Al Gallodoro

Al Gallodoro
Birth name Alfred J. Gallodoro
Born (1913-06-20)June 20, 1913
Origin Chicago, Illinois, United States
Died October 4, 2008(2008-10-04) (aged 95)
Oneonta, New York, United States
Genres Jazz
Occupation(s) Musician
Instruments alto saxophone, clarinet, bass clarinet
Years active 1920's–2008
Labels Golden Rooster, Basta, Chmusic Productions
Associated acts the Paul Whiteman orchestra
Website http://www.algallodoro.com/

Alfred J. Gallodoro, (June 20, 1913 October 4, 2008) was an American jazz clarinetist and saxophonist, who performed from the 1920s up until his death. He is notable for having played lead alto sax with the Paul Whiteman Orchestra and bass clarinet for 12 years with the NBC Symphony Orchestra under Arturo Toscanini. Bandleader Jimmy Dorsey praised him as "the best sax player who ever lived."[1]

Early Years

Gallodoro was born to a Chicago steelworker, but moved with his family to Birmingham, Alabama when he was five years old. About the same time his father began teaching him clarinet on the "Albert Method". Devoting himself to practice, Gallodoro earned a spot with Romeo and His Juliets and made his first stage appearance at Birmingham's Lyric Theatre in 1926. The next summer he toured the Gulf Coast with Birmingham banjo player George Evans and decided to settle in New Orleans, Louisiana, where his family joined him.

After six years of playing nightclubs, speakeasies and vaudeville shows at the Orpheum Theater, Gallodoro moved to New York City and worked in radio bands. In 1933 he briefly joined Isham Jones' big band, making one record session with it. In 1936 he was hired to play lead alto saxophone in Paul Whiteman's orchestra, among the most popular performing groups of the era. After that group disbanded in 1940 he was hired to play bass clarinet in the NBC Symphony Orchestra under Arturo Toscanini. Among his credits is the famed opening clarinet glissando from the 1945 Warner Brothers film Rhapsody in Blue. He claimed to have performed that particular piece over 10,000 times in his career, more than any other person.[2]

Radio and Television

In 1947 Gallodoro's former bandleader invited him to join him as a live performer on New York's WJZ radio station. Gallodoro contributed countless saxophone solos to that station's programs over two decades and continued to do live radio work throughout his life. Known for effortlessly transitioning from classical to jazz idioms and for a clean and virtuosic style, Gallodoro was much in demand as a session recording artist. Composer Ferde Grofé tailored his Gallodoro’s Serenade for Saxophone and Piano for him in 1958, which he recorded in 2004 (Grofe and Gershwin: Symphonic Jazz). He performed on screen as a street musician in the 1974 film The Godfather, Part II.

Teaching career

In 1981 Gallodoro moved to Oneonta, New York and began working as an instructor at Hartwick College.[3] His wife, Mary died in Oneonta in 1985. He continued to perform and record, often with pianist, manager and friend JoAnn Chmielowski. He issued several CDs of new and old recordings on his own Golden Rooster Records with the help of his producer and grandson, Kevin Wood. His final performance was on September 20, 2008 at the Corning Jazz and Harvest Festival in Corning, New York.

Discography

References

  1. Chambers, J. (October 2, 2008) "Jazz legend with Birmingham roots releases CD recorded here in 1969." Birmingham Weekly
  2. Alfred J. Gallodoro obituary. (October 7, 2008) (Oneonta, New York) The Daily Star.
  3. Gallodoro profile at www.hartwick.edu

External links

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