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Bob Thiele

 
Artist: Bob Thiele
 
  • Born: July 27, 1922, Brooklyn, NY
  • Died: January 30, 1996, New York, NY
  • Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s
  • Genres: Jazz
  • Instrument: Producer, Keyboards, Clarinet
  • Representative Albums: "Sunrise, Sunset," "The Twenties Score Again," "Louis Satchmo"

Biography

Bob Thiele was a major voice in the music industry for nearly six decades. Something of a child prodigy, Thiele started hosting a jazz radio show when he was 14. As a teenager, he learned clarinet and led a big band locally in the New York area. From 1939-41, he was editor of Jazz Magazine, and at the age of 17 in 1939, he founded the Signature label. As the head of the label and its producer, Thiele recorded Art Hodes, Yank Lawson, Lester Young, Errol Garner, various Chicago jazz-style groups, and, most notably in 1943, a classic session by Coleman Hawkins. After Signature folded in 1948, Thiele freelanced and then joined Decca in 1952, where he produced sessions for their Coral and Brunswick labels. Although involved with some jazz, Thiele also worked with Teresa Brewer (his future wife), the McGuire Sisters, Lawrence Welk and several notables whose careers he helped launch: Buddy Holly (whom Thiele largely discovered), Henry Mancini, Steve and Eydie, and Jackie Wilson. He then switched to Dot for a period in 1959. Thiele headed with Steve Allen the short-lived Hanover-Signature label (which had a big hit with Ray Bryant's "Little Susie"), and he also freelanced for other labels. Probably his proudest accomplishment was teaming up Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong for a classic set on Roulette. From 1961-69, Thiele was the main producer at ABC/Impulse. He gave John Coltrane permission to record as extensively as he wanted, and Thiele also produced more than 100 other albums, including sets by Charles Mingus, Oliver Nelson, Albert Ayler, Archie Shepp, Pharoah Sanders, Charlie Haden's Liberation Music Orchestra, Earl Hines, Johnny Hodges, Coleman Hawkins (including a date with Duke Ellington), Quincy Jones, Count Basie, and many others. He started ABC's Bluesway subsidiary, which featured blues in the late 1960s (highlighted by dates from B.B. King, T-Bone Walker, Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson and Big Joe Turner) and produced a variety of pop singers for ABC. After leaving ABC-Impulse, Thiele founded a series of short-term labels, including Flying Dutchman, Blues Time, Dr. Jazz, and finally Red Baron. Thiele wrote a lot of songs for his artists through the years with "What a Wonderful World" being easily his biggest success. Among the many musicians he produced during his last two decades were such favorites as Gato Barbieri, David Murray, Lonnie Liston Smith, Clark Terry and his wife Teresa Brewer, whom he teamed with Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Stephane Grappelli, Earl Hines, Ruby Braff, and even Murray. As enthusiastic in his later years about music as he had been as a teenager, Bob Thiele was active up until his death. His 1995 memoir What a Wonderful World is colorful, if much too brief. ~ Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Bob Thiele
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Bob Thiele (July 27, 1922January 30, 1996) was an American record producer. His wife was the singer Teresa Brewer, whom he met and produced while working for Decca Records in the 1950s.

He hosted a jazz radio show when he was 14. He also played clarinet and led a band in the New York area. At 17 he founded the Signature Records label and recorded many jazz greats, including Lester Young, Errol Garner and, in 1943, Coleman Hawkins. Signature folded in 1948 and he joined Decca Records in 1952, running its Coral Records subsidiary.

He took over as head of Impulse! Records from 1961-69 after founder Creed Taylor went to run Verve Records and signed, and recorded such artists as John Coltrane, Charles Mingus, Dizzy Gillespie, Sonny Rollins, Archie Shepp, Albert Ayler and others. Thiele's most successful hit song was with Louis Armstrong's "What a Wonderful World", which he co-wrote with George David Weiss. According to Thiele's memoir, the recording session for this now-famous song was the scene of a major clash with ABC-Paramount Records sales executive Larry Newton, who had to be locked out of the studio after getting into a heated argument with Thiele over the song[1]

In the late 1960s Thiele was often brought in to produce artists on the company's BluesWay Records label. He produced the albums that graduated blues giant B.B. King toward the mainstream, including Lucille (1967), Live and Well (1968), and Completely Well (1969), the last biggest seller of King's career to that point. He also produced BluesWay recordings by John Lee Hooker, T-Bone Walker, and others.

Thiele later formed his own record label, Flying Dutchman Records, which is now part of Sony Music Entertainment. In 1995 he released a memoir titled What a Wonderful World.

Some of the songs Thiele wrote are credited to George Douglas or Stanley Clayton[2]. These are pseudonyms Thiele used, made from the names of his uncles, Stanley, Clayton, George, and Douglas.

Contents

Discography

Do The Love (abc records, abc-615)

LP album by Bob Thiele & his New Happy Times Orchestra feat. The Sunflower Singers & Steve Allen

Tracklist:

  • Do The Love
  • All You Need Is Love
  • My Blue Heaven
  • I Just Don't Know What To Say
  • Here Comes Sgt. Pepper
  • Jet Me To Frisco
  • When Day Is Done
  • Green
  • The Sunshine Of Love
  • Goodnight Sweetheart

Bibliography

  • Bob Thiele (1995) What a Wonderful World: A Lifetime of Recordings, Oxford University Press

References

  1. ^ Ashley Kahn; The House That Trane Built (Granta Books, London, 2006), p.199
  2. ^ For instance What a Wonderful World.

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bob Thiele" Read more

 

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