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Buddy Childers

 
Artist: Buddy Childers

Similar Artists:

Worked With:

Bart Varsalona, George Roberts, Bob Gioga, Bud Shank, Shelly Manne, Stan Kenton, Bob Cooper

Formal Connection With:

  • Born: February 12, 1926, St. Louis, MO
  • Active: '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s
  • Genres: Jazz
  • Instrument: Trumpet
  • Representative Albums: "Buddy Childers' Quartet," "Sam Songs," "Just Buddy's"

Biography

During his decade-plus stint as the lead trumpeter in the legendary big bands of Stan Kenton, Buddy Childers was the indomitable warhorse anchoring some of the most progressive and physically demanding arrangements in all of jazz. Born Marion Childers in St. Louis on February 12, 1926, he began playing trumpet at 12. Within two years he was gigging as a professional musician, and his talent was so prodigious that he joined Kenton at just 16. Months later, when Kenton terminated the Artistry in Rhythm Orchestra's three other trumpeters, Childers immediately vaulted to the lead position, a role he would briefly relinquish in 1944 during an injury-shortened tenure in the U.S. Army. In all, Childers exited the Kenton lineup no fewer than eight times over his dozen-year tenure, no doubt a result of the extraordinary physical challenges of playing the band's music -- Kenton demanded that his trumpeters play so loud that many who passed through the orchestra's ranks passed out in the middle of performances, and Childers and bandmate Al Porcino regularly took the stage wearing abdominal supports.

Each time Childers resigned, accepting positions with bandleaders from Tommy Dorsey to André Previn to Les Brown, within weeks he would inevitably return to the Kenton stable, in 1947 aptly renamed the Progressive Jazz Orchestra. By all accounts, their music reached its apex in 1950, Kenton mounting his most awe-inspiring spectacle to date, the 40-member Innovations in Modern Music Orchestra, adding horns and strings as well as introducing to the world immense talents like composers Bob Graettinger and Shorty Rogers as well as trumpeter Maynard Ferguson. Kenton dissolved the Innovations in Modern Music Orchestra in 1952 in favor of the more manageable 19-piece New Concepts of Artistry in Rhythm Orchestra -- two years later, Childers left the band for good, serving behind Georgie Auld and Charlie Barnet. After a stint as a Los Angeles freelancer, he settled in Las Vegas in 1959, remaining there for seven years. Upon returning to L.A. in 1966, Childers launched a long and successful career as a session player, and from 1983 on served as the musical director for Frank Sinatra, Jr. After a lengthy battle with cancer, Childers died in Los Angeles on May 24, 2007. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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Marion "Buddy" Childers (February 12, 1926May 24, 2007) became famous in 1942, when Stan Kenton hired him at the tender age of 16 to be the lead trumpet in his band.

As Buddy himself later told the story to Steve Voce: "At the rehearsal he sat me down in the first trumpet chair, had the first trumpet player sit out. I played about eight or nine things in a row and the adrenalin was really flying that day. I was 16 I probably looked about 13, but I played considerably more maturely than that. 'Well, what do you want to do?' he said after that was over. 'I want to join your band.' 'But you're so young.' 'I gotta join your band,' I said. I had this thing in my mind that I had to join a name band at 16 or I'd never be able to make it as a musician. I was thinking of Harry James so young with Ben Pollack and then with Benny Goodman, and Corky Corcoran who joined Sonny Dunham when he was 16 and then became Harry James's leading soloist the next year. So I made it by three weeks. I only had a couple of months before I graduated but I wasn't interested in that, I was only interested in playing."

Buddy worked with Kenton for years, played with Tommy Dorsey, Woody Herman, Les Brown, Charlie Barnet[1] and others. He worked on TV and films, and put together a big band that recorded for Candid Records in the 1980s and 1990s.

Childers became a member of the Bahá'í Faith by 1982.[2] He died from cancer on May 24, 2007, aged 81.

References


 
 
Learn More
Jewels (1979 Album by Bob Florence)
Cool Jazz for Hot Nights (2000 Album by Various Artists)
Concerts in Miniature 1953 (2004 Album by Stan Kenton & His Orchestra)

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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
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