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He is a horn
player and teacher born in Kansas City, Missouri into a family where his father was a
clarinettist and his mother was a singer.
He started
studying the horn when he was ten years old and when he as twelve he moved
with his family to Los Angeles. He then studied which
his uncle, Vincent Retubertis and gave several
performances.
When he was fiftenn he ventured into his career as a musician and
substituted at the San Carlo Opera Company after his father, who had
performed there, passed away.
He then started working professionally at 20th Century
Fox Studios when he was seventeen as a member of their horn section.
During WWII he
enlisted in the military and became a musician with the radio production
unit of the California Air Army Corps.
He was first discharged in 1943 but was recalled and continued
serving until 1945.
After he
returned to civilian life he forged on with his career on a freelance basis
and as a successful and first-call studio brass musician, becoming one of
the most recorded over his long-running career which spans an amazing eight
decades. In fact, he was the
first horn of most of the recordings he made in Hollywood for four of those decades.
He also
started working in the field of musical education in the 1950s when he
taught students at the Los Angeles Conservatory of Music. From 1974 he was a teacher at the University of Southern California and taught there for 31 years until he
retired from there in 2005. In
2003 the Vince DeRosa Scholarship Fund was
established.
This career
has seen him working with an enormous amount of artists with just a few of
them including The Abnuceals Emuukha
Electric Symphony Orchetra, of which he as a
member, American Jazz Philharmonic, Julie Andrews, Hoyt Axton, Ann-Margret, The Beatles, Tony Bennett, Elmer Bernstein, The
Blackbyrds, Pat Boone, Stanley Clarke, Rosemary
Clooney, Nat King Cole, Sammy Davis Jr., Judith
Durham, Billy Eckstine, Duane Eddy, The Emotions,
Ella Fitzgerald, Dan Fogelberg, Judy Garland, Jascha Heifetz, Phyllis
Hyman, Harry James, Tommy James, Michael Kamen, Stan
Kenton, Frankie Laine, Peggy Lee, Los Angeles
Philharmonic Orchestra Chuck Mangione, Dean
Martin, Billy May, Carmen McRae, Alfred Newman, Harry Nilsson, Oscar
Peterson, Mike Post, Louis Prima, Minnie Riperton,
Tex Ritter, Miklos Rozsa,
Arturo Sandoval, Lalo Schifrin, Doc Severinsen, Artie Shaw, Horace Silver, Mel Torme, Stanley Turrentine, John
Williams, Lenny Williams, Nancy Wilson and Frank Zappa.
His album
output is massive so just a very small selection of them includes Mr. Guitar: The Complete Recordings 1955-1960
by Chet Atkins, Unforgettable: With
Love by Natalie Cole, Hard Times for
Lovers by Judy Collins, Rita
Coolidge by Rita Coolidge, Bing!
His Legendary Years, 1931 to 1951 by Bing Crosby, Dingo by Miles Davis, Move
Over Darling by Doris Day, Evening
with John Denver by John Denver, September
Morn by Neil Diamond, Faces
by Earth, Wind & Fire, Heartaches
and Harmonies by The Everly Brothers, Sings the Rodgers and Hart Song Book
by Ella Fitzgerald, Now Voyager
by Barry Gibb, Koo Koo by
Debbie Harry, Q: The Musical
Biography of Quincy Jones by Quincy Jones, The Blues and the Beat by Henry Mancini, That’s What Friends are For by Johnny Mathis and Deniece Williams, Headquarters
by The Monkees, Four Platters and One Lovely Dish by The Platters, Best of the Capitol Years by
Nelson Riddle, Silk Degrees by Boz Scaggs, Voice of Frank Sinatra by Frank
Sinatra, Black Rose by J.D. Souther, With
Michel Legrand by Sarah Vaughan and Just For You by Barry White.
Featuring on literally
thousands of movie soundtracks he can be heard on films such as Ben-Hur, Breakfast at Tiffany’s, Caddyshack, Close
Encounters of the Third Kind, The Enforcer, E.T., How the West Was Won, Indiana
Jones and the Lat Crusade, Jaws, Love at First Bite, The Magnificent Seven,
Mary Poppins, The Music Man, My Fair Lady, Oklahoma,
Robin Hood, Rocky, The Sound of
Music. Sudden Impact and Three
Musketeers. He also
performed on music for television shows that include Batman, Bonanza, Dallas,
Hawaii
Five-O, The Rockford
Files, The Simpsons and Star
Trek. He is also slated to
appear in the 2012 production called 1M1:
Hollywood
Horns of the Golden Years.
After a long
and hugely successful career, he was made an Honorary Member of the
International Horn Society in 2004 before officially retiring in 2008.
The author
Todd Miller has written a very detailed book on Vincent’s life and
career entitled Carved in Stone.
Johnny Mathis & Deniece
Williams recordings
Emotion (Barry Gibb/Robin Gibb)
S CBS 6164B (UK 45)
Sources:
- http://www.hornsociety.org/ihs-people/honoraries/78-vincent-derosa
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vincent_DeRosa
- http://www.united-mutations.com/d/vincent_de_rosa.htm
- http://www.moviebrass.com/intro/Musicians/horn_players/vince_de_rosa.html
- http://www.imdb.com/name/nm4673285/
- http://www.discogs.com/artist/Vincent+DeRosa
- http://www.allmusic.com/artist/vincent-derosa-p141261/credits
- http://www.allmusic.com/artist/vincent-derosa-p141261/credits/date-asc/100
- http://www.allmusic.com/artist/vincent-derosa-p141261/credits/date-asc/200
- http://www.allmusic.com/artist/vincent-derosa-p141261/credits/date-asc/300
- http://www.allmusic.com/artist/vincent-derosa-p141261/credits/date-asc/400
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