Background
Although he was born in New Orleans, Dixon moved often as a child with his father, a minister who toured the American S.
Although he was born in New Orleans, Dixon moved often as a child with his father, a minister who toured the American S.
Arkansas State University.
Not to be confused with George West. Dixon of The Spinners. He began playing violin at age 13 while living in Natchez, Mississippi, and studied the instrument at Arkansas State College, where he also picked up alto saxophone. Dixon moved to Chicago in 1926, where he played with Sammy Stewart from 1928, including on a tour of New York City in 1930.
Dixon then worked with Earl Hines throughout the decade of the 1930s.
He led a Navy band in Memphis, Tennessee during World World War II, then played in Chicago with Floyd Campbell, Ted Eggleston, and others He led his own band at the Circle Inn in the 1940s and early 1950s.
From about the mid-1950s Dixon stopped playing full-time, though he continued to play occasionally up until his death in 1994.