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The Drummers (First row) George Wettling and Bud Freeman; (Second Row) Jo Jones, Gene Krupa, and Sonny Greer; (Third Row) Miff Mole, Zutty Singleton, Red Allen, and Taft Jordan; (Top row) Dickie Wells, Buck Clayton, Benny Golson, Art Farmer, Hilton Jefferson, and Art Blakey, Esquire Magazine Shoot, Harlem, NYC
The Drummers (First row) George Wettling and Bud Freeman; (Second Row) Jo Jones, Gene Krupa, and Sonny Greer; (Third Row) Miff Mole, Zutty Singleton, Red Allen, and Taft Jordan; (Top row) Dickie Wells, Buck Clayton, Benny Golson, Art Farmer, Hilton Jefferson, and Art Blakey, Esquire Magazine Shoot, Harlem, NYC
The Drummers (First row) George Wettling and Bud Freeman; (Second Row) Jo Jones, Gene Krupa, and Sonny Greer; (Third Row) Miff Mole, Zutty Singleton, Red Allen, and Taft Jordan; (Top row) Dickie Wells, Buck Clayton, Benny Golson, Art Farmer, Hilton Jefferson, and Art Blakey, Esquire Magazine Shoot, Harlem, NYC

The Drummers (First row) George Wettling and Bud Freeman; (Second Row) Jo Jones, Gene Krupa, and Sonny Greer; (Third Row) Miff Mole, Zutty Singleton, Red Allen, and Taft Jordan; (Top row) Dickie Wells, Buck Clayton, Benny Golson, Art Farmer, Hilton Jefferson, and Art Blakey, Esquire Magazine Shoot, Harlem, NYC

Maker (American, 1910 - 2000)
Date1958
MediumGelatin Silver Print
Dimensionsimage: 8.75 in x 13 in; mat: 16 in x 20 in; paper: 11 in x 14 in
Credit LineGift of David G. Berger & Holly Maxson, Milton J. Hinton Photographic Collection
Object number2018:209
About the ArtistMilt Hinton, regarded as the dean of jazz bass players, was born in Mississippi in 1910 prior to moving to Chicago at the age of eleven. Hinton studied under legendary Chicago educator and musician, Nathaniel Clark Smith. Establishing a key role in the Chicago Jazz scene, he sustained a lucrative jazz career which included a fifteen-year stint performing with Cab Calloway. He began photographing in the 1930s, creating over 60,000 images over six decades. His work examines an extensive list of jazz musicians and friends in a variety of contexts ranging from intimate home settings to scenes on tour. He held solo exhibitions at the Rhode Island School of Design, RI (1991); The Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC (1997), and the Denver Museum of Art, CO (1991), among many others.