Sam Dockery

Appearances

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Latino Blue
#5173299
Various Artists
Label: Blue Note Records
Number of Discs: 1

Though it includes just one track originally released on Blue Note (Kenny Dorham's "Afrodisia"), Latino Blue is a superb collection of Latin jazz spanning the late '50s to the late [more]

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History of Jazz Messengers
#5379513
Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers
Label: Blue Note
Number of Discs: 3

Three-disc anthology that covers various editions of The Messengers from the beginning to the end. It contains such classics as

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Different Drummers
#21954023
Art Blakey & Max Roach
Number of Discs: 1

Different Drummers is exactly that, two live sets featuring two different quintets driven in turn by two different jazz drummers, Art Blakey and Max Roach. Blakey's [more]

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Hard Bop [Bonus Tracks]
#21526549
Art Blakey
Label: Mosaic
Number of Discs: 1

Issued as part of Mosaic Records' Singles series, Hard Bop is given the deluxe treatment here. For starters, this 1957 date -- with altoist Jackie McLean, pianist Sam Dockery, [more]

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Biography

Although not a huge name in the jazz world, veteran hard bop pianist Sam Dockery has been well-respected on the Philadelphia jazz scene since the early '50s. Over the years, Dockery has enjoyed a reputation for being a very hard-swinging, straight-ahead player; Bud Powell is a major influence on Dockery, as are Thelonious Monk and Art Tatum. Dockery, who is originally from Lawnside, NJ but has spent much of his life in and around Philly, is perhaps best known for the year he was with Art Blakey & the Jazz Messengers. Dockery, a frequent visitor to New York City, was with drummer Blakey's Jazz Messengers in 1956 and 1957; he was Blakey's pianist after Horace Silver and Kenny Drew Sr. and before Junior Mance or Bobby Timmons. During his stay in that legendary group, Dockery was part of a five-man lineup that also included trumpeter Bill Hardman, alto saxophonist Jackie McLean (pre-Blue Note) and bassist Spanky DeBrest; at times, that quintet became a sextet when Chicago icon Johnny Griffin was added on tenor sax. But Blakey wasn't the only well-known jazz musician Dockery played with during his youth; the late '50s and early '60s found him being featured in Philly tenor saxophonist Jimmy Heath's quartet, which employed Buster Williams on bass and Specs Wright on drums. And along the way, Dockery also crossed paths with heavyweight improvisers ranging from trumpeter Clifford Brown (four years before Dockery's association with Art Blakey & the Jazz Messengers) to saxophonists Sonny Stitt, Benny Golson and Stan Getz. Regrettably, Dockery hasn't been recorded nearly as often as he should have been; in a perfect world, any pianist of his caliber would have a huge catalog. Nonetheless, Dockery was a fixture on the Philly jazz scene throughout the '60s, '70s and '80s. The '90s and early 2000s found Dockery teaching at Philly's University of the Arts and continuing to perform around the city, where he was a frequent attraction at Ortleib's Jazz Haus and other local jazz hangouts. ~ Alex Henderson, All Music Guide