Latest Release
- NOV 4, 2022
- 8 Songs
- Hope (feat. Rob Franken, Ferdinand Povel, Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen & Grady Tate) · 1995
- Two-Too · 2006
- The Jiggs Up · 1990
- Musicals for Brass - Gershwin, G. - Bernstein, L. · 1993
- Musicals for Brass - Gershwin, G. - Bernstein, L. · 1993
- Values · 2016
- Whigham, Jiggs - Bertoncini, Gene: Jiggs and Gene · 1996
- Trombone Workshop · 2015
- Rias Big Band: Music of Paul Ferguson (The) (Blue Highways) · 1998
- Rias Big Band: Music of Paul Ferguson (The) (Blue Highways) · 1998
Appears On
- Peter Hedrich
- Bosch Big Band
About Jiggs Whigham
A major trombonist who is quite versatile, Jiggs Whigham has thus far not received the recognition that he deserves, possibly because he has spent a lot of time performing in Germany. After graduating from high school in 1961, Whigham joined the Glenn Miller Ghost Orchestra (under the direction of Ray McKinley) and in 1963 became a member of the Stan Kenton Orchestra. In 1965, he settled in Germany, originally to play with the Kurt Edelhagen band. When that orchestra broke up, Whigham stayed, working as a studio musician, a freelance jazz performer, and a teacher, becoming a professor at Cologne Conservatory in 1974. Through the years, he has played with Maynard Ferguson, Count Basie, the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Orchestra, Johnny Griffin, Freddie Hubbard, Art Farmer, Dexter Gordon, Lee Konitz, and Sarah Vaughan, among many others, and he recorded Trombone Summit in the late '70s with Bill Watrous, Kai Winding, and Albert Mangelsdorff. In addition to recordings with Stan Kenton, Johnny Richards, George Gruntz, Bill Holman, and the Brass Connection, Whigham has led sessions of his own for MPS (1971), Telefunken (1976, released domestically by Pausa), Koala (1982), and Capri (1989). ~ Scott Yanow
- HOMETOWN
- Cleveland, OH, United States
- BORN
- August 20, 1943
- GENRE
- Jazz