Written by Jim Eigo:
jim@jazzpromoservices.com
Hal Gaylor
to receive
The First Annual Lifetime Achievement Award
presented by
Hudson Valley Jazz Festival
Sunday Aug. 19th 7PM
at The Lycian Theatre in Sugarloaf, NY
Hal Gaylor, an accomplished bass player, and local
resident will receive the first annual Lifetime Achievement Award presented by The
Hudson Valley Jazz Festival. Hal has been living with hearing loss after a wonderful
career in jazz. He evolved as an artist who's work has been shown locally.
The ceremony will take place Sunday Aug. 19 at The Lycian Theatre in Sugar Loaf
between jazz festival performances. The evening begins at 7 PM with The Andy Ezrin
Group featuring drummer Adam Nussbaum. Andy, is keyboardist for Chris Botti.
After their set will be The Rick Savage Group featuring Don Braden and drumming
legend Eliot Zigmund.
About Hal Gaylor
Long considered one of the finest bass players in jazz, Hal Gaylor is also a
painter, architect, and licensed hypnotherapist. He has worked with performers as
disparate as Tony Bennett and Ornette Coleman.? His father and grandfather were
both violinists, and Hal -- born Harold Walden Gaylor in Montreal, Canada, on July
9, 1929 -- began to play clarinet at the age of nine. At first he taught himself,
with help from his father on music theory. He gained his first practical playing
experience with his high school band. The school was Montreal High, and fellow students
included Oscar Peterson and Maynard Ferguson.? In 1948, his father suffered a heart
attack and asked Hal to sub for him on bass. Hal had limited knowledge of the instrument,
but he got through the job without complaint from the other musicians. But his interest
in the bass had become whetted.? He left school for two years to work as an airline
mechanic, then enrolled at McGill University, where he studied art and music, including
clarinet under Andre Moretti. He was asked to play bass in the school orchestra
and henceforth concentrated on that instrument.? During that period, Montreal was
a thriving Mecca of music and entertainment and when such performers as Tony Bennett,
Frank Sinatra, Peggy Lee, Vic Damone, and Edith Piaf came to town, Hal was the bassist
of choice for their engagements. In 1953, he joined pianist Maury Kaye for the opening
of the El Morocco, a supper club with a first rate show band backing the best acts
of the time. He was a part of the Canadian All Stars, a quintet made up of winners
of a jazz poll conducted by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Besides Gaylor,
the group included Al Baculis on clarinet, Gordie Fleming on accordion, Yvan Landry
on piano and Billy Graham on drums.? Another of Hal's associates was pianist Paul
Bley, and when Bley invited Charlie Parker to play a concert in Montreal, Hal was
a bassist on the engagement. Tapes of that performance became CD titledCharlie Parker
Montreal 1953.? In 1955, Hal married dancer Evelyn Benz of New York. In 1956, they
moved to New York City. While living and working in NYC, Hal worked with Paul Bley
in a trio that included Lennie McBrown on drums. They toured the Midwest in a series
of concerts ending up in Los Angeles. There Hal met and worked with pianist Walter
Norris and Billy Higgins in a trio. This group was frequently augmented by saxophonist
Ornette Coleman and trumpeter Don Cherry.
In 1957, Gaylor replaced bassist Red Mitchell in the Chico Hamilton Quintet. He
toured and recorded with Hamilton until 1960. During his tenure with that group,
he also recorded two albums for Decca Records with guitarists John Pisano and Billy
Bean.
Then Hal returned to New York, where he played in the Clark Terry big band and quartet,
the Billy May band, saxophonist Stan Getz, Pianist Bill Evans, and Kai Winding's
Trombone Panorama, among others. When Walter Norris moved to new York, he, Gaylor
and guitarist Billy Bean formed a group called simply The Trio. Although they worked
infrequently and recorded only one album, that album -- on Riverside -- has a cult
status as a classic. All three musicians and their families lived together in a
log house on Greenwood Lake, NY, about fifty miles north of New York City. Meanwhile,
Hal was taking gigs on the road with Lena Horne, Mel Torme, Anita O'Day, and Dick
Haymes.
In 1961, Hal joined Ralph Sharon and Billy Exiner in the rhythm section that played
for Tony Bennett. This was to prove to be one of the most rewarding, and exciting,
periods of his career, in part because of his respect for Bennett as an artist and
musician, and in part because they worked with great bands, including those of Duke
Ellington, Count Basie, and Woody Herman. The trio worked extensively with Bennett,
including one album in which they were the singer's only backing.
After six years on the road, with long periods away from his wife and family, Hal
left to pursue work in the studios and clubs in the New York area. He added electric
bass to his musical skills, and played in fusion groups with Jeremy Steig, Mike
Mainieri, Donald McDonald ands Joe Beck. ?In 1971 he toured Europe with the Benny
Goodman Septet. The group is heard on a live recording made in Copenhagen on the
London label.
In 1972, Hal contracted a virus that had one devastating after-effect: it destroyed
the hearing in his right ear. Unable to hear the full spectrum of sound, he decided
that music was no longer a practical career. Always a practicing architect, He designed
and built his home atop amountainat Greenwood Lake. his father-in-law, Frank Benz,
owned a small resort hotel called the Linden House. After it burned down, Hal designed
and built a new one that included a small theater. For several seasons it presented
Broadway shows under the direction of James Sisco.
For the past several years Hal has begun to utilize his artistic talents in drafting
and architecture to develop his drawing and painting abilities. His love of jazz
and the musicians he has played with inspired him to create the portraits you see
here.
Opening Day ~ Thursday August 16
3:30 – 5 John Ehlis- Sponsored by "Music in The Courtyard"- Railroad Ave. Warwick
5:30 - 6:30 David Crone Group - Sponsored by "Music in The Courtyard"- Railroad
Ave. Warwick
7:00 - 9 The New York Swing Exchange- Sponsored by The Village of Warwick Concert
Series- Village Green- Warwick
9:30 to midnight- The Skye Jazz Quintet- Sponsored by "Music in The Courtyard"-
Railroad Ave. Warwick
Friday August 17
8 PM - The Chris Persad Group at The Dautaj- 36 Oakland Ave. Warwick
10:30 - Special late night show at Eddie's Roadhouse 13 Main St. Warwick
Saturday August 18
1 PM The String Trio of NY- The Albert Wisner Library
"This performance is funded, in part, by Orange County Tourism and the County of
Orange. It is also made possible with public funds from the New York State Council
on the arts, celebrating 50 years of building strong, creative communities in New
York State's 62 counties."
2 PM- The Tuscan Cafe 3 South St Warwick. - Bob Rosen speaks on "Why Ellington Matters"
4 PM "The Gabriele Tranchina Quintet" with 2011 Grammy nominee Bobby Sanabria on
drums and Joe Vincent Tranchina on piano.
Warwick Grove. 12 Cropsey Ave. Warwick
7:00 The Jeff Ciampa / Mark Egan / Bill Evans / Richie Morales on the Village Green,
presented by The Village of Warwick Concert Series.
9:30 -11:30- Viviano's Restaurant presents a very special jazz trio -100 Main St.
Warwick
Sunday August 19
11 AM Jazz Brunch at The Iron Forge Inn- Iron Forge Rd. Warwick- Bossa Jazz Trio
1:00 Gustavo Calle and Le Cardieu-
3:30 Michael Purcell
Presented by "The Music in The Courtyard Series"
Railroad Ave.
7 PM- The Rick Savage Group with Eliot Zigmund on drums and Don Braden on saxophone.
8 PM- Award ceremony
9:30 2nd show The Andy Ezrin Group with Adam Nussbaum & special guests
The Lycian Center For Performing Arts-Sugar Loaf, NY,
Special food catering by Healthy Thymes Market -Vernon NJ for the Lycian Theatre
shows
Additional info: warwickjazz@yahoo.com
Watch The New Video About The Hudson Valley Jazz Festival
Here
http://www.hudsonvalleyjazzfest.org
|