Al Belletto (January 3, 1928 – December 26, 2014) was an
American jazz saxophonist and clarinetist.
Al Belletto was born in New Orleans on January 3, 1928 to
Philip and Frances Franzella Belletto. His long career in jazz made him one of
the city's best known and most treasured musicians. While at Warren Easton High
School he began working as a professional
musician. At age sixteen Al began his studies at Loyola University and later earned a Master's Degree at LSU.
musician. At age sixteen Al began his studies at Loyola University and later earned a Master's Degree at LSU.
He played with Sharkey Bonano, Louis Prima, Wingy Manone
and the Dukes of Dixieland in the 1940s and 1950s. A pioneer of contemporary jazz, Al led his own quintet in
1951 in which most of its members performed skillfully and they all doubled on
more than one instrument. They used to play at Gus Stevens’ in Biloxi,
Mississippi, where they found their first long-term booking, and a loyal crowd
of followers.
It was precisely during their engagement there, that singing star
Mel Tormé found himself in need of some choral assistance. Although none of
Belletto’s men had ever sung a note professionally, they were anxious to please
their first boss, so they just took deep breaths and began to sing. To
everyone’s amazement what came out was round, full, and in beautiful accord.
Impressed with the boys’ natural vocal talent, Tormé
furnished them with some of his Meltones charts, and suggested they make
singing a regular part of their act. So raving about the excellent musicianship
and affability of Tormé, and despite no one of them have sung before, they
accepted the challenge. Trombonist Jimmy Guinn became the group’s featured
singer, while each member also pitched in for some interesting five-way vocals
remindful of the Four Freshmen. Belletto toured nationally and via Kenton was soon
was signed up with Capitol Records.
Here’s “You'd Be So Nice to Come Home To” from above E.P.
His first "Kenton Presents" EP in 1954 was An
Introduction to the Al Belletto Quintet. The pair of 45s featured four songs
with five neatly arranged musicians: Jack Martin (tp,fhr,b), Jimmy Guinn
(tb,vcl), Al Belletto (as,bar), Fred Crane (p,bar) and Charles McKnight (d). In
1954 and '55, Belletto recorded Sounds and Songs. By then, Belletto's group was
a sextet: Jack Martin (tp,fhr), Danny Conn (tp,Mellophone,b), Jimmy Guinn (tb),
Al Belletto (as,bar), Fred Crane (p), Skip Fawcett (b) and Charles McKnight
(d).

Learning of Al's group on Stan Kenton Presents
recordings, bandleader Woody Herman heard the band in the late '50's and
incorporated them into his State Department tour of Central and South America. Belletto's surfy, high-register attack on the
alto saxophone sounded very much like
Art Pepper. His tight groups had a West Coast jazz feel—rich in melody with fugue-like harmony and lots of space. After Sounds and Songs, Belletto recorded Half and Half in 1956, Whisper Not in 1957 and a superb album with singer Jerri Winters in '57 entitled Somebody Loves Me.
Art Pepper. His tight groups had a West Coast jazz feel—rich in melody with fugue-like harmony and lots of space. After Sounds and Songs, Belletto recorded Half and Half in 1956, Whisper Not in 1957 and a superb album with singer Jerri Winters in '57 entitled Somebody Loves Me.
Missing New Orleans, Al returned to the city and worked
at the New Orleans Playboy Club fronting the house band and serving as
Musical/Entertainment Director which positioned him to attract international
figures to the city. As a member of the board of directors of the original New
Orleans jazz festival Jazziest in 1968, he
successfully pressed for a policy guaranteeing not only that the city's
prominent black musicians would be presented at the festival, but that they
would also receive compensation commensurate with the white musicians.

Players who worked with Al had a title for him that reflected their admiration for his musicianship, leadership and the warmth of their feelings for him. They called him Coach. His Jazznocracy big band album in 1997, his last, was a knockout. He died at home in Crescent City, Metairie on December 26, 2014.
(Edited from Legacy.com, Wikipedia, jazzwax.com &
Fresh Sounds)