Cleve Eaton and the Alabama All Stars will be jazzing it up at the Pell City Library

Published 2:30 pm Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Cleve Eaton will perform in Pell City on Wednesday.

The library will be hopping on Wednesday,  Feb. 16 at noon, as the Pell City Library welcomes jazz great, Cleveland Eaton, and the Alabama All Stars for a concert  of jazzy favorites.  

Recognized as one of the best jazz bassists in the country, Mr. Eaton has performed on stage or played in recording sessions with various personalities in nearly all music genres, including jazz with John Klemmer and Bucky Green, pop with Minnie Ripperton, and big band with George Benson, Henry Mancini, Frank Sinatra, Sarah Vaughan, and Ella Fitzgerald. Eaton and his band bring their musical expertise and experience to Pell City for the library’s ongoing Wild and Wonderful Wednesday series.    

Cleveland “Cleve” Eaton was born on August 31, 1939, in Fairfield, Alabama.  His musical talent was evident at an early age.  He began playing his mother’s piano at age 5, a saxophone by age 8, and the trumpet two years later.  His music teacher, John Springer, introduced him to the tuba and string bass at age 15.  

After earning his degree in music from Tennessee A & I State University, he embarked on a career spanning more than four decades.  

While attending college, he performed in a jazz group, and after graduating, he moved to Chicago and toured with the Ike Cole Trio, and later with Larry Novak, the Ramsey Lewis Trio, and with the legendary Count Basie.  

He was known as “The Count’s Bassist” during his 16-year stint with the Basie Band.  During the 1960’s he appeared on thirty of the Ramsey Lewis Trio’s recordings, including such hits as “Hang on Sloopy” and “Wade in the Water.”  

He has also performed with The Temptations, Lou Rawls, The Platters, Sammy Davis, Jr. and countless others.  

Cleve began performing and touring with his own group, Cleve Eaton and Company, in 1974.  In 2004, his group became known as the Alabama All Stars.  

Many well-known Alabama jazz musicians, such as pianist, Ray Reach, trumpeter, Tommy Stewart, saxophonist, Jeff Lopez, and drummer, John Nuckols play frequently with Cleve Eaton and the Alabama All Stars.

Cleve Eaton is recognized and respected in the world of jazz as a producer, arranger, composer, publisher, and head of his own Birmingham-based record company.  As a recording artist, his version of the “Bama Boogie Woogie” was a best seller in Germany, Switzerland, France, Australia, and the United Kingdom.  

His 1975 recording of Plenty Good Eaton is considered a classic in the funk music genre.   Eaton has received many awards, including the Governor’s Art Award in 1995, and the Don Redman Lifetime Achievement Award in 2004.  

He has been inducted into the Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame.  

He was nominated to the Alabama Music Hall of Fame in 1993 and inducted in February 2008.

Cleve Eaton will perform at the Pell City Library on Wednesday, February 16th at noon, for the library’s ongoing Wild and Wonderful Wednesday series.  

The program is free and open to the public, and promises to be one of the season’s best.  Light refreshments will be served afterwards in the library.