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Chris Griffin

 
Artist: Chris Griffin

Similar Artists:

George McManus, Dick Wallis, Giorgio Gomelsky, Harry James, Benny Goodman & His Orchestra

Worked With:

Jess Stacy, Hymie Schertzer, Allan Reuss, Toots Mondello, Harry Goodman, Red Ballard, Ziggy Elman, Gene Krupa, Benny Goodman
  • Born: October 31, 1915, Binghamton, NY
  • Died: June 18, 2005
  • Genres: Jazz
  • Instrument: Trumpet

Biography

Chris Griffin is a name worth knowing if a listener enjoys the trumpet. No less an expert than Duke Ellington said so. He once picked out the line-up of Harry James, Ziggy Elman and Griffin as "the best trumpet section of all time," a moment of generosity as well as brass appraisal since this trumpet trio was an aspect of Ellington's stiffest competition, the Benny Goodman band. Nicknamed "steel lips," Griffin is one of those trumpeters who got the part with the high notes and can be sampled on a pile of recordings that if secured atop each other might seem to be heading for some of the pitches Griffin hit, at least symbolically.

He began as a pianist when he was only five, dropped music for a few years and then began the trumpet at 12. Still his interest flagged until a neighbor friend who played piano came up with the idea of starting a band. This was just the beginning of a life in which Griffin probably spent more time on bandstands than anywhere else, with recording studios coming in a close second. At 15 he was playing in a New York City dance hall; at 18 he had begun working with performers whose names have retained the gleam of fame over the decades. He played until 1934 with bandleader Charlie Barnet, took off for a spell to back up crooner Rudy Vallee and was doing studio assignments for CBS when Goodman hired him.

Between several stints in the latter band the trumpeter continued studio work and freelanced in bands led by Miff Mole and Teddy Wilson, among others. Jimmy Dorsey was the first name written in his datebook for 1940 but doesn't appear again past the spring months. Goodman seemed to make sure this trumpeter was in the section whenever he assembled an important recording date. Since Griffin logged something like three decades of service to the CBS studios, where Goodman also did much work, this wasn't too difficult to arrange.

During the '60s Griffin branched out to open a school of trumpet with fellow high note man Pee Wee Irwin. Bandleader Warren Covington took the trumpeter out on the road in the '70s, including a European tour. After the '80s Grifin seems to have stepped back from active service to the jazz community. On the subject of touring, those fans of bed and breakfast spots who stop by the Griffin House Bed and Breakfast in Jeffersonville, New York, would have the opportunity to visit something of a shrine to good old "steel lips." The establishment is run by the trumpeter's son, Paul Griffin, who set up a "Griffin Room" on the second floor in honor of his father's career. The trumpeter should not be confused with the Chris Griffin who runs an Atlanta mastering facility and is also active as a player. ~ Eugene Chadbourne, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Chris Griffin
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Chris Griffin
Family Guy character
Chris Griffin.png
Chris Griffin
Voiced by Seth Green
Character information
Full name Christopher Cross Griffin
Relatives Parents: Peter and Lois
Siblings: Meg and Stewie
Pet: Brian Griffin
Gender Male
Hair color Blond
Occupation High school student
Convenience Store Clerk
Paperboy
Show information
First appearance ""Death Has a Shadow""

Christopher Cross "Chris" Griffin is a fictional character from the animated series Family Guy. He is the oldest son of Peter and Lois Griffin, brother of Stewie and Meg Griffin. Chris is voiced by Seth Green.

Contents

Character personality

Though Chris is not the brightest one in the family, he is particularly coherent and makes good points when talking about movies. Chris deals with the problems that most pubescent boys face: acne, girls, and school. He is 14 years old and is enrolled at James Woods Regional High School. Chris has been known to feel self-conscious about himself, especially his weight. In fact, on the Volume 1 DVD Boxset, it stated that Chris "wouldn't hurt a fly, unless it landed on his hot dog". He was referred to as an "Elephant Child" when he was born. Chris is also willing to do something as drastic as to convert to Judaism order to do better in school, specifically math. He once believed his low grades in mathematics were caused by himself when he tickled his brain by sticking an army man's rifle into his nose and accidentally puncturing a lobe. Chris enjoys drawing and once almost managed to become a famous artist in New York, but failed. Chris also has an apparent physical attraction to his mother, Lois, which was noted in the commentary of Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story.[1][2][3] It is also seen in "E. Peterbus Unum"[4][5][6] (where he hands Meg a note that reads "I think Mrs. Griffin is hot") and in "Model Misbehavior"[7] (where he says that he'll masturbate to pictures of her). Chris—like his father—is obese, has a low IQ and no common sense; however in the episode "Fast Times at Buddy Cianci Jr. High",[8][9] Brian refers to Chris's class as intelligent before going to teach remedial English. Also, various storylines give him autistic savant talents, such as artistic ability, and detailed knowledge of film and TV actors. Both he and Peter have also demonstrated profiency in the use of American Sign Language. Occasionally he exhibits unexpected, uncharacteristic insights, such as when he gives Peter and Lois a detailed and articulate lecture on the effects and disadvantages of marijuana. He has also demonstrated an ability to quickly adapt to new cultural surroundings. For example, when the family moved to London, England in "Patriot Games",[10][11][12] Chris was the only member of the family who was able to quickly learn and speak cockney English.

Chris is usually depicted as naive to the point of blamelessness. However, when Peter and Lois were having a fist fight, Chris cheered for Peter, telling him to "kick her ass!" Also, in Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story, when Lois and Peter are trying to make out, the children mistake it for a fight and Chris says "I don't know what they're fighting about, but I think Dad's winning. Go Dad!"

Evil Monkey

In a running gag, starting in the episode "Dammit Janet!", Chris is regularly tormented by an evil monkey who lives in his closet, though whenever he complains about it to anyone, they don't believe him and often laugh him off instead, after which the monkey appears with a malevolent grimace and points at Chris in a threatening manner. However, in "Hannah Banana", Chris finally manages to prove the monkey's existence to the family, and even ends up becoming friends with him after the monkey (who appears not to be evil at all, but just a poor creature who was depressed after his wife cheated with another monkey) helps him write out a book report and pass. They hang out each other in fun places, and the monkey helps Chris in his studies in school, something in which Peter doesn't do. This, however, caused a rift between Chris and Peter when Chris realized that the monkey cares more for him than his father. Eventually the monkey helped the two patch things up, especially after Peter saved the monkey from Miley Cyrus (who is depicted as a gynoid) who had kidnapped him á la King Kong. After that, the monkey happily moved out of Chris' closet to live in the closet of Tom Tucker's son Jake, where the cycle will start in a new beginning, as Jake's having a bad time with his father.

Character origins

Chris' character resembles Milt, the son of the main character Larry Cummings in The Life of Larry, one of the animated short films created by Seth MacFarlane at the Rhode Island School of Design in 1995 that led to the development of Family Guy.[citation needed]

Chris was originally given a "punk" image, according to creator Seth MacFarlane's DVD commentary tracks. He wore earrings, and his painful awkwardness was not as emphasized as it is later in the series.[citation needed]

Chris' voice was based on Ted Levine's performance as James/Jame "Buffalo Bill" Gumb in The Silence of the Lambs. In the commentary for Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story, Green reveals that he based his voice for Chris on what "Buffalo Bill" would sound like if he were working at a drive-thru in a McDonald's (speaking through a PA system); the result being a pre-Chris Griffin voice. Chris later parodied a scene from the movie where Buffalo Bill dances in front of a mirror in the same fashion.[13]

References

External links


 
 

 

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 Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Chris Griffin" Read more

 

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