Ian Christie (musician)

For the academic, see Ian Christie (film scholar).

Ian Christie (24 June 1927 19 January 2010)[1] was an English jazz clarinetist best known for playing in a number of trad jazz ensembles of the 1950s, including the Christie Brothers' Stompers, featuring Ken Colyer and Dicky Hawdon, with his brother, Keith Christie.[2]

Their father was a piano tuner and banjoist who played in a local Blackpool banjo band. Ian took lessons under Charlie Farrell, but joined the Royal Air Force and took up photography as his primary interest. After Keith joined Humphrey Lyttelton's band, Ian soon followed; he completed his photography studies with Lyttelton's financial help. Ian also worked extensively with Mick Mulligan and George Melly in the 1950s and 1960s.

Aside from music, Christie also pursued other interests in the ensuing decades, working as a film critic for The Daily Express for over 25 years and continuing to work as a photographer. He worked in trad jazz ensembles into the 2000s, with the Wyre Levee Stompers, the Merseysippi & Parade Jazz Band, and the Tony Davis Band, among others. In his later years he played with Graham Tayar in his "Crouch End All Stars".

References

  1. Ian Christie: jazz clarinettist and film critic, obituary, The Times, 8 February 2010, retrieved 23 June 2013
  2. Ian Christie, obituary, Daily Telegraph, 11 March 2010, retrieved 8 June 2013.
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