Sims, Al Cohn, | Milt Jackson, and Dizzy Gillespie. |
| ) with James Moody, Dodo Marmarosa, Hank Jones, | Milt Jackson, Ray Brown, J. C. Heard |
| nk Wess, Thad Jones, Ernie Wilkins) and others ( | Milt Jackson, Coleman Hawkins, Putte Wickman). |
| sicians such as bassist Ray Brown, vibraphonist | Milt Jackson, and pianist John Lewis. |
| orked with artists such as Dee Dee Bridgewater, | Milt Jackson, Ulf Wakenius, John Esposito, Joanne Br |
| man, Charlie Watts, Scott Hamilton, Buddy Tate, | Milt Jackson, Ben Webster, George Chisholm and Kenny |
| ed jazz musicians as Ben Webster, Errol Garner, | Milt Jackson, and Billie Holiday. |
| He has written and/or arranged music for | Milt Jackson, Nancy Wilson, Ray Brown, Regina Carter |
| ith Mary Lou Williams, Art Blakey, Donald Byrd, | Milt Jackson, and Hank Jones among others. |
| r, Big Joe Turner, Coleman Hawkins, Frank Wess, | Milt Jackson, Sidney Bechet, Sonny Rollins, Sonny St |
| ncesco, Dexter Gordon, Bunky Green, Roy Haynes, | Milt Jackson, "Philly" Joe Jones, Clifford Jordan, R |
| z musicians and popular entertainers, including | Milt Jackson, Joe Henderson, Gary Burton, Sonny Stit |
| ert with Sonny Stitt, Gene Ammons, Clark Terry, | Milt Jackson, Eddie Harris, Zoot Simms, Eddie "Clean |
| ffin, Herbie Mann, Randy Brecker, Joe Williams, | Milt Jackson, and Jimmy Witherspoon. |
| llins with the Modern Jazz Quartet (John Lewis, | Milt Jackson, Percy Heath, and Kenny Clarke), eight |
| Joyce DiCamillo, Booker Ervin, Freddie Hubbard, | Milt Jackson, J. J. Johnson, Quincy Jones, Oliver La |
| Coleman Hawkins, Johnny Hodges, Billie Holiday, | Milt Jackson, Illinois Jacquet, Hank Jones, Barney K |
| e Silver, Ron Carter, Hank Jones, Benny Carter, | Milt Jackson, Art Farmer, McCoy Tyner, Wynton Marsal |
| lbum by pianist Oscar Peterson and vibraphonist | Milt Jackson. |
| ded Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Max Roach, and | Milt Jackson. |
| erican jazz guitarist Joe Pass and vibraphonist | Milt Jackson. |
| ompilation of performances by jazz vibraphonist | Milt Jackson. |
| Kenny Clarke, Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie and | Milt Jackson. |
| trud Gilberto, Freddie Hubbard, Herb Ellis, and | Milt Jackson. |
| Milt Jackson: vibes | |
| Bags and Trane [with | Milt Jackson] (released 1961) |
| According to Benny writer | Milt Josefsberg, the issue was budget. |
| He assisted legendary animator | Milt Kahl with Alice in Wonderland (1951) by complet |
| the Stone (in which he was paired with animator | Milt Kahl to great effect), King Louie in The Jungle |
| Milt Kogan (born April 10, 1936 in Camden, New Jerse | |
| agician who usually teamed up with his brother, | Milt Larsen. |
| traded to the Houston Astros where, he replaced | Milt May as the Astros' starting catcher. |
| On May 27, the White Sox purchased | Milt May from the Detroit Tigers, and Foley, who was |
| December 6, 1975: | Milt May, Dave Roberts and Jim Crawford were traded |
| bstituted for the original flipside, "Harry and | Milt Meet Hal B." This, and many other flipsides, we |
| tz, Terry McCarl, Jim McWhithey, A. J. Michael, | Milt Miller, Charlie Musselman, Johnny Parsons, Sr., |
| ents for a local series, Cartoon Zoo, featuring | Milt Moss as host and "Zookeeper", with life-sized c |
| "Deck the Halls" (Trad., arrangement | Milt Okun) (The Cast) |
| Babe I Hate to Go" but Denver's then producer, | Milt Okun, convinced him to change the title. |
| week after the team released former point guard | Milt Palacio for failure to join the team on time. |
| the first the Cubs had been involved in) since | Milt Pappas in 1972. |
| Carmen is known for catching the last out in | Milt Pappas no-hitter on September 2, 1972 when Gary |
| ielder Frank Robinson to Baltimore for pitchers | Milt Pappas and Jack Baldschun and a minor league ou |
| after DeWitt added front-line starting pitcher | Milt Pappas in a blockbuster trade with Baltimore in |
| traded by the Reds to the Baltimore Orioles for | Milt Pappas, Jack Baldschun, and Dick Simpson. |
| ing rotation, which also featured Steve Barber, | Milt Pappas, Jerry Walker and Jack Fisher. |
| Milt Raskin - conductor, orchestration | |
| Piano: | Milt Raskin, Howard Smith, Joe Bushkin, Dick Jones, |
| Milt Schmidt continued to show improvement, scoring | |
| Center | Milt Schmidt lead the league in scoring with 22 goal |
| 15 | Milt Schmidt |
| n playing with Hall of Famers like Bobby Bauer, | Milt Schmidt, and Roy Conacher. |
| o become the team's general manager, succeeding | Milt Schmidt, who was made executive director. |
| Bobby Bauer, Pat McReavy, Herb Cain, Mel Hill, | Milt Schmidt, Woody Dumart, Roy Conacher, Terry Rear |
| ead coach and was replaced later that season by | Milt Schmidt. |
| April, 1886: | Milt Scott was assigned by the Alleghenys to the Bal |
| June 25, 1885: | Milt Scott was purchased by the Alleghenys from the |
| "Black Diamond" ( | Milt Sealey) - 5:23 |
| Biddle recorded LPs with | Milt Sealey, Ted Curson, and Oliver Jones. |
| August 19, 1939: | Milt Shoffner was selected off waivers by the Reds f |
| August 19, 1939: | Milt Shoffner was selected off waivers from the Bees |
| On February 18, | Milt Stegall announced his retirement from the Blue |
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