Dick Hughes (musician)

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Dick Hughes
Birth nameRichard Hughes
Born(1931-07-08)8 July 1931
Brighton, Victoria, Australia
Died20 April 2018(2018-04-20) (aged 86)
Vaucluse, New South Wales, Australia
GenresJazz
Occupation(s)Pianist, singer, journalist

Dick Hughes (1931 — 2018) was an Australian jazz pianist, singer and journalist.[1][2][3]

Hughes earnt two ARIA Award nominations for Best Jazz Album, in 1987 for The Last Train For Casablanca Leaves Once In A Blue Moon and in 2010 alongside his daughter Christa Hughes with Twenty First Century Blues. He also contributed a track (with Dick Hughes' Famous Five) to Jazz Live At Soup Plus which was nominated for the same award in 1989.

Hughes was born in Melbourne in 1931, the only son of Richard Hughes, a journalist, and his wife, May Hughes née Bennett. He developed an interest in jazz early in life and became president of the Melbourne University Rhythm Club in 1950. In 1952 he relocated to London for three years where he started working as a journalist, working for ABC, Frank Packer, News Limited and Fairfax community newspapers before retiring in 2014.

Hughes was a pianist and singer and played regularly around Sydney's jazz scene and played in multiple bands such as Port Jackson Jazz Band and Ray price Quartet before first performing solo in 1973. He formed Dick Hughes' Famous Five and the released an album, Dick Hughes Looks Back & Around, in 1977.

In 1997 Hughes started presenting a jazz show, Speak Easy and Swing Hard, on 2MBS-FM.

Hughes married Fay in 1962 and together they had three daughters, Vashti, Christa and Stephanie.

Discography[]

Dick Hughes

  • Piano Solos (1973) — Festival Records
  • The Last Train For Casablanca Leaves Once In A Blue Moon (1988) — Larrikin

Dick Hughes' Famous Five

  • Dick Hughes Looks Back & Around (1977) — 44 Records

The Dick Hughes' Famous Five* With Merv Acheson

  • 45 Years In Jazz! Merv Acheson 60th Birthday Concert (1982) — MBS JAZZ

Dick & Christa Hughes

  • Twenty First Century Blues (2010) — ABC Music

References[]

  1. ^ Moffatt, Steve (24 April 2018), "Dick Hughes, jazz pianist, singer and journalist", The Australian
  2. ^ Brown, Malcolm (23 April 2018), "Dick Hughes, journalist, jazz pianist and broadcaster", The Sydney Morning Herald
  3. ^ "Keeping faith in jazz", The Age, 11 May 2014

External links[]

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