Biography
Bernie Leighton (January 30, 1921 – September 16, 1994) was an American jazz pianist. Leighton was born in West Haven, Connecticut. He first played professionally at the end of the 1930s. He played with Bud Freeman, Leo Reisman, Raymond Scott (1940) and Benny Goodman (1940–41) before serving in the Army. Following his discharge, he worked as a studio sideman, with Dave Tough (1946), Billie Holiday (1949), Neal Hefti (1951), Goodman again, Artie Shaw (1953), John Serry, Sr. (1956), James Moody (1963) and Bob Wilber (1969). He did a tour with Tony Bennett in 1972–73. While Leighton was best known as a sideman, he also recorded extensively as a leader; he recorded for Keynote Records in 1946, Mercury Records in 1950, an LP on Columbia Records in 1950, Brunswick in 1951, LPs for Disneyland and Capitol in 1957, and a tribute to Duke Ellington released in 1974. His instrumental cover of Connie Francis' "Don't Break the Heart That Loves You" on the Colpix label in 1962 reached #101 on Billboard's listing. Leighton has a cameo role in the film Hannah and Her Sisters (1986). He died in Coconut Creek, Florida.
Bio from Wikipedia
Discography
Records they worked on — most-collected first.

Spirits Known And Unknown
1969

Memories Are Made Of This
1960

Sin & Soul
1961

Thighs And Whispers
1979

The Verve Years (1950-51)
1976

All-Time Greatest Hits
1972

Born To Be Blue
1959

Ain't Nobody's Business If I Do
1975

The Big Band Hits Of The Thirties
1970

Firestone Presents Your Favorite Christmas Music Volume 6
1967

Exotica 1970
1966

Warm Wave
1964

Concert In Rhythm Volume II
1960

Rebound
1958

"Oooo!"
1957

East Side Rendezvous
1950

Satchmo Serenades

Think Well Of Me
1962
Credited work
829 releases · 166 albums · active 1950–2024
- Performance · 1,031
- Other credits · 69
Studios: A&R Studios · The Review Room · RCA Studios, New York · Olympic Studios
Frequent collaborators
- Various
- Charlie Parker
- Louis Armstrong
- Benny Goodman
- Billie Holiday
- Tony Bennett
- Jackie Gleason
- Benny Goodman And His Orchestra
