Mick Mulligan

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Nobody Knows You When You're Down And Out 00:00 Tools
Indiana 00:00 Tools
Girl Of My Dreams 00:00 Tools
Button Up Your Overcoat 00:00 Tools
How Long Blues 00:00 Tools
Bei Mir Bist Du Schöen 00:00 Tools
Muskrat Ramble 00:00 Tools
Shanty In Old Shanty Town 00:00 Tools
Mama Don't Allow 00:00 Tools
St. James Infirmary 00:00 Tools
Muddy Water 00:00 Tools
Oriental Strut 00:00 Tools
Sally Jane 00:00 Tools
Blues My Naughty Sweetie Gives To Me 00:00 Tools
Cemetry Blues 00:00 Tools
You've Got the Right Key But the Wrong Keyhole 00:00 Tools
Raver's Edge 00:00 Tools
Ace In The Hole 00:00 Tools
All I Do Is Dream Of You 00:00 Tools
Big House Blues 00:00 Tools
Shimme-Sha-Wabble 00:00 Tools
Blue Spirit Blues 00:00 Tools
Beale St. Blues 00:00 Tools
Death Letter 00:00 Tools
Stack-O-Lee 00:00 Tools
Miss Jenny's Ball 00:00 Tools
Organ Grinder Blues 00:00 Tools
Send Me To The 'Lectric Chair 00:00 Tools
Double Dee 00:00 Tools
Beale Street Mama 00:00 Tools
  • 2,708
    plays
  • 488
    listners
  • 2708
    top track count

Peter Sidney "Mick" Mulligan (January 24, 1928, Middlesex - December 20, 2006) was an English jazz trumpeter and bandleader, best known for his presence on the trad jazz scene. Mulligan began playing trumpet while a student at Merchant Taylors' School. He entered into the family wine company, but was an alcoholic and eventually was pushed out of the business by his relatives. He then formed his own Magnolia Jazz Band in 1948. He met George Melly soon after; they performed together for many years and became close associates. In Melly's memoir Owning Up, published in 1965, he detailed many of the pair's drunken and scandalous outings, which had made them regular tabloid figures in the 1950s. Mulligan's orchestra included Roy Crimmins, Ian Christie, and Archie Semple; it rivaled Humphrey Lyttelton's in popularity on the British trad jazz circuit. While he booked excellent sidemen, Mulligan was not a top-flight musician and his own playing was often hampered by intoxication; furthermore, their recording legacy is spotty because their releases were irregular and generally for small labels. Mulligan broke up his band in 1953 but reformed it a year and a half later, continuing with the new group in 1962; Melly also sang along with this ensemble. By the early 1960s, rock & roll had whittled the enthusiasm for trad jazz to nearly nothing, and Mulligan ended the Magnolia Jazz Band to manage Melly, who was launching a solo career. He played occasionally into the 1970s but primarily retired to run a grocery store. Later in life he became interested in horse racing and owned the prize-winning horse Forever My Lord. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.