Guitarist Mary Kaye led a trio from the 1940s through the 1960s that roosted in Las Vegas in 1953. There, she helped establish the lounge phenomenon that showcased small snappy singer-players in smaller, intimate rooms at resorts. Of Hawaiian descent, Kaye played and sang while her two male counterparts accompanied her and hammed around.
Here are bunch of clips of the Mary Kaye Trio in action that Milt Cohen sent along:
Here's the trio in 1945...
Here's the trio in Las Vegas in the mid-1950s...
Here's Kaye and the trio singing Just One of Those Things...
Here's Kaye playing the very first Fender Stratocaster c. 1954...
Here's the trio in 1963, with Kaye singing I Left My Heart in San Francisco...
Bonus: Here's the trio's recording of I Should Care in the late 1950s...
Here are bunch of clips of the Mary Kaye Trio in action that Milt Cohen sent along:
Here's the trio in 1945...
Here's the trio in Las Vegas in the mid-1950s...
Here's Kaye and the trio singing Just One of Those Things...
Here's Kaye playing the very first Fender Stratocaster c. 1954...
Here's the trio in 1963, with Kaye singing I Left My Heart in San Francisco...
Bonus: Here's the trio's recording of I Should Care in the late 1950s...
This story appears courtesy of JazzWax by Marc Myers.
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