Jack Lesberg


Jack Lesberg was a jazz double-bassist.
Lesberg performed with many famous jazz musicians, including Louis Armstrong, Earl Hines, Jack Teagarden, Sarah Vaughan and Benny Goodman, with whom he went on several international tours. He also performed in the New York City Symphony under Leonard Bernstein in the 1940s.
A native of Boston, Lesberg had the misfortune of playing in that city's Cocoanut Grove on the night in 1942 when 492 people lost their lives in a fire. His escape was memorialized by fellow bassist Charles Mingus in an unpublished section of Mingus's autobiography Beneath the Underdog; this passage was read by rapper Chuck D. on the Mingus tribute album Weird Nightmare.
Lesberg continued to tour in the 1980s and was interviewed for KCEA radio in 1984 following a performance in Menlo Park, California. During the taped interview Jack spoke of the many bands and performers he worked with and expressed his feelings that he felt blessed to be a musician.

Discography

;As co-leader
;As sideman
With George Barnes
  • Guitar in Velvet
  • Country Jazz
  • Movin' Easy
  • Guitar Galaxies
  • Guitars Galore
With Ruth Brown
  • Ruth Brown
With Urbie Green
;With Coleman Hawkins
With Johnny Hodges
  • Blue Rabbit
;With the Henri René Orchestra
With Eddie Condon
  • In Japan
With Ralph Sutton & Ruby Braff'