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Urbie Green

 

Trombonist, bandleader

Urbie Green was among the first musicians to recognize the versatility of the trombone and expand its uses as a lead and solo instrument in jazz music. Beginning as a teenager in the 1940s, Green appeared with a variety of jazz bands and orchestras, playing swing and bebop with such artists as Louis Armstrong, Gene Krupa, Charles Mingus, and Coleman Hawkins, and supporting such singers as Billie Holiday, Perry Como, Ella Fitzgerald, Dinah Washington, Jimmy Rushing, and Frank Sinatra. Discussing Green’s groundbreaking trombone contributions to jazz, Paul Berliner noted in Thinking in Jazz: Infinite Art of Improvisation: "Just as string bass players faced challenges adapting Charlie Parker’s fluent melodic lines to their instrument, many trombonists initially found learning bebop patterns discouraging. When artists like J.J. Johnson and Urbie Green, through the use of such techniques as alternate slide positions, demonstrated the possibility of performing pitches rapidly with minimal movement of the right arm and wrist, trombonists began to feel at home with the new idiom."

Born Urban Clifford Green on August 8, 1926, in Mobile, Alabama, Green’s life as a musician began when he took piano lessons from his mother. "She didn’t know a lot about music—she played by ear—but she knew a few fundamental things about reading…," Green told Down Beat magazine’s Herb Nolan. "We practiced by playing the sheet music for the popular songs of the day because we didn’t have practice books. That’s probably why I never got to be very good on the piano. But it did develop my harmonic sense, I guess." He switched to the trombone—the same instrument his two older brothers played—when he was 12. One of five children, Green was 15 when his father died. In order to help support his mother and younger sister, he began playing professionally with Mobile bands and moved to California the following year. Among his main influences were trombone players Tommy Dorsey, JackTeagarden, Lawrence Brown, J. C. Higginbotham, Jack Jenning, and Tommy Young. But Green has also stated that he considered musicians of instruments other than the trombone to be even more influential, including cornet player Bill Lagman, trumpet player Dizzie Gillespie, and saxophone player Lester Young.

After stints playing in West Coast bands led by Tommy Reynolds, Bob Strong, and Frankie Carle, Green played with legendary jazz drummer Gene Krupa from 1947 to 1950. In 1950, he joined Woody Herman’s Third Herd. Discussing his experiences with Krupa and Herman, Green told Nolan: "I enjoyed both those bands in different ways. Gene’s band was more arranged, while Woody had a lot of head arrangements going." With the former band, Green’s featured number was "Skylark," and with the latter band, he soloed on "My Silent Love." Nolan described Green in the Third Herd as "one of the most influential trombone players around, combining articulate speed—fast clusters of notes—with a beautiful, full warm sound. It was a

sound that became a classic model for young players learning the instrument. It still is."

Throughout the 1950s, Green furthered his reputation as a versatile and virtuoso jazz trombonist who led his own recording band and performed with some of the most renowned jazz and popular musicians of the decade. In the mid-1950s, he played on the Buck Clayton jam sessions that were released as Buck Clayton Jam Session and The Hucklebuck and Robbin’s Nest. He also played with Clayton on a recording of songs popularized by Benny Goodman, Buck Clayton Jams Benny Goodman. Coincidentally, Green later played sporadically with Goodman, appearing both on screen and on the soundtrack for the 1955 film The Benny Goodman Story.

During this period, Green lived in New York City, where he was close to the city’s jazz clubs and recording studios, and, according to essayist Gunther Schuller in The Oxford Companion to Jazz, "became, even more than [trombonist Jimmy] Knepper, the central figure in that city’s freelance jazz recording scene. Gifted with a truly spectacular, dead-sure technique, incredible speed, and a rich, perfectly centered warm tone, his playing could encompass the complete range of musical expression, from the suave elegance to the most exuberantly lusty drama." In demand as a recording studio musician, Green played on sessions for Perry Como, Mel Torme, Betty Carter, Tony Bennett, Dinah Washington, LaVern Baker, Ella Fitzgerald, Dizzy Gillespie, Coleman Hawkins, Billie Holiday, Quincy Jones, Charles Mingus, Jimmy Rushing, and Charlie Parker. He also released several highly regarded albums as a bandleader in the 1950s, including Blues & Other Shades of Green and Urbie Green Octet: Slidin’ Swing.

The 1960s were no less hectic for Green’s recording and performing career. Among his accomplishments, he played with Count Basie’s orchestra and fronted Tommy Dorsey’s orchestra from 1966-67. He guested on recordings by Wes Montgomery, Kenny Burrell, Ray Charles, Aretha Franklin, Paul Desmond, Joe Morello, Jimmy Smith, Antonio Carlos Jobim, Gil Evans, Astrud Gilberto, Johnny Griffin, Rahsaan Roland Kirk, Oliver Nelson, Pee Wee Russell, Lalo Schifrin, Doc Severinson, Jimmy Smith, and Cal Tjader. He also collaborated on a series of albums with jazz producer Enoch Light, including The Persuasive Trombone of Urbie Green, The Persuasive Trombone of Urbie Green, Volume Two, Urbie Green and His 6-Tet, 21 Trombones, and 21 Trombones, Volume Two. He also played at the White House to commemorate Duke Ellington’s seventieth birthday and receipt of the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Richard Nixon. Reviewing the evening, critic Whitney Balliett wrote in Collected Works: A Journal of Jazz, 1954-2000: "The music, which lasted an hour and a half, was exceptional. Some two dozen numbers were played, almost all were by Ellington and/or Billy Strayhorn. The high points included… a gorgeous Urbie Green solo in ‘I Got It Bad and That Ain’t Good.’"

In the 1970s, Green moved to a farm in Pennsylvania, but continued to do session recording and releasing albums as a band leader into the 1990s. He told Nolan in 1976: "I enjoy different kinds of settings instead of just one thing; I like tunes with good chord progressions to them and I also like just plain old basic blues. I think variety is nice; to play straightahead jazz all night could get a little tiresome, like playing bossa novas all night might get a little boring, or jazz/rock all night." He also worked with musical equipment manufacturers Jet Tone and Martin, respectively, on the designs for the Urbie Green Mouthpiece and the Martin Urbie Green Model trombone. He also began experimenting with devices such as an electronic pickup in the trombone mouthpiece connected with an octave double and reverberation unit that he dubbed the "Green Monster." Among the albums he released in the 1970s are Green Power, Bein’Green, Urbie Green’s Big Beautiful Band, The Fox, and Senor Blues. He subsequently released live recordings, including 1995’s Sea Jam Blues.

Selected discography
New Faces, New Sounds, Blue Note, 1953.
Blues and Other Shades of Green, Paramount, 1955.
East Coast Jazz, Volume Six, Bethlehem, 1955.
The Lyrical Language of Urbie Green, Bethlehem, 1955.
The Melodic Tones of Urbie Green, Bethlehem, 1955.
Urbie Green and His Band, Vanguard, 1955.
All About Urbie Green, Paramount, 1956.
Let’s Face the Music and Dance, RCA, 1957.
Urbie Green Octet: Slidin’ Swing, Jazztone, 1957.
Urbie Green, RCA Camden, 1958.
Best of the New Broadway Show Hits, RCA Camden, 1959.
The Persuasive Trombone of Urbie Green, Command, 1960.
The Persuasive Trombone of Urbie Green, Volume Two, Command, 1961.
Urbie Green and his 6-Tet, Command, 1963.
21 Trombones, Project 3, 1967; reissued, 1987.
21 Trombones, Volume Two, Project 3, 1967.
Comin’ Home Baby/Lumps, Project 3, 1970.
Green Power, Project 3, 1971.
Bein’Green, Project 3, 1972.
Urbie Green’s Big Beautiful Band, Project 3, 1974.
The Fox, CTI, 1976.
Senor Blues, CTI, 1977.
(With Red Norvo) Live at Rick’s Café American, Flying Fish, 1978.
Sea Jam Blues, Chiaroscuro, 1995.
Just Friends, E.J., 1997.

Sources
Books
Balliett, Whitney, Collected Works: A Journal of Jazz, 1954-2000, St. Martin’s Press, New York, 2000.
Berliner, Paul, Thinking in Jazz: Infinite Art of Improvisation, University of Chicago Press, 1994.
Feather, Leonard, and Ira Gitler, Biographical Encyclopedia of Jazz, Oxford University Press, 1999.
Kernfeld, Barry, editor, New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, Volume One, A-K, Macmillan Press, 1988.
Kirchner, Bill, editor, The Oxford Companion to Jazz, Oxford University Press, 2000.

Periodicals
Down Beat, October 1976, p. 14-15.

Online
"Green, Urbie," Trombone Page of the World, http://www.trombone-usa.com/tromb_g.html (January 2, 2002).
"Urbie Green," All Music Guide, http://www.allmusic.com (January 2, 2002).
"Urbie Green," Jazz Valley, http://www.jazzvalley.com/musician/urbie.green (January 2, 2002).
"Urbie Green Biography," A Tribute to Urbie Green, http://www.applink.net/meesee/bio.htm (January 2, 2002).
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  • Genres: Jazz

Biography

A fine jazz player with a beautiful tone who has spent most of his career in the studios, Urbie Green is highly respected by his fellow trombonists. He started playing when he was 12; was with the big bands of Tommy Reynolds, Bob Strong, and Frankie Carle as a teenager; and worked with Gene Krupa during 1947-1950. Green had a stint with Woody Herman's Third Herd, appeared on some of the famous Buck Clayton jam sessions (1953-1954), and was with Benny Goodman off and on during 1955-1957. He played with Count Basie in 1963, and spent a period in the 1960s fronting the Tommy Dorsey ghost band (1966-1967), but has mostly stuck to studio work. Urbie Green recorded frequently as a leader in the 1950s up to 1963 (for Blue Note, Vanguard, Bethlehem, ABC-Paramount, and dance band-oriented records for RCA and Command). He has appeared much less often in jazz settings since then, but did make two albums for CTI in 1976-1977. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Urbie Green

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Urbie Green

Jazzmen George Morrow and Urbie Green at the Village Jazz Lounge in Walt Disney World (photo by Laura Kolb)
Background information
Birth name Urban Clifford Green
Also known as Urbie Green
Born August 8, 1926 (1926-08-08) (age 85)
Origin Mobile, Alabama, United States
Genres Jazz
Occupations Musician
Instruments Trombone
Labels Vanguard, Bethlehem, Paramount, Command, Project 3
Associated acts Woody Herman, Gene Krupa, Jan Savitt, Frankie Carle, many others

Urban Clifford "Urbie" Green (born August 8, 1926) is an American jazz trombonist who toured with Woody Herman, Gene Krupa, Jan Savitt, and Frankie Carle.[1]

He has played on over 250 recordings and has released more than two dozen albums as a soloist and is highly respected by his fellow trombonists. Green's trombone sound is especially noted for its warm, mellow tone, even in the higher registers where he is more fluent than most trombonists. His technique is considered flawless by many in the music industry and has appeared in major jazz festivals, motion pictures, concert halls, nightclubs, radio, television and the White House. He was inducted into the Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame in 1995.

Contents

Early years and influences

Born in Mobile, Alabama, Green was taught the piano as a child by his mother, jazz and popular tunes from the beginning. He picked up the trombone, which both older brothers played, when he was about 12. Although he listened to such trombone greats as Tommy Dorsey, J. C. Higginbotham, Jack Jenny, Jack Teagarden and Trummy Young he has said that he was more influenced by the styles of Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, and Lester Young.

Urbie's trombone style was also influenced by vocalists such as Perry Como, and the vocal style of Louis Armstrong. Green's father died when he was 15 and Urbie went straight into professional music, first joining the Tommy Reynolds Band in California before moving on to stints with Bob Strong, Jan Savitt, and Frankie Carle. Green also played with The Auburn Knights Orchestra, a college big band based in Auburn, Alabama while attending Auburn High School.[2]

Professional career

In 1947, Green joined Gene Krupa's band and quickly moved up to Woody Herman's third "Thundering Herd" Big Band in 1950 to play with his brother, Jack. In 1953 he moved to New York City, quickly establishing himself as the premier trombonist in the booming recording industry and in 1954 he was voted the "New Star" trombonist in the International Critics Poll from Down Beat magazine.

He was voted "Most Valuable Player" several times by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences.[citation needed] He recorded with virtually all of the major jazz musicians of the 1950s and 1960s and led his own groups while also joining tours as a featured performer, including a three-month tour leading the Benny Goodman Orchestra and fronting the Tommy Dorsey orchestra after Dorsey's death in 1956.

He collaborated with innovative producer Enoch Light for the Command and Project 3 labels, producing what are probably his most notable recordings, such as the two-volume sets The Persuasive Trombone of Urbie Green and 21 Trombones.

In the 1970s Green began making innovations with his instrument. He designed a signature mouthpiece for Jet Tone and collaborated with Martin Brass on practical improvements to trombone design, including modifications of the hand brace and slide, water valve, and finish. Urbie also began experimenting with the "Green Monster", a King trombone using a King Vox Amp pickup in the mouthpiece connected to an octave doubler and reverb unit. Some of his best recordings of the 70s were with Enoch Light and the Light Brigade, Dick Hyman, Maynard Ferguson and Doc Severinsen. After the very productive Enoch Light years, Green's style changed slightly. His recordings under the CTI label contained much more music by Urbie's band and fewer solos by Urbie.[citation needed]

The 1980s and beyond saw a slowing down of Urbie Green's recording career. Both albums recorded by him during this period are live, straight jazz works; Just Friends, and Sea Jam Blues.

Personal life

He now spends most of his time with his second wife Kathy, a jazz singer, at their home in the Poconos region of Pennsylvania. The couple have two children, Jesse and Casey. Jesse is a jazz pianist and lives nearby, while Casey is a director/editor in Los Angeles, California. Urbie's first wife was Darlein Dietz and they had two children, Urban Clifford Green and James Preston Green. Urban has a daughter, Gretchen Alexandra Pöelker-Green, and lives in Sea Cliff, Long Island. James lives in Tallahasse, Florida, and has a son named Vincent.

In 1995 he was elected into the Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame. Urbie Green still plays live at the Delaware Water Gap Celebration of the Arts (COTA) Festival every September, just miles down the road from his home.

Discography

As Leader

  • 1953 New Faces, New Sounds (Blue Note)
  • 1954 Urbie Green Septet (Blue Note)
  • 1955 Blues and Other Shades of Green (Blue Note)
  • 1955 The Melodic Tones of Urbie Green (Bethlehem)
  • 1955 East Coast Jazz, Volume 6 (Bethlehem)
  • 1955 The Lyrical Language of Urbie Green (Bethlehem)
  • 1955 The Melodic Tones of Urbie Green (Vanguard)
  • 1955 Urbie Green and His Band (Vanguard)
  • 1955 Blues and Other Shades of Green (Paramount)
  • 1956 All About Urbie Green (Paramount)
  • 1957 Urbie Green Octet / Slidin' Swing (Jazztone)
  • 1957 Let's Face the Music and Dance (RCA)
  • 1958 Best of New Broadway Show Hits (RCA)
  • 1960 The Persuasive Trombone of Urbie Green (Command)
  • 1961 The Persuasive Trombone of Urbie Green Volume 2 (Command)
  • 1963 Urbie Green and His 6-Tet. (Command)
  • 1967 21 Trombones (Project 3)
  • 1967 21 Trombones Volume 2 (Project 3)
  • 1971 Green Power (Project 3)
  • 1972 Bein' Green (Project 3)
  • 1973 Old Time Modern (RCA) (recorded in 1954)
  • 1974 Urbie Green's Big Beautiful Band (Project 3)
  • 1976 The Fox (CTI)
  • 1977 Seńor Blues (CTI)
  • 1978 Live at Rick's Cafe American (Flying Fish)
  • 1981 Just Friends (E.J.)
  • 1995 Sea Jam Blues (Chiaroscuro)

As sideman

With Manny Albam

With The Count Basie Orchestra

With Paul Desmond

With Bill Evans

With Gil Evans

With Aretha Franklin

With Coleman Hawkins

With Billy Holiday

With Bobby Hutcherson

With Milt Jackson

With Antonio Carlos Jobim

With Blue Mitchell

With Wes Montgomery

With Mark Murphy

  • Rah! (Riverside, 1961)

With Oliver Nelson

With Chico O'Farrill

With Shirley Scott

With Frank Sinatra

With Jimmy Smith

With Dinah Washington

  • The Swingin' Miss "D" (EmArcy, 1956)

References

  1. ^ Allmusic
  2. ^ "Former Knight Urbie Green", Auburn Knights Alumni Association Newsletter, September 15, 1996, 6; The School Musician and Teacher, November 1970, 56.

External links


 
 
Related topics:
Live at Monterey (1959 Album by Woody Herman)
Old Time Modern (1955 Album by Nat Pierce & Urbie Green)
John's Bunch (1975 Album by John Bunch)

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