George Wallington
Biography
George Wallington (October 27, 1924 – February 15, 1993) was an American jazz pianist and composer. Born in Sicily, his career as a pianist began in the early 1940s, when he played with Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker and contributed to the development of bebop. Following several years as a sideman during the late 1940s, he formed his own group, experimenting with trios and a string ensemble before settling upon a permanent quintet. During the 1950s, Wallington's quintet including rising stars Donald Byrd, Jackie McLean, and Phil Woods, but in 1960 he retired and moved to Florida to work for a family business. He returned to his previous career in the 1980s and made further recordings as a soloist before his death in 1993. Noted for his technique and mastery of the developing styles of modern jazz, his contributions to the genre have been described as "underrated." His compositions, however, became known through recordings by Woody Herman's band and Miles Davis.
Bio from Wikipedia
Discography
Records they worked on — most-collected first.

Birth Of The Cool
1957

The Best Of Miles Davis (The Capitol / Blue Note Years)
1992

History Of Jazz
1978

Early Bones
1976

The Savoy Sessions
1976

Prestige Twofer Giants Volume II
1972

The Beginning And End Of Bop
1969

The Hits Of Woody Herman
1961

Woody Herman
1984

The Complete Pacific Jazz And Capitol Recordings Of The Original Gerry Mulligan Quartet And Tentette With Chet Baker
1983

Wednesday's Child
1956
Credited work
1,085 releases · 176 albums · active 1950–2026
- Performance · 1,501
- Other credits · 24
Studios: Van Gelder Studio, Hackensack, New Jersey · Café Bohemia · WOR Studios · Ronnie Scott's
