Saturday 30 April 2022

Buddy Arnold born 30 April 1926


Arnold Buddy Grishaver (April 30, 1926 – November 9, 2003), known professionally as Buddy Arnold, was an American jazz saxophonist. 

Bronx born Buddy Arnold took up the sax at age nine and turned pro while still in his teens. At 16 years old, Arnold performed at the Apollo Theater with the Georgie Auld Orchestra with singer Billy Eckstine. At age 18 he joined the Army and led an Army Dance Band from 1944 to 1946. Following this he played with Joe Marsala, Will Osborne (singer), Herbie Fields, Buddy Rich. His first recordings were in 1949 with Gene Williams and the Junior Thornhill Band with Claude Thornhill before leaving to study music and economics at Columbia University. In 1951 he began playing again, touring with Buddy DeFranco, then worked with Jerry Wald, Tex Beneke, Elliot Lawrence, Stan Kenton, and Neal Hefti. 

                         Here’s “Oedipus” from above album. 

                             

Finally, late in 1955 and together with fellow trumpeter Phil Sunkel, he put together his own quintet, emerging as a prominent soloist. His playing was directly inspired by Lester Young, whose style was so pervasive at the time that it became an almost universal language for many modern tenors. "Wailing" was Arnold’s only album as a leader, fronting a septet of fine musicians, who all subscribed to the premise that emotion and swing are the key and character of jazz. It was released by Paramount in 1956. He did further work for the label with Phil Sunkel. 

Despite this promising album debut, his career was cut short soon after its release. Drug use was partially to blame, as it led to him going to prison for robbery for two years. In 1960 he tried to resume his career, playing and recording with Stan Kenton, who wanted to help him on his recovery. He also played with Tommy Dorsey’s ghost band. But he went back to old habits in the 1970s. In 1977 he was arrested in Pasadena, California, for falsifying prescriptions, and in 1981 a new prison sentence linked to his addictions sent him to San Quentin. 

In the 1980s, he dropped out of music due to another prison sentence stemming from his addictions. Following his release from prison four months later due to a computer error, Arnold remained clean. A decade later he and his wife Carole Fields co-founded the Musician’s Assistance Program, which offered help to musicians with drug problems. In the early '90s he showed up on an album by swing revival band Love Jones, providing a touch of authenticity that is quite rare on these sorts of recordings. 

Buddy and Carole Fields

After many ups and downs, Arnold passed away of complications from open heart surgery at Los Angeles' Cedars-Sinai Medical Center on November 9, 2003. He was 77. 

 (Edited from Wikipedia, AllMusic & Liner notes)

1 comment:

boppinbob said...

For “Buddy Arnold – Wailing (1956 Spartan)” go here:

https://www.upload.ee/files/14100219/Buddy_Arnold_Wailing.rar.html

1. Oedipus 3:36
2. Footsie 5:05
3. It's Sand, Man 3:40
4. You Don't Know What Love Is 5:01
5. Letter Today 3:33
6. Patty's Cake 3:25
7. P.U. Stomp 3:28
8. Moby Dick 3:53
9. Old Devil Moon 4:15

Tracks #1,3,5,6: Dick Sherman, trumpet; Frank Rehak, trombone; Gene Quill, alto sax, clarinet; Buddy Arnold, tenor sax, bass clarinet; John Williams, piano; Teddy Kotick, bass; Shadow Wilson, drums.
Recorded in New York City, January 26, 1956

Tracks #2,4,7,8,9: Dave Schildkraut, alto sax and Osie Johnson, drums;
replace Gene Quill and Shadow Wilson.
Recorded in New York City, January 29, 1956

Buddy Arnold shows he took his Getz pills on this mellifluous session from 1956 with a bopping team of Dick Sherman/tp, Frank Rehak/tb, Gene Quill-Dave Schildkraut/as, Buddy Arnold/ts, Teddy Kotick/b and Osie Johnson-Shadow Wilson/dr. The bands sounds like the second coming of the Four Brothers on “No Letter Today” and “It's Sand Man” with the spirit of Count Basie present on “PU Stomp” and “Mobie Dick”. Arnold blows it cool and clean throughout, creating smoke rings on “Oedipus”. (Jazz Weekly notes)