MP3 George Voland - Remember Beauty: George Voland and Friends
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User tags: jazz mainstream, jazz traditional combo, mp3 album
Swinging and lyrical jazz, played before a live audience and "live" in the studio, the tunes are great standards made even more lovely and exciting by the joyful, sensitive interplay of great players.
10 MP3 Songs
JAZZ: Mainstream Jazz, JAZZ: Traditional Jazz Combo
Show all album songs: Remember Beauty: George Voland and Friends Songs
Details:
George Volandâs Story
1."Riff Version"
(Note:2."Full Score" Version follows this shorter version)
I play valve trombone with happiness and heart because I was given great gifts during my growing up years. Those gifts included: a musical family; the ability to hear roots and changes even before I knew what those things were called; and a wise junior high band director who switched me from cornet to baritone horn.
Without lessons, but with radio and records as my teachers, I played jazz in the privacy and safety of my room. I taught myself piano. I didnât play out while in high school except during my senior year, thanks to an enterprising New Rochelle High School classmate of mine, Keith McClelland, who formed a band to play arrangements heâd taken off records. Alas, I was too shy to solo.
When I got to Middlebury College, another enterprising person, Randy McNamara, asked me to play in his college dance band, which also became the pit orchestra for the Broadway musicals put on by the community theater. As a musician at a college with no music school, I got to play everything from Bach to Stravinsky to Duke Ellington. My jazz improvising couldnât be stopped by my shyness any longer: As a member of Randyâs band, I HAD to play, and my peers liked what I did and told me so.
Vermont jazz players started hiring me to play gigs while I was still in college. They were good musicians and they taught me tunes and the intricacies of improvisation on the band stand. I never had written music for the small combo gigs, but I surely had to have ears when leaders called tunes and a keys. I listened like a fiend and I learned from wonderful players with who lived in a universe of jazz surrounded by cows in rural Vermont.
For more than 40 years, that universe has been peopled by players who have inspired me. For many of those years, music was part-time. I had a great family to help support, and I taught high school English for 33 years because I loved it and teaching did allow me to pay the bills as well. I directed the high school jazz ensemble for many years and, thanks to the example of those who taught me jazz, I have been able to pass on the gift of jazz to many younger players and theyâve been my teachers as well.
I currently consider myself a fulltime jazz musician who happens also to be an innkeeper, a writer, a college teacher, and giver of lessons. With my first album, âRemember Beauty: George Voland and Friends,â the gift of my friend Allen Johnson, Jr., Iâm poised to play as much jazz as comes my way or as much as I can bring my way.
âLife is short,â we often lament. But with so many good tunes to play and good people to play them with and for, itâs not unusual for me to know in my heart of hearts that life isnât short at all. For at any moment on the bandstand, I can find myself in that space where music, played with joy, from the heart, brings meâand listeners, I hopeâto a place that cannot be spoken of, but can certainly be felt as eternally alive and beautiful.
George Volandâs Story: Full Score Version
I Find My Real Voice
I met music thanks especially to my dad, a weekend âclub dateâ musician who played cornet and trumpet in the New York and Connecticut areas from the early 1930âs to the 1980âs. Iâm his namesake and his musical offspring as well.
But I can never hear or play âSophisticated Ladyâ without thinking also of my mom, Margaret, who played it so gently on the piano and who was a talented lyricist and mother. Both my sisters are gifted with musicâDiana as a pianist who could play symphonic selections by ear before she was six, and Elissa, a wonderful acoustic guitarist.
Speaking of Dianaâs early display of talent, I remember âTurkey in the Straw,â a version improvised for a young Diana and me by Graham Forbes, later a pianist for Frank Sinatra, who honored Diâs request during a jam session at the New Rochelle, NY apartment of trumpeter George Stacy. The next day, Diana was playing it by ear, including the Tatum-esque left hand and right hand flourishes.
I owe my chosen instrumental âvoiceâ to my band director at Isaac Young Junior High School (also Bob Mintzerâs director, I found out a few years ago when Bob sat in with a group I was playing with at The Tyler Place, a family resort in Vermont).
Director Harry Richman took me aside at the end of my first year in the junior high band. âGeorge,â he told me, âwe have lots of trumpet players.â He was gently implying, âWe donât really need a player like you in that section.â He might have added explicitly, âPlus, you donât sound that good and you donât practice, so we donât need you at all!â Instead, he handed me a large case that contained a baritone horn. âPractice this and learn how to play it by the fall.â I took the horn home, scoured it clean inside and out, cradled it as if Iâd always played baritone, put the mouthpiece to my lips, and blew.
The note that came out had depth and sounded beautiful, not like the pinched treble blats that had often shot out of my cornet. I honestly knew right then that Iâd found my real voice, though I wouldnât have expressed it that way as a junior high kid: I simply loved the low sound of that horn! Thus began a lifelong love of playing that started in the summer of 1957 and continues today, thanks to Mr. Richman.
Hearing the Changes
There were no school-sponsored jazz bands in New Rochelle. Instead, my father inadvertently gave me the gift of âthe changesâ when he taught himself to play accordion He never played the bass note buttons under the left hand, but only played chords in his right handâthe keyboard side of the accordionâa la Art Van Dam
I know now that he was voicing close-harmony chords with the melody on top. At age 7 or 8, though, I didnât know he wasnât playing the roots of chords. However, for some wonderful reason, I could always hear the un-played roots! Before I fell asleep in my attic room on nights when dad was practicing in the next room, Iâd sing the roots to his good chords for songs such as Thereâs a Small Hotel, I Could Write a Book, Mountain Greenery, Small World, Isnât It?, She is Beautiful, and many others whose names I learned because Iâd get out of bed and go in and ask Dad, âWhat was the name of that last one?â
After I fell asleep, the music continued, and maybe the changes continued to print themselves on my brain, because those chords stuck with me, and the roots I added intuitively became the foundation on which to base my feel for improvisation even before I knew what that was.
Lessons with Miles, Chet, Stan, Oscar, JJ, Bob, Gerry ⦠and Jack Sterling
Jack Sterling? Yes.
During the 1950âs, Jack Sterling was an early morning radio host on WCBS New York. The transmitter tower was on an island in Long Island Sound, just south of New Rochelle, and Sterlingâs show came in clearly on the crystal radio Iâd built as a Cub Scout project.
Every morning, Iâd wake up by six, put on the earphones, and listen to the live studio band on Sterlingâs show. Sterling played drums, and his steady band included, among others, Mary Osborne and her âAll-Girl Guitar.â Guests included Dick Hyman, Barry Galbraith, Tyree Glenn, Al Cohn, Zoot Sims, and many others who were likely on their way home after playing gigs in the New York clubs. That live jazz, first thing in the morning, taught me style and tunes and Iâm grateful that I grew up at a time when Jack Sterlingâs show and radio in general offered such a rich musical education.
And thank goodness for records and the players who became my teachers. Itâs not hyperbole to talk about wearing out the records that I played along with. They included Miles Davisâ Porgy and Bess and Miles Ahead; Chet Baker and Strings; a Gerry Mulligan Quartet album with Bob Brookmeyer on valve trombone; Bob Brookmeyer and Friends, with friends Herbie Hancock, Gary Burton, Ron Carter, and Stan Getz; an Oscar Peterson/Ray Brown trio recording done live in Chicago; a JJ Johnson album on RCA that included âLamentâ; the Atomic Basie album of Neil Hefti arrangements, with Eddie âLockjawâ Davis on tenor. ⦠In old dumps around the world, archeologists of the future may unearth the strata of the 1950s that include my spent records and those of so many other musicians. âWhy did people back then make some records without sound and grooves?â theyâll askâand theyâll come to this archived Web site for the answer!
Music at Middlebury College Opens Ears, Doors
At Middlebury College from 1962-66, I was an English major but a musician at heart. Because the college had no music school, musicians such as Iânow playing sousaphone and valve trombone in addition to the baritoneâhad many playing opportunities. I played and directed the pit bands for musicals, directed the college band, played in a busy college dance band, the Vermont State Symphony, brass groups, odd chamber groups, and in dozens of informal jazz groupings. Iâll never forget the beauty of Hindemithâs Noblissima Visione during my first rehearsal on a Sunday afternoon. There I was in the trombone section with my unorthodox valve trombone, nestled right in the midst of all those musical colors and Hindemithâs angular, lovely harmony and melodies.
Though I lacked formal training in jazz, I had been intuitively able to hear chord changes and roots from an early age. By my sophomore year in college, area musicians hired me for gigs around northern Vermont, and gave him me an on-the-job education in great tunes and improvisation. I had to listen like a fiend because we had no music. The leader would call a tune and a key, and away weâd go. I learned style and nuance from the older players who were patient and encouragingâand good!
But Iâd also been learning consistently from Miles Davis, Chet Baker, J.J. Johnson, Bob Brookmeyer, Oscar Peterson, Gerry Mulligan, and Stan Getz since high school. I truly wore out my records, playing along over and over with these great musicians and the rich context in which they improvised. Their swinging, lyrical playing and my developing jazz voice were the âconstantsâ around which the rest of my life revolved.
Doors Continue to Open
My career as an English teacher in Vermont allowed for hundreds of weekend and summer gigs, plus it gave me a solid base from with to share the gift of jazz with younger players. I have loved âgiving backâ to younger musicians, as director of the South Burlington (VT) High School Jazz Ensemble, interim director of the University of Vermont Jazz Ensemble, as a private teacher/coach to individuals and groups, and nowâfollowing my retirement from public school teaching in 1999âas a combo director for middle and high school players in the FlynnArts program, and as a staff member at Interplay Jazz in Woodstock, and Jazz Camp in Colchester, VT. Iâm a member of the IAJE, an adjudicator for jazz festivals, a clinician, and a member of the team that auditions high school players for the Vermont All State Jazz Ensemble.
A charter member of Vermontâs premier big band, the Vermont Jazz Ensemble, Iâve played the jazz trombone chair since 1976. I play regularly with Pine Street Jazz, a popular sextet that has also has a âstableâ of great jazz singers who perform as âPine Street Jazz and the Singersâ Circle.â As a freelance player, I play on-call with groups around the state, you can hear me as a sideman on many albums, and now on my own premiere CD, âRemember Beauty: George Voland and Friends.â
Jazz is such a gift, to players and listeners. Played well and from the heartâby musicians who really listen to one another and who carry on a musical dialogueâjazz creates instant community on the bandstand. The audience gets pulled in. Theyâre part of itâand the âitâ is a whole thatâs greater than the sum of its parts.
Played this way, jazz can be beautiful and absolutely âreal.â At this time in history, we could do with as much beauty and reality as we can get!
George Volandâs Story: âRiffâ Version
I play valve trombone with happiness and heart because I was given great gifts during my growing up years. Those gifts included: a musical family; the ability to hear roots and changes even before I knew what those things were called; and a wise junior high band director who switched me from cornet to baritone horn.
Without lessons, but with radio and records as my teachers, I played jazz in the privacy and safety of my room. I taught myself piano. I didnât play out while in high school except during my senior year, thanks to an enterprising New Rochelle High School classmate of mine, Keith McClelland, who formed a band to play arrangements heâd taken off records. Alas, I was too shy to solo.
When I got to Middlebury College, another enterprising person, Randy McNamara, asked me to play in his college dance band, which also became the pit orchestra for the Broadway musicals put on by the community theater. As a musician at a college with no music school, I got to play everything from Bach to Stravinsky to Duke Ellington. My jazz improvising couldnât be stopped by my shyness any longer: As a member of Randyâs band, I HAD to play, and my peers liked what I did and told me so.
Vermont jazz players started hiring me to play gigs while I was still in college. They were good musicians and they taught me tunes and the intricacies of improvisation on the band stand. I never had written music for the small combo gigs, but I surely had to have ears when leaders called tunes and a keys. I listened like a fiend and I learned from wonderful players with who lived in a universe of jazz surrounded by cows in rural Vermont.
For more than 40 years, that universe has been peopled by players who have inspired me. For many of those years, music was part-time. I had a great family to help support, and I taught high school English for 33 years because I loved it and teaching did allow me to pay the bills as well. I directed the high school jazz ensemble for many years and, thanks to the example of those who taught me jazz, I have been able to pass on the gift of jazz to many younger players and theyâve been my teachers as well.
I currently consider myself a fulltime jazz musician who happens also to be an innkeeper, a writer, a college teacher, and giver of lessons. With my first album, âRemember Beauty: George Voland and Friends,â the gift of my friend Allen Johnson, Jr., Iâm poised to play as much jazz as comes my way or as much as I can bring my way.
âLife is short,â we often lament. But with so many good tunes to play and good people to play them with and for, itâs not unusual for me to know in my heart of hearts that life isnât short at all. For at any moment on the bandstand, I can find myself in that space where music, played with joy, from the heart, brings meâand listeners, I hopeâto a place that cannot be spoken of, but can certainly be felt as eternally alive and beautiful.
George Volandâs Story: Full Score Version
I Find My Real Voice
I met music thanks especially to my dad, a weekend âclub dateâ musician who played cornet and trumpet in the New York and Connecticut areas from the early 1930âs to the 1980âs. Iâm his namesake and his musical offspring as well.
But I can never hear or play âSophisticated Ladyâ without thinking also of my mom, Margaret, who played it so gently on the piano and who was a talented lyricist and mother. Both my sisters are gifted with musicâDiana as a pianist who could play symphonic selections by ear before she was six, and Elissa, a wonderful acoustic guitarist.
Speaking of Dianaâs early display of talent, I remember âTurkey in the Straw,â a version improvised for a young Diana and me by Graham Forbes, later a pianist for Frank Sinatra, who honored Diâs request during a jam session at the New Rochelle, NY apartment of trumpeter George Stacy. The next day, Diana was playing it by ear, including the Tatum-esque left hand and right hand flourishes.
I owe my chosen instrumental âvoiceâ to my band director at Isaac Young Junior High School (also Bob Mintzerâs director, I found out a few years ago when Bob sat in with a group I was playing with at The Tyler Place, a family resort in Vermont).
Director Harry Richman took me aside at the end of my first year in the junior high band. âGeorge,â he told me, âwe have lots of trumpet players.â He was gently implying, âWe donât really need a player like you in that section.â He might have added explicitly, âPlus, you donât sound that good and you donât practice, so we donât need you at all!â Instead, he handed me a large case that contained a baritone horn. âPractice this and learn how to play it by the fall.â I took the horn home, scoured it clean inside and out, cradled it as if Iâd always played baritone, put the mouthpiece to my lips, and blew.
The note that came out had depth and sounded beautiful, not like the pinched treble blats that had often shot out of my cornet. I honestly knew right then that Iâd found my real voice, though I wouldnât have expressed it that way as a junior high kid: I simply loved the low sound of that horn! Thus began a lifelong love of playing that started in the summer of 1957 and continues today, thanks to Mr. Richman.
Hearing the Changes
There were no school-sponsored jazz bands in New Rochelle. Instead, my father inadvertently gave me the gift of âthe changesâ when he taught himself to play accordion He never played the bass note buttons under the left hand, but only played chords in his right handâthe keyboard side of the accordionâa la Art Van Dam
I know now that he was voicing close-harmony chords with the melody on top. At age 7 or 8, though, I didnât know he wasnât playing the roots of chords. However, for some wonderful reason, I could always hear the un-played roots! Before I fell asleep in my attic room on nights when dad was practicing in the next room, Iâd sing the roots to his good chords for songs such as Thereâs a Small Hotel, I Could Write a Book, Mountain Greenery, Small World, Isnât It?, She is Beautiful, and many others whose names I learned because Iâd get out of bed and go in and ask Dad, âWhat was the name of that last one?â
After I fell asleep, the music continued, and maybe the changes continued to print themselves on my brain, because those chords stuck with me, and the roots I added intuitively became the foundation on which to base my feel for improvisation even before I knew what that was.
Lessons with Miles, Chet, Stan, Oscar, JJ, Bob, Gerry ⦠and Jack Sterling
Jack Sterling? Yes.
During the 1950âs, Jack Sterling was an early morning radio host on WCBS New York. The transmitter tower was on an island in Long Island Sound, just south of New Rochelle, and Sterlingâs show came in clearly on the crystal radio Iâd built as a Cub Scout project.
Every morning, Iâd wake up by six, put on the earphones, and listen to the live studio band on Sterlingâs show. Sterling played drums, and his steady band included, among others, Mary Osborne and her âAll-Girl Guitar.â Guests included Dick Hyman, Barry Galbraith, Tyree Glenn, Al Cohn, Zoot Sims, and many others who were likely on their way home after playing gigs in the New York clubs. That live jazz, first thing in the morning, taught me style and tunes and Iâm grateful that I grew up at a time when Jack Sterlingâs show and radio in general offered such a rich musical education.
And thank goodness for records and the players who became my teachers. Itâs not hyperbole to talk about wearing out the records that I played along with. They included Miles Davisâ Porgy and Bess and Miles Ahead; Chet Baker and Strings; a Gerry Mulligan Quartet album with Bob Brookmeyer on valve trombone; Bob Brookmeyer and Friends, with friends Herbie Hancock, Gary Burton, Ron Carter, and Stan Getz; an Oscar Peterson/Ray Brown trio recording done live in Chicago; a JJ Johnson album on RCA that included âLamentâ; the Atomic Basie album of Neil Hefti arrangements, with Eddie âLockjawâ Davis on tenor. ⦠In old dumps around the world, archeologists of the future may unearth the strata of the 1950s that include my spent records and those of so many other musicians. âWhy did people back then make some records without sound and grooves?â theyâll askâand theyâll come to this archived Web site for the answer!
Music at Middlebury College Opens Ears, Doors
At Middlebury College from 1962-66, I was an English major but a musician at heart. Because the college had no music school, musicians such as Iânow playing sousaphone and valve trombone in addition to the baritoneâhad many playing opportunities. I played and directed the pit bands for musicals, directed the college band, played in a busy college dance band, the Vermont State Symphony, brass groups, odd chamber groups, and in dozens of informal jazz groupings. Iâll never forget the beauty of Hindemithâs Noblissima Visione during my first rehearsal on a Sunday afternoon. There I was in the trombone section with my unorthodox valve trombone, nestled right in the midst of all those musical colors and Hindemithâs angular, lovely harmony and melodies.
Though I lacked formal training in jazz, I had been intuitively able to hear chord changes and roots from an early age. By my sophomore year in college, area musicians hired me for gigs around northern Vermont, and gave him me an on-the-job education in great tunes and improvisation. I had to listen like a fiend because we had no music. The leader would call a tune and a key, and away weâd go. I learned style and nuance from the older players who were patient and encouragingâand good!
But Iâd also been learning consistently from Miles Davis, Chet Baker, J.J. Johnson, Bob Brookmeyer, Oscar Peterson, Gerry Mulligan, and Stan Getz since high school. I truly wore out my records, playing along over and over with these great musicians and the rich context in which they improvised. Their swinging, lyrical playing and my developing jazz voice were the âconstantsâ around which the rest of my life revolved.
Doors Continue to Open
My career as an English teacher in Vermont allowed for hundreds of weekend and summer gigs, plus it gave me a solid base from with to share the gift of jazz with younger players. I have loved âgiving backâ to younger musicians, as director of the South Burlington (VT) High School Jazz Ensemble, interim director of the University of Vermont Jazz Ensemble, as a private teacher/coach to individuals and groups, and nowâfollowing my retirement from public school teaching in 1999âas a combo director for middle and high school players in the FlynnArts program, and as a staff member at Interplay Jazz in Woodstock, and Jazz Camp in Colchester, VT. Iâm a member of the IAJE, an adjudicator for jazz festivals, a clinician, and a member of the team that auditions high school players for the Vermont All State Jazz Ensemble.
A charter member of Vermontâs premier big band, the Vermont Jazz Ensemble, Iâve played the jazz trombone chair since 1976. I play regularly with Pine Street Jazz, a popular sextet that has also has a âstableâ of great jazz singers who perform as âPine Street Jazz and the Singersâ Circle.â As a freelance player, I play on-call with groups around the state, you can hear me as a sideman on many albums, and now on my own premiere CD, âRemember Beauty: George Voland and Friends.â
Jazz is such a gift, to players and listeners. Played well and from the heartâby musicians who really listen to one another and who carry on a musical dialogueâjazz creates instant community on the bandstand. The audience gets pulled in. Theyâre part of itâand the âitâ is a whole thatâs greater than the sum of its parts.
Played this way, jazz can be beautiful and absolutely âreal.â At this time in history, we could do with as much beauty and reality as we can get!
10 MP3 Songs
JAZZ: Mainstream Jazz, JAZZ: Traditional Jazz Combo
Show all album songs: Remember Beauty: George Voland and Friends Songs
Details:
George Volandâs Story
1."Riff Version"
(Note:2."Full Score" Version follows this shorter version)
I play valve trombone with happiness and heart because I was given great gifts during my growing up years. Those gifts included: a musical family; the ability to hear roots and changes even before I knew what those things were called; and a wise junior high band director who switched me from cornet to baritone horn.
Without lessons, but with radio and records as my teachers, I played jazz in the privacy and safety of my room. I taught myself piano. I didnât play out while in high school except during my senior year, thanks to an enterprising New Rochelle High School classmate of mine, Keith McClelland, who formed a band to play arrangements heâd taken off records. Alas, I was too shy to solo.
When I got to Middlebury College, another enterprising person, Randy McNamara, asked me to play in his college dance band, which also became the pit orchestra for the Broadway musicals put on by the community theater. As a musician at a college with no music school, I got to play everything from Bach to Stravinsky to Duke Ellington. My jazz improvising couldnât be stopped by my shyness any longer: As a member of Randyâs band, I HAD to play, and my peers liked what I did and told me so.
Vermont jazz players started hiring me to play gigs while I was still in college. They were good musicians and they taught me tunes and the intricacies of improvisation on the band stand. I never had written music for the small combo gigs, but I surely had to have ears when leaders called tunes and a keys. I listened like a fiend and I learned from wonderful players with who lived in a universe of jazz surrounded by cows in rural Vermont.
For more than 40 years, that universe has been peopled by players who have inspired me. For many of those years, music was part-time. I had a great family to help support, and I taught high school English for 33 years because I loved it and teaching did allow me to pay the bills as well. I directed the high school jazz ensemble for many years and, thanks to the example of those who taught me jazz, I have been able to pass on the gift of jazz to many younger players and theyâve been my teachers as well.
I currently consider myself a fulltime jazz musician who happens also to be an innkeeper, a writer, a college teacher, and giver of lessons. With my first album, âRemember Beauty: George Voland and Friends,â the gift of my friend Allen Johnson, Jr., Iâm poised to play as much jazz as comes my way or as much as I can bring my way.
âLife is short,â we often lament. But with so many good tunes to play and good people to play them with and for, itâs not unusual for me to know in my heart of hearts that life isnât short at all. For at any moment on the bandstand, I can find myself in that space where music, played with joy, from the heart, brings meâand listeners, I hopeâto a place that cannot be spoken of, but can certainly be felt as eternally alive and beautiful.
George Volandâs Story: Full Score Version
I Find My Real Voice
I met music thanks especially to my dad, a weekend âclub dateâ musician who played cornet and trumpet in the New York and Connecticut areas from the early 1930âs to the 1980âs. Iâm his namesake and his musical offspring as well.
But I can never hear or play âSophisticated Ladyâ without thinking also of my mom, Margaret, who played it so gently on the piano and who was a talented lyricist and mother. Both my sisters are gifted with musicâDiana as a pianist who could play symphonic selections by ear before she was six, and Elissa, a wonderful acoustic guitarist.
Speaking of Dianaâs early display of talent, I remember âTurkey in the Straw,â a version improvised for a young Diana and me by Graham Forbes, later a pianist for Frank Sinatra, who honored Diâs request during a jam session at the New Rochelle, NY apartment of trumpeter George Stacy. The next day, Diana was playing it by ear, including the Tatum-esque left hand and right hand flourishes.
I owe my chosen instrumental âvoiceâ to my band director at Isaac Young Junior High School (also Bob Mintzerâs director, I found out a few years ago when Bob sat in with a group I was playing with at The Tyler Place, a family resort in Vermont).
Director Harry Richman took me aside at the end of my first year in the junior high band. âGeorge,â he told me, âwe have lots of trumpet players.â He was gently implying, âWe donât really need a player like you in that section.â He might have added explicitly, âPlus, you donât sound that good and you donât practice, so we donât need you at all!â Instead, he handed me a large case that contained a baritone horn. âPractice this and learn how to play it by the fall.â I took the horn home, scoured it clean inside and out, cradled it as if Iâd always played baritone, put the mouthpiece to my lips, and blew.
The note that came out had depth and sounded beautiful, not like the pinched treble blats that had often shot out of my cornet. I honestly knew right then that Iâd found my real voice, though I wouldnât have expressed it that way as a junior high kid: I simply loved the low sound of that horn! Thus began a lifelong love of playing that started in the summer of 1957 and continues today, thanks to Mr. Richman.
Hearing the Changes
There were no school-sponsored jazz bands in New Rochelle. Instead, my father inadvertently gave me the gift of âthe changesâ when he taught himself to play accordion He never played the bass note buttons under the left hand, but only played chords in his right handâthe keyboard side of the accordionâa la Art Van Dam
I know now that he was voicing close-harmony chords with the melody on top. At age 7 or 8, though, I didnât know he wasnât playing the roots of chords. However, for some wonderful reason, I could always hear the un-played roots! Before I fell asleep in my attic room on nights when dad was practicing in the next room, Iâd sing the roots to his good chords for songs such as Thereâs a Small Hotel, I Could Write a Book, Mountain Greenery, Small World, Isnât It?, She is Beautiful, and many others whose names I learned because Iâd get out of bed and go in and ask Dad, âWhat was the name of that last one?â
After I fell asleep, the music continued, and maybe the changes continued to print themselves on my brain, because those chords stuck with me, and the roots I added intuitively became the foundation on which to base my feel for improvisation even before I knew what that was.
Lessons with Miles, Chet, Stan, Oscar, JJ, Bob, Gerry ⦠and Jack Sterling
Jack Sterling? Yes.
During the 1950âs, Jack Sterling was an early morning radio host on WCBS New York. The transmitter tower was on an island in Long Island Sound, just south of New Rochelle, and Sterlingâs show came in clearly on the crystal radio Iâd built as a Cub Scout project.
Every morning, Iâd wake up by six, put on the earphones, and listen to the live studio band on Sterlingâs show. Sterling played drums, and his steady band included, among others, Mary Osborne and her âAll-Girl Guitar.â Guests included Dick Hyman, Barry Galbraith, Tyree Glenn, Al Cohn, Zoot Sims, and many others who were likely on their way home after playing gigs in the New York clubs. That live jazz, first thing in the morning, taught me style and tunes and Iâm grateful that I grew up at a time when Jack Sterlingâs show and radio in general offered such a rich musical education.
And thank goodness for records and the players who became my teachers. Itâs not hyperbole to talk about wearing out the records that I played along with. They included Miles Davisâ Porgy and Bess and Miles Ahead; Chet Baker and Strings; a Gerry Mulligan Quartet album with Bob Brookmeyer on valve trombone; Bob Brookmeyer and Friends, with friends Herbie Hancock, Gary Burton, Ron Carter, and Stan Getz; an Oscar Peterson/Ray Brown trio recording done live in Chicago; a JJ Johnson album on RCA that included âLamentâ; the Atomic Basie album of Neil Hefti arrangements, with Eddie âLockjawâ Davis on tenor. ⦠In old dumps around the world, archeologists of the future may unearth the strata of the 1950s that include my spent records and those of so many other musicians. âWhy did people back then make some records without sound and grooves?â theyâll askâand theyâll come to this archived Web site for the answer!
Music at Middlebury College Opens Ears, Doors
At Middlebury College from 1962-66, I was an English major but a musician at heart. Because the college had no music school, musicians such as Iânow playing sousaphone and valve trombone in addition to the baritoneâhad many playing opportunities. I played and directed the pit bands for musicals, directed the college band, played in a busy college dance band, the Vermont State Symphony, brass groups, odd chamber groups, and in dozens of informal jazz groupings. Iâll never forget the beauty of Hindemithâs Noblissima Visione during my first rehearsal on a Sunday afternoon. There I was in the trombone section with my unorthodox valve trombone, nestled right in the midst of all those musical colors and Hindemithâs angular, lovely harmony and melodies.
Though I lacked formal training in jazz, I had been intuitively able to hear chord changes and roots from an early age. By my sophomore year in college, area musicians hired me for gigs around northern Vermont, and gave him me an on-the-job education in great tunes and improvisation. I had to listen like a fiend because we had no music. The leader would call a tune and a key, and away weâd go. I learned style and nuance from the older players who were patient and encouragingâand good!
But Iâd also been learning consistently from Miles Davis, Chet Baker, J.J. Johnson, Bob Brookmeyer, Oscar Peterson, Gerry Mulligan, and Stan Getz since high school. I truly wore out my records, playing along over and over with these great musicians and the rich context in which they improvised. Their swinging, lyrical playing and my developing jazz voice were the âconstantsâ around which the rest of my life revolved.
Doors Continue to Open
My career as an English teacher in Vermont allowed for hundreds of weekend and summer gigs, plus it gave me a solid base from with to share the gift of jazz with younger players. I have loved âgiving backâ to younger musicians, as director of the South Burlington (VT) High School Jazz Ensemble, interim director of the University of Vermont Jazz Ensemble, as a private teacher/coach to individuals and groups, and nowâfollowing my retirement from public school teaching in 1999âas a combo director for middle and high school players in the FlynnArts program, and as a staff member at Interplay Jazz in Woodstock, and Jazz Camp in Colchester, VT. Iâm a member of the IAJE, an adjudicator for jazz festivals, a clinician, and a member of the team that auditions high school players for the Vermont All State Jazz Ensemble.
A charter member of Vermontâs premier big band, the Vermont Jazz Ensemble, Iâve played the jazz trombone chair since 1976. I play regularly with Pine Street Jazz, a popular sextet that has also has a âstableâ of great jazz singers who perform as âPine Street Jazz and the Singersâ Circle.â As a freelance player, I play on-call with groups around the state, you can hear me as a sideman on many albums, and now on my own premiere CD, âRemember Beauty: George Voland and Friends.â
Jazz is such a gift, to players and listeners. Played well and from the heartâby musicians who really listen to one another and who carry on a musical dialogueâjazz creates instant community on the bandstand. The audience gets pulled in. Theyâre part of itâand the âitâ is a whole thatâs greater than the sum of its parts.
Played this way, jazz can be beautiful and absolutely âreal.â At this time in history, we could do with as much beauty and reality as we can get!
George Volandâs Story: âRiffâ Version
I play valve trombone with happiness and heart because I was given great gifts during my growing up years. Those gifts included: a musical family; the ability to hear roots and changes even before I knew what those things were called; and a wise junior high band director who switched me from cornet to baritone horn.
Without lessons, but with radio and records as my teachers, I played jazz in the privacy and safety of my room. I taught myself piano. I didnât play out while in high school except during my senior year, thanks to an enterprising New Rochelle High School classmate of mine, Keith McClelland, who formed a band to play arrangements heâd taken off records. Alas, I was too shy to solo.
When I got to Middlebury College, another enterprising person, Randy McNamara, asked me to play in his college dance band, which also became the pit orchestra for the Broadway musicals put on by the community theater. As a musician at a college with no music school, I got to play everything from Bach to Stravinsky to Duke Ellington. My jazz improvising couldnât be stopped by my shyness any longer: As a member of Randyâs band, I HAD to play, and my peers liked what I did and told me so.
Vermont jazz players started hiring me to play gigs while I was still in college. They were good musicians and they taught me tunes and the intricacies of improvisation on the band stand. I never had written music for the small combo gigs, but I surely had to have ears when leaders called tunes and a keys. I listened like a fiend and I learned from wonderful players with who lived in a universe of jazz surrounded by cows in rural Vermont.
For more than 40 years, that universe has been peopled by players who have inspired me. For many of those years, music was part-time. I had a great family to help support, and I taught high school English for 33 years because I loved it and teaching did allow me to pay the bills as well. I directed the high school jazz ensemble for many years and, thanks to the example of those who taught me jazz, I have been able to pass on the gift of jazz to many younger players and theyâve been my teachers as well.
I currently consider myself a fulltime jazz musician who happens also to be an innkeeper, a writer, a college teacher, and giver of lessons. With my first album, âRemember Beauty: George Voland and Friends,â the gift of my friend Allen Johnson, Jr., Iâm poised to play as much jazz as comes my way or as much as I can bring my way.
âLife is short,â we often lament. But with so many good tunes to play and good people to play them with and for, itâs not unusual for me to know in my heart of hearts that life isnât short at all. For at any moment on the bandstand, I can find myself in that space where music, played with joy, from the heart, brings meâand listeners, I hopeâto a place that cannot be spoken of, but can certainly be felt as eternally alive and beautiful.
George Volandâs Story: Full Score Version
I Find My Real Voice
I met music thanks especially to my dad, a weekend âclub dateâ musician who played cornet and trumpet in the New York and Connecticut areas from the early 1930âs to the 1980âs. Iâm his namesake and his musical offspring as well.
But I can never hear or play âSophisticated Ladyâ without thinking also of my mom, Margaret, who played it so gently on the piano and who was a talented lyricist and mother. Both my sisters are gifted with musicâDiana as a pianist who could play symphonic selections by ear before she was six, and Elissa, a wonderful acoustic guitarist.
Speaking of Dianaâs early display of talent, I remember âTurkey in the Straw,â a version improvised for a young Diana and me by Graham Forbes, later a pianist for Frank Sinatra, who honored Diâs request during a jam session at the New Rochelle, NY apartment of trumpeter George Stacy. The next day, Diana was playing it by ear, including the Tatum-esque left hand and right hand flourishes.
I owe my chosen instrumental âvoiceâ to my band director at Isaac Young Junior High School (also Bob Mintzerâs director, I found out a few years ago when Bob sat in with a group I was playing with at The Tyler Place, a family resort in Vermont).
Director Harry Richman took me aside at the end of my first year in the junior high band. âGeorge,â he told me, âwe have lots of trumpet players.â He was gently implying, âWe donât really need a player like you in that section.â He might have added explicitly, âPlus, you donât sound that good and you donât practice, so we donât need you at all!â Instead, he handed me a large case that contained a baritone horn. âPractice this and learn how to play it by the fall.â I took the horn home, scoured it clean inside and out, cradled it as if Iâd always played baritone, put the mouthpiece to my lips, and blew.
The note that came out had depth and sounded beautiful, not like the pinched treble blats that had often shot out of my cornet. I honestly knew right then that Iâd found my real voice, though I wouldnât have expressed it that way as a junior high kid: I simply loved the low sound of that horn! Thus began a lifelong love of playing that started in the summer of 1957 and continues today, thanks to Mr. Richman.
Hearing the Changes
There were no school-sponsored jazz bands in New Rochelle. Instead, my father inadvertently gave me the gift of âthe changesâ when he taught himself to play accordion He never played the bass note buttons under the left hand, but only played chords in his right handâthe keyboard side of the accordionâa la Art Van Dam
I know now that he was voicing close-harmony chords with the melody on top. At age 7 or 8, though, I didnât know he wasnât playing the roots of chords. However, for some wonderful reason, I could always hear the un-played roots! Before I fell asleep in my attic room on nights when dad was practicing in the next room, Iâd sing the roots to his good chords for songs such as Thereâs a Small Hotel, I Could Write a Book, Mountain Greenery, Small World, Isnât It?, She is Beautiful, and many others whose names I learned because Iâd get out of bed and go in and ask Dad, âWhat was the name of that last one?â
After I fell asleep, the music continued, and maybe the changes continued to print themselves on my brain, because those chords stuck with me, and the roots I added intuitively became the foundation on which to base my feel for improvisation even before I knew what that was.
Lessons with Miles, Chet, Stan, Oscar, JJ, Bob, Gerry ⦠and Jack Sterling
Jack Sterling? Yes.
During the 1950âs, Jack Sterling was an early morning radio host on WCBS New York. The transmitter tower was on an island in Long Island Sound, just south of New Rochelle, and Sterlingâs show came in clearly on the crystal radio Iâd built as a Cub Scout project.
Every morning, Iâd wake up by six, put on the earphones, and listen to the live studio band on Sterlingâs show. Sterling played drums, and his steady band included, among others, Mary Osborne and her âAll-Girl Guitar.â Guests included Dick Hyman, Barry Galbraith, Tyree Glenn, Al Cohn, Zoot Sims, and many others who were likely on their way home after playing gigs in the New York clubs. That live jazz, first thing in the morning, taught me style and tunes and Iâm grateful that I grew up at a time when Jack Sterlingâs show and radio in general offered such a rich musical education.
And thank goodness for records and the players who became my teachers. Itâs not hyperbole to talk about wearing out the records that I played along with. They included Miles Davisâ Porgy and Bess and Miles Ahead; Chet Baker and Strings; a Gerry Mulligan Quartet album with Bob Brookmeyer on valve trombone; Bob Brookmeyer and Friends, with friends Herbie Hancock, Gary Burton, Ron Carter, and Stan Getz; an Oscar Peterson/Ray Brown trio recording done live in Chicago; a JJ Johnson album on RCA that included âLamentâ; the Atomic Basie album of Neil Hefti arrangements, with Eddie âLockjawâ Davis on tenor. ⦠In old dumps around the world, archeologists of the future may unearth the strata of the 1950s that include my spent records and those of so many other musicians. âWhy did people back then make some records without sound and grooves?â theyâll askâand theyâll come to this archived Web site for the answer!
Music at Middlebury College Opens Ears, Doors
At Middlebury College from 1962-66, I was an English major but a musician at heart. Because the college had no music school, musicians such as Iânow playing sousaphone and valve trombone in addition to the baritoneâhad many playing opportunities. I played and directed the pit bands for musicals, directed the college band, played in a busy college dance band, the Vermont State Symphony, brass groups, odd chamber groups, and in dozens of informal jazz groupings. Iâll never forget the beauty of Hindemithâs Noblissima Visione during my first rehearsal on a Sunday afternoon. There I was in the trombone section with my unorthodox valve trombone, nestled right in the midst of all those musical colors and Hindemithâs angular, lovely harmony and melodies.
Though I lacked formal training in jazz, I had been intuitively able to hear chord changes and roots from an early age. By my sophomore year in college, area musicians hired me for gigs around northern Vermont, and gave him me an on-the-job education in great tunes and improvisation. I had to listen like a fiend because we had no music. The leader would call a tune and a key, and away weâd go. I learned style and nuance from the older players who were patient and encouragingâand good!
But Iâd also been learning consistently from Miles Davis, Chet Baker, J.J. Johnson, Bob Brookmeyer, Oscar Peterson, Gerry Mulligan, and Stan Getz since high school. I truly wore out my records, playing along over and over with these great musicians and the rich context in which they improvised. Their swinging, lyrical playing and my developing jazz voice were the âconstantsâ around which the rest of my life revolved.
Doors Continue to Open
My career as an English teacher in Vermont allowed for hundreds of weekend and summer gigs, plus it gave me a solid base from with to share the gift of jazz with younger players. I have loved âgiving backâ to younger musicians, as director of the South Burlington (VT) High School Jazz Ensemble, interim director of the University of Vermont Jazz Ensemble, as a private teacher/coach to individuals and groups, and nowâfollowing my retirement from public school teaching in 1999âas a combo director for middle and high school players in the FlynnArts program, and as a staff member at Interplay Jazz in Woodstock, and Jazz Camp in Colchester, VT. Iâm a member of the IAJE, an adjudicator for jazz festivals, a clinician, and a member of the team that auditions high school players for the Vermont All State Jazz Ensemble.
A charter member of Vermontâs premier big band, the Vermont Jazz Ensemble, Iâve played the jazz trombone chair since 1976. I play regularly with Pine Street Jazz, a popular sextet that has also has a âstableâ of great jazz singers who perform as âPine Street Jazz and the Singersâ Circle.â As a freelance player, I play on-call with groups around the state, you can hear me as a sideman on many albums, and now on my own premiere CD, âRemember Beauty: George Voland and Friends.â
Jazz is such a gift, to players and listeners. Played well and from the heartâby musicians who really listen to one another and who carry on a musical dialogueâjazz creates instant community on the bandstand. The audience gets pulled in. Theyâre part of itâand the âitâ is a whole thatâs greater than the sum of its parts.
Played this way, jazz can be beautiful and absolutely âreal.â At this time in history, we could do with as much beauty and reality as we can get!
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User tags: jazz mainstream, jazz traditional combo, mp3 album
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