Joe Bushkin(1916-2004)
- Music Department
- Composer
- Actor
Songwriter and jazz pianist who was born to Russian immigrants and
learned to play the piano by age ten. His first professional
performance was in 1932 with the Frank LaMarr orchestra in New York's
Roseland Ballroom. By 1935, he became intermission pianist at the
Famous Door where the Bunny Berigan Boys were performing, a group that
included guitarist Eddie Condon and pianist
George Zack, whom Bushkin ended up replacing. In 1936, he played on
Billie Holiday's first recording under
her own name. Later, he went on to play with Condon, Joe Marsala, and
Tommy Dorsey, whose band he joined and
where he wrote the hit song "Oh! Look at Me Now" with
John DeVries, the tune that launched the
career of a young Frank Sinatra. He was
pianist with the bands of Louis Prima,
Bunny Berigan, Joe Marsala, and
Muggsy Spanier. In 1946, he joined
Benny Goodman and later played
with Louis Armstrong. In 1951,
he formed his own group and worked at The Embers in New York. Bushkin
retired after working with conductor/arranger
Kenyon Hopkins on several Capitol albums
("Blue Angels," "Night Sounds," "I Get a Kick out of Porter"), but
performed on Bing Crosby's last tours in
1976 and 1977 and a 1984 concert series at New York's St. Regis Hotel,
designed to commemorate his half-century show-business career. He
joined ASCAP in 1946 and wrote many songs and instrumentals.