picture of Rahn Burton
 

 
Rahn Burton
Rahn, also Ron and William, (* 1934 in Louisville, KY) was a jazz pianist. He began taking piano lessons at age 13, and worked locally in Louisville before playing his first gigs with Roland Kirk. He toured with Kirk from 1953 to 1959 and recorded with Kirk into the early 1960s, contributing the composition "Jack the Ripper" to the 1960 release Introducing Roland Kirk. He moved on to playing local gigs in New York and Syracuse for a short time in the early 1960s, then returned to local playing in Louisville again. In 1964-65 he played organ in George Adams's touring ensemble, and played briefly with Sirone around the same time.
 
In 1967, Rahn re-joined Roland Kirk's group, playing with him at the 1968 Newport Jazz Festival and on several recordings through 1973. He also founded his own ensemble, African American Connection, which included Roland Alexander, Bob Cunningham, Ricky Ford, and Hannibal Marvin Peterson. He recorded extensively as a sideman in the 1970s and 1980s, with George Adams and Hannibal Peterson, as well as Carlos Garnett, Beaver Harris, Jemeel Moondoc, Charlie Rouse, Leon Thomas and Stanley Turrentine. His associations in the 1990s included work in Austria with Nicholas Simion, and a trio recording in 1992 with Walter Booker and Jimmy Cobb. Rahn died in 2013.
 
from Wikipedia
contact:
homepage:

 

Discography
Introducing Roland Kirk
Argo LPS 669
Roland Kirk, tenor sax, manzello, strich
Ira Sullivan, tenor sax, trumpet
William Burton, organ, piano
Don Garrett, bass
Sonny Brown, drums
In The Center Of It All
Justin Time 130-2
recorded April 1999 in New York, NY/USA
Michael Marcus, sax, sopranino, stritch
Rahn Burton, Hammond B-3 organ
Clark Gayton, trombone
Nasheet Waits, drums

 
Sound Samples
MP3 n/a
Video n/a

 
YouTube videos
For more videos search YouTube

 
 

Back
 
If you don't see the left hand menu,
please go back to the homepage.

Back to the homepage