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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Gus_StatirasGus Statiras - Wikipedia

    Gus P. Statiras (July 6, 1922–April 2, 2004) was a music dealer, record producer, and briefly a New York radio disc jockey under the moniker "Gus Grant." The founder of Progressive Records, Statiras produced and distributed jazz records in the 1950s.

  2. Progressive Records was founded by Gus Statiras in New York in 1950. When the business declined, Savoy bought and reissued much of the label's catalog, then sold it to Prestige with backing from Bainbridge, a Japanese record company.

  3. Statiras Records is a sub-label of Progressive Records which Progressive founder Gus Statiras launched in the 1980s that recorded jazz musical artists for release on LP and CD. Albums

  4. 3 ago 2004 · Gus Statiras, who devoted his life to jazz, doing almost everything short of actually playing the music, died April 2, 2004 at the VA Hospital in Milledgeville GA.Gus was felled by a stroke in 1998 and had spent the last six years in a semi-conscious state.

  5. Record producer, liner note writer, founder of Progressive Records (2) and the briefly run Statiras Record Company. Born July 6, 1922 in Jersey City, New Jersey and died in Milledgeville, Georgia on April 2, 2004.

    Title
    Catalog Number
    Year
    In Your Collection, Wantlist, Or ...
    KUX-35-G
    Gus' Thingh (as Gus Statiras) Various - ...
    7019
    Scott Hamilton, Flip Phillips, Ray Turner ...
    Gus' Flower (as Gus Statiras) Scott ...
    PRO 7017
    Gus' Rhythm (as Gus Statiras) Various - ...
    PRO 7018
    Gus' Slide (as Gus Statiras) Various - ...
  6. jazzrealities.blogspot.com › 2010 › 12Jazzrealities

    Label founder Gus Statiras Attempt to compile the complete output of Progressive Records. I added some more information, covers and running times during April 2017.

  7. 1 feb 2010 · Gus Statiras, who was one of the great jazz storyvtellers, began a series of memoirs in this issue with a reminiscence of his involvement in the Bunk Johnson Office of War Information film. By the third issue of JazzBeat, the magazine was turned over to Jon Pult, a young New Orleans-based writer.