
Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Anthony C. Mottola was born on April 18, 1918 in Kearny, New Jersey. He started out learning to play the banjo, then took up the guitar and had his first guitar lessons from his father. In 1936 he toured with an orchestra led by George Hall, marking the beginning of his professional life.
His first recordings were duets with guitarist Carl Kress. In 1945 he collaborated with accordionist John Serry Sr. in a recording of Leone Jump for Sonora Records which was played in jukeboxes throughout the United States. Tony’s only charted single as a soloist was This Guy’s In Love With You, which reached No. 22 on the Billboard magazine Easy Listening Top 40 in the summer of 1968.
Mottola worked often on television, appearing as a regular on shows hosted by vocalist Perry Como and comedian Sid Caesar and as music director for the 1950s series Danger. From 1958–1972, he was a member of The Tonight Show Orchestra led by Skitch Henderson.
He composed music for the TV documentary Two Childhoods, which was about Vice President Hubert Humphrey and writer James Baldwin, and won an Emmy Award for his work. In 1980, Mottola began performing with Frank Sinatra, often in duets, appearing at Carnegie Hall and the White House. He retired from the music business in 1988 but kept playing at home almost every day.
Guitarist Tony Mottola, who released dozens of albums as a leader, passed away in Denville, New Jersey on August 9, 2004.
More Posts: bandleader,guitar,history,instrumental,jazz,music

Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Sam Noto was born on April 17, 1930 in Buffalo, New York, where he learned to play the trumpet. While still in his early twenties he was invited to join Stan Kenton’s band as the lead trumpeter, playing with him full-time until 1958. He returned to the Kenton band in 1960 after a year-long stint touring Europe with Louie Bellson and Pearl Bailey in 1959.
Between 1964 and 1967 for two separate periods, Sam was also a member of the Count Basie Orchestra. He worked primarily in Las Vegas, Nevada after 1969. It was while living and working in Vegas, he became acquainted with trumpeter Red Rodney who was influential in Noto’s prolific recording career with Xanadu.
Relocating to Toronto in 1975 he quickly became a first-call studio player and member of Rob McConnell’s “The Boss Brass” for a number of years in the ‘80s. Noto established his own successful groups including the Sam Noto Quintet, performing frequently throughout Toronto in the ‘90s and early 2000s.
He recorded six albums as a leader and another eighteen as a sideman working with Count Basie, Stan Kenton, Rob McConnell, Frank Rosolino, Red Rodney, Don Menza, Buddy Rich, Joe Romano, Charlie Parker, Mel Lewis, Dizzy Gillespie, Louie Bellson, and Kenny Drew. He has had recording associations with Xanadu, Muse, Capitol, Sea Breeze, Dot, Coliseum, Reprise, Supermono, and Unisson record labels.
Now residing in Fort Erie, Ontario, trumpeter and bop soloist Sam Noto continues to play in and around the Toronto area, as well as closer to home in Buffalo, New York jazz clubs.
More Posts: bandleader,history,instrumental,jazz,music,trumpet

The Quarantined Jazz Voyager
The Quarantined Jazz Voyager has but one desire and that is for you to be safe from this pandemic. If you must go out wear gloves and mask, distance yourself and return to your haven as quickly as possible. There are those who have family members they must care for, so travel is a necessity. I encourage your diligence in staying healthy from this virus.
There is no next stop for this voyager except my safe haven for the near future where I am quarantined until this pandemic is over. But what this jazz guy will do while at home, is listen to some great music and share that music with each of you weekly to give you a little insight into this voyager’s choices during this unprecedented sabbatical from jet setting investigations of jazz around the globe.
The world will be back to traveling and so will I. My album choice for this week’s listen is A Bluish Bag by Stanley Turrentine, released in 1967.
More Posts: adventure,club,genius,jazz,museum,music,preserving,restaurant,travel,voyager

Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Raymond Ventura was born on April 16, 1908 into a Jewish family in Paris, France and learned to play the piano as a child. By the time he turned 17 in 1925 he was the pianist for the Collegiate Five, which recorded as the Collegians for Columbia Records beginning in 1928 and then for Decca in the 1930s.
Later he led the Collegians and it became a dance orchestra resembling a big band. His sidemen included Alix Combelle, Philippe Brun, and Guy Paquinet. In the early Forties, Ray led a big band in South America and in France during the rest of the decade.
One of his band’s popular songs from 1936 was Tout va très bien, Madame la Marquise in which the Marquise is told by her servants that everything is fine at home except for a series of escalating calamities. It was seen as a metaphor for France’s obliviousness to the approaching war.
Between 1931 and 1953 he appeared with his big band in four films, American Love, Beautiful Star, Women of Paris, and A Hundred Francs A Second. Pianist and bandleader Ray Ventura, who helped popularize jazz in France in the 1930s, March 29, 1979 in Palma de Mallorca, Spain.
More Posts: bandleader,history,instrumental,jazz,music,piano

Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Sy Johnson was born on April 15, 1930 in New Haven, Connecticut and learned to play the piano in his youth. He first performed in New York City with Charles Mingus at the jazz club Showplace, with Booker Ervin on tenor, Ted Curson on trumpet, Dannie Richmond on drums, and Mingus on bass. and on his first night with Mingus, Eric Dolphy performed on alto, bass clarinet, and flute.
In 1971, eleven years later, Mingus gave Johnson Let My Children Hear Music to arrange, which featured two Mingus pieces, Shoes of the Fisherman’s Wife (Are Some Jiveass Slippers) and Don’t Be Afraid, the Clowns Afraid Too. The album’s emergence was heralded with a live concert, Mingus And Friends At Philharmonic Hall, also arranged by Johnson and released as an album.
Performing We Did It on Soul Train in 1973 and continued to work with Mingus until his death from Lou Gehrig’s disease in 1979. Mingus recorded two of Johnson’s compositions, Wee and For Harry Carney, and nominated Johnson for a Guggenheim award following his own in Jazz Composition.
Johnson continues to work with Sue Mingus arranging charts for all the Mingus repertory ensembles—the Mingus Big Band, the Mingus Orchestra and the Mingus Dynasty. He would go on to collaborate with arrangements for Joe Williams, Frank Sinatra, Wes Montgomery, Roy Eldridge, Ben Webster, Quincy Jones, Benny Goodman, Count Basie, Mel Torme, Terry Gibbs, Lee Konitz and Sarah Vaughan, among others.
He has also worked on Broadway and in films such as the1984 movie The Cotton Club. Arranger Sy Johnson is also a jazz photographer, writer, pianist, singer, and teacher.
More Posts: arranger,history,instrumental,jazz,music,photographer,pianist,singer,teacher,writer


