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Violinist from
Chicago, Illinois, who played fiddle on the vaudeville circuit with his
mother and sister in the 1930s and went on to attend Chicago Musical
College on a scholarship. Exaggerating
his age of sixteen, he applied for membership in a local union of musicians
and started his own band, which played the club circuit.
Uncle Sam came calling during World War II, and Bobby enlisted in
the U.S. Marines. His tour of
duty included stops in Guam, Iwo Jima, and Saipan. He was involved in most of the
action in the Pacific Islands, and soon the legendary exploits of the
fiddle-wielding fighter resounded in the top eschelons
of the military, and he found himself arranging and directing music for a
stage show in Guam.
Once the war
was over, Bobby joined Luke Wills and His Rhythm Busters, playing dances in
the San Joaquin Valley and performing on a regular radio program. He stayed with them for about a year
until Leon McAuliffe drafted him into his band in Tulsa, Oklahoma. His experience as an arranger in the
military came in handy, as Leon utilized him as his principal arranger for
five years, which was a challenge, considering few of the musicians could
read a lick of music. Fortunately,
most of them had an elephant’s memory when it came to hearing and
remembering notes. They enjoyed
a brief tenure on one of television’s early programs, The Helen Alvirez
Show.
After his
five-year stint with Leon’s band, Bobby moved back to California,
where he was hired by none other than Bob Wills, whose Texas Playboys band
he played for about half a year.
Around this time, he also found work on the radio with Jimmy Wakely, who had his own weekly program on CBS. He switched to television shortly thereafter,
as concertmaster on The Oran Tucker
Show, which aired on KTLA, and as arranger for Country America, which featured all the big country and western
musicians of the day.
In fact,
television would be a very big part of Bobby’s career and life for
years to come: Some of the
programs he has worked on include The
Barbara Mandrell Show, Bewitched, Green Acres,
Highway to Heaven, The Lawrence Welk
Show, Little House on the Prairie,
Paradise, The Ray Anthony Show, and Roseanne. He is also credited with coming up
with a lot of the sound effects used on those old Hanna-Barbera
cartoon shows.
His early
success in TV led to work in movies such as Funny Girl, Jeremiah
Johnson, Oklahoma Crude, and The Sting. (He played the violin solo on Marvin
Hamlisch’s arrangement of “Little
Girl”, written by Scott Joplin.)
In the mid-to-late ‘70s, he hooked up with Quincy Jones for
the mini-series Roots, dubbing
Lou Gossett’s fiddle playing and even penning part of the score.
Bobby’s
studio work did not end in film and television, however. In the late ‘50s, he was in
the studio with Chet Atkins for sessions that were later compiled on Mr. Guitar: The Complete Recordings 1955-1960. Between 1958 and 1969, he worked
with Phil Spector on recordings that eventually
wound up the album, Back to Mono. At the end of this period, he found
himself working on Working!, by Bobby
Jameson, as a member of the string section. In 1979, he appeared on Frank
Sinatra’s boxed set, Trilogy,
on which he is credited with playing the violin and the balloon!
Other artists
with whom he has worked include Susie Allanson,
Bob Desena, Lowell George, Corky Hale, Jim Horn,
Willie Nelson, Dolly Parton, Bob Seger, Al
Stewart, Mel Torme, and Ian Whitcomb, whose style
suits the early vaudeville experience culled all those years ago, on albums
such as The Golden Age of Lounge. It is hard to believe Bobby has
found time to keep performing live, but he has kept his chops active with
the likes of Noel Boggs, Barney Kessel, Joaquin Murphy, Herb Remington,
Paul Smith, and Jimmy Wyble.
He has also
been active with Tommy Allsup in the Cowboy
Symposium, which holds court in Rudioso, New
Mexico, and the Valley Villagers.
Sources:
- http://theband.hiof.no/albums/working.html
- http://www.answers.com/topic/trilogy-vocal-music-album
- http://www.bobdesena.com/linernotes1.html
- http://www.valleyvillagers.com/about2.html
- http://artist.ebay.com/Paul-Jackson-Jr_music_W0QQcZ1382716559QQpgZ9
- http://www.albumlinernotes.com/Phil_s_Musicians.html
- http://www.alstewart.com/discography/btw.htm
- http://books.google.com
- http://www.artistdirect.com/nad/music/artist/credits/0,,409096,00.html
- http://www.soundtrackcollector.com/catalog/soundtrackdetail.php?movieid=2525
- http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&ie=UTF-8&rlz=1T4GWYE_en___US230&q=Roots
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