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Multi-reed
musician who started out playing the saxophone and then moved on to the
clarinet. In his long and
extremely busy recording career, he played virtually all of the woodwind instruments,
making him invaluable as a session musician.
He joined the
musicians’ union Local 802 in 1938. After receiving some formal training
at New York University, he started playing professionally in The Big Apple
in the 1940s. In the 1950s, he added
the flute and oboe to his repertoire and hooked up with Benny
Goodman’s jazz combo, sometimes sitting in for him at The Rainbow
Room.
Some of his
earliest recordings were a pair of 78s by Tony Bennett with Percy Faith and
His Orchestra in 1955. Right
away, he showed his versatility, performing alto sax, clarinet and tenor
sax on “Afraid of the Dark” backed with “Come Next
Spring” and clarinet and tenor sax on “How Can I Replace
You?” backed with “(Come Back and) Tell Me That You Love
Me”. In 1958, he appeared
on the Miles Davis/Gil Evans collaboration Porgy and Bess, Billie Holiday’s Lady in Satin, and Cootie
Williams in Hi-Fi. He was also a member of The
Metropolitan Jazz Quartet, which released five LPs on the MGM label.
Phil was
highly prolific on RCA’s Living Jazz and Enoch Light’s Command
recordings. He recorded ten
albums in 1960 alone. In 1962,
he played bass clarinet and flute on Jackie Paris’s self-titled LP, The Song is Paris.
Around this
time, Phil started putting together a group called The Brass Ring, modeled
after Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass, but with more emphasis on reed
instruments. In fact, one of
Phil’s compositions, “The Now Sound”, from the 1967 album
of the same name, has become a catch-phrase for easy listening 1960s music,
which frequently featured jazz musicians covering pop-rock songs in an
effort to make them more palatable for a generation largely weaned on
jazz.
In 1965, The
Brass Ring scored a #1 hit with their version of “Love Theme from The
Flight of the Phoenix”.
Another one of their recordings, “The Disadvantages of
You” was scooped up by advertisers for a Benson & Hedges
campaign. Around this time, a
whiskey-maker, Black and White, ponied up the
money for a promo featuring Phil essentially comprising his own woodwind
section.
The Brass Ring
continued to churn out albums throughout the mid-to-late ‘60s,
including The Best of Dunhill, The Dis-Advantages
of You, Gazpacho, Lara’s Theme, Love Theme from The Flight of the
Phoenix, The Now Sound of The
Brass Ring, Only Love, and Sunday Night at the Movies.
Phil appeared
on the equally popcorn-flavored album, The
Best of Movie Themes 1970, with Enoch Light and the Light Brigade: Again, Phil was a one-man wind
brigade, multi-tasking on alto sax, clarinet, English horn, and flute. In 1971, he appeared on the George
Benson album, White Rabbit, and
the soundtrack of The Landlord. He followed this up with another
Brass Ring project, Project 3,
specifically, which hit the shelves in 1972. In 1973, he performed on the Donny
Hathaway album, Extension of a Man. He then reunited with George Benson
on Bad Benson and Bill Evans on Symbiosis, both released in
1974. In 1975, he appeared on
self-titled albums by The Brass Ring, The Manhattan Transfer, and Oscar
Peterson, as well as performing on Janis Ian’s Between the Lines and Grover Washington, Jr.’s
Mister Magic. He then hooked up for a pair of Van
McCoy albums, The Real McCoy and Rhythms of the World, both released
in 1976. In 1978, he appeared
on Chaka Khan’s self-titled album, Carly
Simon’s Boys in the Trees,
and the soundtrack of The Wiz. He was one of many musicians on
Frank Sinatra’s Trilogy and
Sesame Disco!, which were both unveiled in
1979.
In 1980,
Phil’s own moniker emblazoned a pair of albums, Fine and Dandy and New
York Jam, he celebrated the Yuletide with Meco on Christmas in the Stars:
Star Wars Christmas Album, and performed on the soundtrack of Fame.
As the studio
scene of the ‘70s faded into memory, Phil concentrated more of his
attention on the New York Club scene, gigging with George Duvivier, Mel Lewis, and Marty Napoleon.
He continued
recording intermittently, especially on movie soundtracks such as Alan and Naomi, Brighton Beach Memoirs, Bullets
Over Broadway, The Glass Menagerie,
and Mo’ Better Blues. Phil even has a credit on a Talking
Heads album, 1988’s Naked.
In 1990, he
released Jammin’ at Phil’s Place. He has been immortalized in CD form
on latter-day re-packagings, including
2004’s The Genius of Phil Bodner and The
Clarinet Virtuosity of Phil Bodner: Once More with Feeling!, which was
released the year before his death.
Other albums on which he appears include The Girl from Ipanema and other Hits,
Wes Montgomery Plays for Lovers, Billy Taylor with Four Flutes, and Phoebe Tyler Regrets… Ruth Warrick
Sings (and Tells).
Van McCoy recordings
The Shuffle (Van McCoy)
That’s the Joint (Richard Harris/Van McCoy)
Sources:
- http://www.spaceagepop.com/bodner.htm
- http://test.woodwind.org/clarinet/BBoard/read.html?f=1&i=209763&t=209287
- http://www.local802afm.org/publication_entry.cfm?xEntry=55806024
- http://www.network54.com
- http://www.artsjournal.com/rifftides/2008/03/dennis_irwin_phil_bodner_gone.html
- http://www.deepdiscount.com/Lady-in-Satin--Remaster--Jazz-Vocal_stcVVproductId7615397VVcatId465461VVviewprod.htm
- http://www.jazdiskat.co.uk/60.htm
- http://www.jackieparis.com/discography.htm
- http://mailman.xmission.com/lurker/message/20080229.183511.80cd6016.ja.html
- http://www.vinyltap.co.uk
- http://ronkanefiles.blogspot.com/2007/09/phil-bodner-brass-ring.html
- http://www.317x.com/albums/l/enochlight/card.html
- http://www.musicstack.com/album/brass+ring/featuring+phil+bodner
- http://www.artistdirect.com/nad/store/artist/album/0,,163516,00.html
- http://www.vinyl-renaissance.com/servlet/the-4901/Phil-Bodner-Fine-&/Detail
- http://mobile.artistdirect.com/mobile/music/artist/bio/0,,405775,00.html
- http://books.google.com/books
- http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0091031/
- http://masterdigital.com/examples/data/rw2482-093.htm
- http://www.cduniverse.com/search/xx/music/artist/Bodner,%20Phil/a/Phil%20Bodner.htm
- http://www.audiolunchbox.com/album?a=103029
- http://www.shoddity.com/?p=14
- http://movies.nytimes.com/person/630011/Phil-Bodner
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