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Gumina began playing accordion at age eleven, and took lessons on the instrument in
Chicago throughout the second half of the 1940s. He began working with
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on television in 1952 as an accompanist for popular tunes, and in 1955 Gumina began working on his own, both solo and with an ensemble. He recorded with
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in 1974), but increasingly concentrated on his amplifier manufacturing business, Polytone
Musical Instruments, which was based in
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in the 1960s, and began experimenting with modifying an electric accordion, whose amplified sound resembled that of an
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49:. He was occasionally active as a performer in the 1970s (e.g., with
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83:"Jazz accordionist and Milwaukee native Tommy Gumina has died"
30:accordionist and musical instrument builder.
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26:– October 28, 2013) was an American
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108:The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz
87:The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
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142:American jazz accordionists
55:North Hollywood, California
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147:Musicians from Milwaukee
16:American jazz musician
20:Thomas Joseph Gumina
111:. 2nd edition, ed.
22:(May 20, 1931 in
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105:"Tommy Gumina".
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63:Polytone Records
47:electronic organ
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113:Barry Kernfeld
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39:Buddy DeFranco
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90:. Retrieved
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43:Willie Smith
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137:2013 deaths
132:1931 births
61:co-founded
35:Harry James
126:Categories
92:2018-03-12
69:References
51:Art Pepper
65:in 1987.
57:. He and
24:Milwaukee
59:Joe Pass
41:and
28:jazz
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85:.
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