by Matt Micucci
The great bassist Howard Rumsey passed away at the age of 97 of an unreported cause on July 15 in Newport Beach, Calif. Rumsey was best known as the band leader of the legendary Los Angeles group named
Lighthouse All Stars.
Born in Brawley, Calif. on November 7, 1917, Rumsey studied piano and drums before shifting to double bass. In his early career he collaborated with musicians such as Charlie Barnet, Barney Bigard and, most prominently, performed as a member of Stan Kenton's band from 1941.
After a short break from music, he landed a steady gig at the
Lighthouse, a club in Hermosa Beach, in 1949. It was there that he soon put together the first line-up of the
Lighthouse All Stars, that originally included such musicians as Teddy Edwards, Sonny Criss and Hampton Hawes. The band remained active until the late fifties, served by more than 75 musicians and recording around a dozen albums for the
Contemporary Records label. On at least one occasion in 1953, Rumsey and his group were joined on stage by Chet Baker and Miles Davis.
Throughout the seventies and eighties, he owned and operated a club known as
Concerts by the Sea, in Redondo Beach, which was described as a distinctive club that provided an ideal tiered, concert-venue of 200 seats and offered the finest jazz in Los Angeles area.