Ken Mackintosh
Biography
Saxophonist Ken Mackintosh led one of the most popular and long-running British big bands of the postwar era, scoring a massive hit with 1953's swing classic "The Creep." Born in Yorkshire on August 4, 1919, Mackintosh was the son of an amateur musician, and as an adolescent often accompanied his father to local jazz gigs. The alto saxophone proved most alluring, and with income earned as a scorekeeper for a local cricket club he was able to purchase his first sax at age 14. Within a few years Mackintosh was gigging professionally in the Leeds and Bradford areas, but World War II interrupted his fledgling career. In 1939 he joined the British Expeditionary Force, which sent him to France after the relief of Dunkirk. When an attack by the Nazi forces left much of Mackintosh's regiment dead, the survivors scattered. He threw his weapon and gear in a ditch, and clutching his alto walked the ten miles to Cherbourg, where he found refuge on a British relief ship and eventually made his way back home. Mackintosh served out the remainder of his military career as a machinist. He also played in military bands, and when his tour of duty ended he relocated to London, joining trumpeter Johnny Claes & His Clae Pigeons.
Selected Discography

A Tribute
2006
