In 1931 he signed on with Don Redman, working out well with this group and staying on for more than five years. In the spring of 1937 he replaced Cecil Scott in the Teddy Hill band, then went back to Redman until the outset of 1940, when he jumped over to the Teddy Wilson Big Band. This was followed by the work with Waller; any collection devoted to the final years of the latter artist's prolific career will feature some blowing from Carroll. The musical happiness was interrupted by military service, an experience that seems to have drained some of Carroll's enthusiasm for performing. Changing musical styles might also be part of the reason that this saxophonist began working less and less. Rather than switching over to the horn sections of rhythm blues and rock bands, he became a vagrant and died of both malnutrition and alcoholism. ~ Eugene Chadbourne, Rovi