Tom Collier
Day In, Day Out (composed by Tom Collier): recorded June, 1985 @ Studio C in Tukwila (WA); released on my 1991 Pacific Aire album on Nebula Records.
Tom Collier - vibraphone, marimba, electric piano, synthesizer, drums, percussion
Bud Shank - flute
Eddie Daniels featuring Tom Collier
After You've Gone (Turner Layton and Henry Creamer): recorded January 13, 1994 @ Meany Hall, Seattle (WA).
*unreleased live recording
Eddie Daniels - clarinet
Tom Collier - vibraphone
Marc Seales - piano
Jeff Johnson - bass
John Bishop - drums
July 4, 1961:
Tommy Collier, Don Riley TV Show, 1961
On July 4, 1961, I appeared on the Don Riley Show, a local Seattle program on KIRO TV. I digitized the film my Dad made from a kinescope provided by the TV station. The program director instructed me to smile while I was playing, so I tried to look up when I could take my eyes off of the marimba bars for a couple of seconds. I remember the microphone hanging around my neck was bothering me, but I made it through OK. I was 13 years old and a student at Madison Jr. High in West Seattle. (on the video, I said that I was 12 years old; I had just turned 13 a few days earlier on June 30th and, being nervous, I blurted out 12). Video Order: 1. Radio Galop excerpt, 2. interview, 3. Dizzy Fingers (my Mom, Ethel Collier, piano).
Tom Collier
Sister Sadie (composed by Horace Silver): recorded November, 1998 @ Cambridge Studio CO2, Kent (WA). *unreleased recording
Tom Collier - vibraphone, synth bass, drums
Tom Collier, solo vibraphone
Spring Can Really Hang You Up The Most (composed by Tommy Wolf and Fran Landesman): recorded November 28, 2001 @ Meany Hall, Seattle (WA).
*unreleased live recording
Tom Collier - vibraphone