Buzzy Drootin

Benjamin "Buzzy" Drootin (April 22, 1920 May 21, 2000[1]) was a jazz drummer. He played with many leading jazz musicians over a career of sixty years.

Drootin was born near Kiev, Ukraine and moved to Boston, Massachusetts with his family when he was five. His father played the clarinet and two of his brothers as well as his nephew were also musicians. Drootin began playing drums professionally as a teenager. At age twenty, he toured with the Jess Stacy All-Stars, a group that featured Lee Wiley. He also toured with Ina Ray Hutton around the same time. He then joined the band of Chicago jazz musician Wingy Manone. From 1947 until 1951, he worked as the house drummer at Eddie Condon's night club in New York.[1]

In the 1950s and 1960s he worked in clubs in New York, Chicago and Boston. He did a stint as bandleader at New York's El Morocco Club. He and his brother Al were in the house band at George Wein's Storyville in Boston during the early and mid 1950s. In those years he played with musicians including Bobby Hackett, Jimmy McPartland, Doc Cheatham, Vic Dickenson, Claude Hopkins, Arvell Shaw and Pee Wee Russell.

He also recorded with Tommy Dorsey, Bobby Hackett, Jack Teagarden, Eddie Condon, Ruby Braff, Anita O'Day, George Wein, The Newport All-Stars, Lee Konitz, Sidney Bechet, PeeWee Russell and The Dukes of Dixieland. In 1968/69 he toured and recorded with Wild Bill Davison's Jazz Giants and then formed "Buzzy's Jazz Family" borrowing some of Wild Bill's sidemen (Herb Hall, Benny Morton) and adding Herman Autrey on trumpet and his nephew Sonny Drootin on piano.

In 1973, after touring Europe and America, he returned to his hometown of Boston where he and his brother Al (sax and clarinet), and nephew Sonny formed the Drootin Brothers Band. They played at the Newport Jazz Festival. Buzzy played at the very first Newport festival and at many of the festivals after that. He also played at the Los Angeles Classic Jazz Festival in the 1980s.

Drootin backed up many musicians over the years including Wild Bill Davison, Maxine Sullivan, Teddi King, Roy Eldridge, Joe Venuti, and Zoot Sims. He appears as a sideman on numerous recordings including with the bands of Bobby Hackett, Jack Teagarden and the Newport Jazz Festival All-Stars.

He died, from cancer, at the age of eighty at the Actors Fund Retirement and Nursing Home in Englewood, New Jersey.[1]

Discography

With Ruby Braff

Several albums with Bobby Hackett and Jack Teagarden. Numerous albums on George Wein's Storyville label. Several albums with the Newport Jazz Festival All-Stars.

References

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