Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Ivor Mairants was born in Rypin, Poland on July 18, 1908 and  moved with his family to the United Kingdom in 1913 where he attended Raine’s Foundation School in Bethnal Green. He began learning the banjo at the age of 17 and became a professional musician three years later.

In the 1930s he was a banjoist and guitarist for British dance bands led by Bert Firman, Ambrose, Roy Fox, Lew Stone, Geraldo, and Ted Heath. In 1950 Mairants established the Central School of Dance Music in London, England which he ran for 10 years. All instruments were taught at this establishment, but emphasis was given to guitar. Among the teaching staff at the school were Johnny Dankworth, Jack Brymer, Kenny Baker, Bert Weedon and Ike Isaacs, and Eric Gilder. In 1960 Mairants handed the school over to Gilder, who renamed it as the Eric Gilder School of Music.

In the Sixties and Seventies his guitar playing was often heard on television, radio, film soundtracks, and many recordings with the Mantovani orchestra and with Manuel and his Music of the Mountains. His 1976 recording of the Adagio from Joaquin Rodrigo’s Concierto de Aranjuez with Manuel sold over one million copies.

He wrote many occasional pieces for jazz bands, was a columnist for Melody Maker, BMG, and Classical Guitar, and was a member of the Worshipful Society of Musicians, a British guild, and a Freeman of the City of London. In 1997 the Worshipful Society inaugurated an annual competition for the Ivor Mairants Guitar Award.

Guitarist, composer and teacher Ivor Mairants, who with his wife Lily in 1958 he created the Ivor Mairants Musicentre, a specialist guitar store in London, died on February 20, 1998.

GRIOTS GALLERY

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