Resultado de búsqueda
30 de may. de 2014 · Herb Jeffries was born Herbert Jeffrey in Detroit, Michigan in 1913. His father, Umberto Balentino, was a pianist of African-American and Sicilian descent. Jeffries’s mother was of Irish descent. And somewhere in his heritage, there are said to be links to Ethiopian and French Canadian forebears.
- Bob Perkins
In 1995, at age 81, he recorded The Bronze Buckaroo (Rides Again), a Nashville album of songs on the Warner Western label. Film career. Touring the Deep South with Hines, Jeffries was struck by the realities of segregation, as the Orchestra's playing was restricted to tobacco warehouses and black-only movie theatres.
View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 1995 CD release of "A Brief History Of Herb Jeffries (The Bronze Buckaroo)" on Discogs.
- US
- Warner Western-PRO-CD-7621
- CD, Compilation, Promo
- 1995
A Brief History of Herb Jeffries (The Bronze Buckaroo) by Herb Jeffries released in 1995. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and more at AllMusic.
1 de may. de 2023 · Herb Jeffries was the Bronze Buckaroo, star of five all-Black-cast singing-cowboy movies in the 1930s and ’40s. His sweet, rich baritone fronted Duke Ellington’s orchestra in the 1941 megahit “Flamingo” and countless other tunes and set women’s hearts a-fluttering.
26 de may. de 2014 · movies. Remembering “Bronze Buckaroo” Herb Jeffries, the First Star of Black Western Musicals. 4 minute read. By Richard Corliss. May 26, 2014 7:17 PM EDT. A mong Western stars of the late...
The Bronze Buckaroo is a 1939 American Western race film directed by Richard C. Kahn. [1] The Bronze Buckaroo stars Black cowboy singer Herb Jeffries, [2] [3] here billed as Herbert Jeffrey. [4] Plot. Cowboy Bob Blake receives a letter from his friend Joe Jackson, asking for help.