Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Claude Luter ws born on July 23, 1923 in Paris, France the son of a professional pianist and studied the instrument with his father before moving to the clarinet in his teens. Seduced by jazz, he abandoned his training as a naval architect, although he retained an interest in sailing and later qualified as a private pilot. He went on to take clarinet lessons from a pit orchestra player, and pursued his passion for jazz by following the Claude Abadie band around Paris’s Latin Quarter clubs in the late 1930s, sometimes acting as a helpmate to the band’s frail trumpeter, the writer Boris Vian, with whom he made his debut on record in 1944.

Encountering trumpeters Pierre Merlin and Claude Rabanit, who became key members of his first band in 1946. Already recording as Claude Luter et Ses Orientais for the French Swing label, Luter and company moved over to the Vieux Colombier, popular with the existentialist crowd. He began a friendship with the trumpeter’s New Orleans-born clarinetist, Barney Bigard, a connection later cemented on record.

Among Luter’s principal influences was soprano saxophonist Sidney Bechet. As luck would have it, Bechet made concert appearances in Paris in 1949 and was teamed with Luter’s down-to-earth trad band at the Salle Pleyel. He also sat in with them at the Vieux Colombier, beginning an association that endured after Bechet settled permanently in France.

Luter later visited New Orleans, Louisiana a number of times, recorded there and took part in the centenary celebrations of Bechet’s birth. He also attended the tribute concert for Louis Armstrong’s 70th birthday in Los Angeles, California in 1970. Clarinetist Claude Luter, who doubled on soprano saxophone, passed away on October 6, 2006 in Paris at the age of 83.

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Marshal Walton Royal Jr. was born into a musical family on December 5, 1912 in Sapulpa, Oklahoma. His first professional gig was with Lawrence Brown’s band at Danceland in Los Angeles, California. In a very short time, he secured a regular gig at the Apex, working for Curtis Mosby in Mosby’s Blue Blowers, a 10-piece band. Following that gig, he began an eight-year stint from 1931–1939 with the Les Hite Orchestra at Sebastian’s Cotton Club in Los Angeles. He spent 1940 to 1942 with Lionel Hampton, until the war interrupted his career.

With his brother Ernie, he served in the U.S. Navy in the 45-piece regimental band that was attached to the Navy’s pre~flight training school for pilots at St. Mary’s College in Moraga, California. Two swing bands were organized from the larger regimental band, and they played for smokers and dances at USOs and officers clubs. Royal was the leader of the Bombardiers, one of those bands, which also included not only his brother Ernie, but Jackie Kelson (later known as Jackie Kelso), Buddy Collette, Jerome Richardson, and Vernon Alley.

When he left Basie in 1970, Royal settled permanently in Los Angeles, continuing to play and record, working with Bill Berry’s big band, Frank Capp and Nat Pierce, Earl Hines, and Duke Ellington. Royal recorded as a soloist with Dave Frishberg and Warren Vache. He co-led a band with Snooky Young in the 1970s and 1980s, recording with the band in 1978.

Alto saxophonist and clarinetist Marshal Royal, best known for his twenty years with Count Basie, passed away in Culver City, California, on May 9, 1995, aged 82.

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