Edwin LeMar "Buddy" Cole (December 15, 1916 –
November 5, 1964), was a jazz pianist and orchestra leader. He played behind a
number of pop singers, including Rosemary Clooney, Jill Corey, Johnnie Ray and
The Four Lads, who recorded for Columbia
Records. As "Buddy Cole and his Trio" he recorded the albums Some Fine Old Chestnuts and New Tricks with Bing Crosby.
Records. As "Buddy Cole and his Trio" he recorded the albums Some Fine Old Chestnuts and New Tricks with Bing Crosby.
Buddy Cole was born in Irving, Illinois, and started his
musical career in the theatre playing between movies. He moved to Hollywood and
played with a couple of bands, most notably the Alvino Rey big band, before becoming
a studio musician.
Joining the John Scott Trotter orchestra as a pianist in
1947, he worked closely with Bing Crosby for a number of years and in 1954 he
began a daily radio show with Crosby supported by a trio comprising Vince Terri
on guitar, banjo etc., Don Whittaker on bass and Nick Fatool on drums. Cole
also played piano on a number of Nat King Cole's early vocal hits, including
"Nature Boy," and toured occasionally with him as an accompanist
between 1948 and 1952.
Cole played piano and electric organ. He and Crosby built
up a large library of songs which could then be inserted into the show. Cole
also recorded a similar library of songs with Rosemary Clooney (with whom he
had previously toured) and these songs together with those of Crosby's were
employed in The Bing Crosby – Rosemary Clooney Show (1960-1962). Examples of
Cole's playing and band leadership on recordings include a pair of Bing
Crosby's greatest singles, "In a Little Spanish Town" and "Old
Man River".
Albums with his combo were recorded on piano and Hammond
organ. Cole recorded for Capitol Records as both Buddy Cole and Eddie LaMar and
His Orchestra. He did both commercial and transcription recordings for Capitol.

The theatre organ heard on these albums was the 17-rank
Wurlitzer organ from the United Artists theatre plus nine ranks from a one-time
radio studio Robert Morton theatre organ which he installed in the garage of a
former residence in North Hollywood and on which he recorded three albums for
the Columbia and Capitol labels. The combined ranks were installed in a
specially built studio next to his home.
Here’s “That Old Black magic” from above album.
Two albums - Modern Pipe Organ and Autumn Nocturne - were
recorded for Warner Brothers, as well as two albums done in conjunction with
arranger Monty Kelly, one of which contained an arrangement of Richard Rodgers'
Slaughter on Tenth Avenue, and the other of which contained transcriptions of
big band
arrangements with spaces for the organ. These two albums - for the Alshire label - were Cole's last disc recordings.
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Cole and Hoagy Carmichael |
arrangements with spaces for the organ. These two albums - for the Alshire label - were Cole's last disc recordings.
Cole had been suffering from an advanced case of heart
disease for a number of years, and beginning as early as 1959, suffered a
series of heart attacks as a result. On November 4, 1964, Cole was contracted
to record some organ pieces featured in 20th Century Fox's blockbuster hit The
Sound of Music including sections of the "End Titles", the reprise of
"Climb Ev'ry Mountain" and "Processional" and
"Maria". In the early hours of November 5, after the marathon
six-hour recording session had been completed for the evening, Cole headed
home, went to bed and died in his sleep of a heart attack, being found the
following morning by a staff member.
Cole married Yvonne King on 17 August 1940, member of the King Sisters, and with her had two daughters, actress Tina Cole and Cathy Cole Green. They divorced in 1953. He married Clare Foley Woodruff on 12 November 1957, who already had two children, Jay and Jeffrey Woodruff, the latter of whom would often assist him in organ tuning. The marriage lasted until Cole's death.
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Clare & Buddy Cole |
Cole married Yvonne King on 17 August 1940, member of the King Sisters, and with her had two daughters, actress Tina Cole and Cathy Cole Green. They divorced in 1953. He married Clare Foley Woodruff on 12 November 1957, who already had two children, Jay and Jeffrey Woodruff, the latter of whom would often assist him in organ tuning. The marriage lasted until Cole's death.
(Edited from Wikipedia & AllMusic)