Jeanie Bryson


Jeanie Bryson is an American singer who sings a combination of jazz, pop, and Latin music. Her repertoire is based on jazz and pop standards from the Great American Songbook and Peggy Lee and Dinah Washington.

Life and career

Bryson is the daughter of composer Connie Bryson and trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie. Her paternity was kept a secret until after Gillespie's death because he was married, but she occasionally saw him growing up. In 1998 Bryson filed a lawsuit against his widow, Lorraine Willis, after her lawyer found court records from 1965 in which Gillespie admitted he was her father. She reached a settlement with his estate.
Bryson grew up in East Brunswick, New Jersey. She began playing instruments at a young age, piano in first grade and then flute in fifth grade. Bryson attended East Brunswick High School. She studied ethnomusicology at Livingstone College; graduated in 1981. That year, she performed with her father in Salem County, singing "God Bless the Child" by Billie Holiday. After college she worked in a post office during the weeka nd sang on weekends, by the end of the 1980s she was singing full-time. Bryson released her debut album, I Love Being Here With You, on Telarc in 1993. Her mother contributed the lyrics to two songs on the album. Bryson also sang on an album by Terence Blanchard devoted to Billie Holiday songs.
Bryson has a son, Radji Birks Bryson-Barrett, from the first of her two marriages. Her husband, guitarist Coleman Mellett, died in the February 2009 crash of Colgan Air Flight 3407. The couple lived in East Brunswick Township, New Jersey.

Discography