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  1. Jazz cornetist Pete Kelly (Jack Webb) and his Big Seven are the house band at the 17 Club, a speakeasy in Kansas City in 1927 during Prohibition. Crime boss Fran McCarg (Edmond O'Brien) is moving in on the local music scene and wants a percentage of the band's meager earnings. When the band resists, Kelly decides to decline the strongarm and ...

  2. Jan 18, 2024 · Discover the captivating sound of Pete Kelly's Big Seven and their fusion of jazz and blues that took the 1950s music scene by storm. From their hit song "Pete Kelly's Blues" to their immortalized story in film and television, their legacy continues to inspire and influence musicians today. Dive into the fascinating world of Pete Kelly and experience the magic of their music.

  3. Pete Kelly's Big Seven is a group created for a series of 1950's crime dramas. Pete Kelly's Big Seven originally appeared in the American radio drama Pete Kelly's Blues , which aired over NBC as an unsponsored summer replacement series on Wednesday nights at 8pm(et) from July 4 through September 19, 1951.

  4. From the album "Pete Kelly at Home." Dick Cathcart, trpt.; Abe Lincoln, trb.; Matty Matlock, clar.; Jack Chaney, ten.; Ray Sherman, piano; George Van Eps, g...

    • 3 min
    • 374
    • Ray Sherman
  5. The "Big Seven" musicians also played twelve tunes from the film, each introduced by Webb, on the RCA Victor label. The musicians portraying "Pete Kelly's Big Seven," several of whom appeared in Dragnet, recorded songs from the film with Ray Heindorf and the Warner Bros. orchestra on the Columbia Record label. Ella Fitzgerald and Peggy Lee, who ...

  6. After World War II, he moved to Los Angeles. His friend Jack Webb was playing the part of trumpeter Pete Kelly in the movie Pete Kelly's Blues and told Cathcart he should supply the music. [3] The band from the movie stayed together in the 1950s for performances and recordings under the name Pete Kelly's Big Seven. [4]

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  8. Pete Kelly's Blues, Wednesday nights at 8pm during the summer of 1951. Pete Kelly fronts the house band, the Big Seven, at a speakeasy at 217 Cherry Street, Kansas City, on the Missouri side. KC in the roaring '20s is a world of jazz, gangsters, gun molls, g-men, bad booze and desperate people trying to save their skins.