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Chronology & Bio
1917 - Buddy Rich was
born in Brooklyn NY.
1919 - At the tender
age of 18 months, he was already featured in his parent's Vaudeville act
Wilson &Rich.
1921 - Buddy Rich made
his Broardway debut in Raymond Hitchcock's pinwheel.
1923 - Buddy went with
his parents to Australia where for 18 months, he presented a solo act
-Traps The Drum Wonder
1928 - By the age of
11, Buddy Rich was the second highest paid child star in the world,
after Jackie Coogan, and he toured throughout the United States with his
own showband.
1931 - His parents
retired from Vaudeville and the Rich family settled in Brooklyn where
Buddy soon became a part of the flourishing New York jazz scene of the
1930's.
1938 - Buddy Rich's
jazz career began seriously at the Hickory House in New York, where he
played with Joe Marsala.
1939 - Rich worked
with Bunny Bergian and Artie Shaw.
1939-42 - Featured
with the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra before joining the U.S Marines.
1945-46 - Buddy Rich
rejoined the Dorsey Orchestra and, by then, he was not only the highest
paid sideman in the world but indisputably regarded as the greatest
drummer of his day.
1946 - Buddy Rich
decided to form his own big band with excellent arrangements by writers
like Tadd Dameron and fine soloists like Zoot Sims, Al Kohn, Tony Scott
and Johnny Mandell.
1947 - By this time
the great days of the Big Band era were drawing to a close and Buddy
Rich decided to accept an offer from Norman Granz to join Jazz At The
Philharmonic. Between tours all over the world with JATP, Rich was one
of the leading figures in the New York Jazz scene, where he worked and
recorded with pioneering bop musicians like Charlie Parker, Dizzy
Gillespie, Thelonius Monk , Al Haig, Dexter Gordon, and many other great
jazz players.
1950's - Buddy Rich
worked alternately with the Harry James and Tommy Dorsey Orchestra.
1961 - Back with the
Harry James band and once again the driving force behind this excellent
Orchestra.
1966 - Buddy Rich
decided to take the plunge and form his own big band. He assembled some
of the leading players of the day, like Gene Quill and Pepper Adams.
Over the next few years, the personnel of the Rich Orchestra included
outstanding musicians like Don Menza, Art Pepper, Al Porcine, Pat
LaBarbera and Steve Marcus.
1967 - Jackie Gleason
selected the Buddy Rich Orchestra to feature on his summer TV series.
During the autumn, he toured with Frank Sinatra.
70's - 80's -Buddy
Rich continued lead his big band, except for a brief spell in 1974 when
he formed a small group (featuring Sal Nistico, Sonny Fortune, Joe
romano, Jack Wilkins, Kenny Baron, and John Bunch) at a club he opened
in New York called Buddy's Place.
1987 - Buddy continued
to tour with his big band until his death on April the 2nd 1987.
Brief Biography
Arguably the greatest jazz drummer of all time, the
legendary Buddy Rich exhibited his love for music through the dedication
of his life to the art. His was a career that spanned seven decades,
beginning when Rich was 18 months old and continuing until his death in
1987. Immensely gifted, Rich could play with remarkable speed and
dexterity despite the fact that he never received a formal lesson and
refused to practice outside of his performances.
Born Bernard Rich to vaudevillians Robert and Bess Rich on September 30,
1917, the famed drummer was introduced to audiences at a very young age.
By 1921, he was a seasoned solo performer with his vaudeville act,
“Traps the Drum Wonder.” With his natural sense of rhythm, Rich
performed regularly on Broadway at the age of four. At the peak of
Rich's early career, he was the second-highest paid child entertainer in
the world.
Rich's jazz career began in 1937 when he began playing with Joe Marsala
at New York's Hickory House. By 1939, he had joined Tommy Dorsey's band,
and he later went on to play with such jazz greats as Dizzy Gillespie,
Charlie Ventura, Louis Armstrong and Gene Krupa. Rich was regularly
featured in Jazz at the Philharmonic during the late 1940s. He also
appeared in such Hollywood films as Symphony of Swing (1939), Ship Ahoy
(1942) and How's About It (1943).
Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, Rich toured with his own bands and
opened two nightclubs, Buddy's Place and Buddy's Place II. Both clubs
were regularly filled to capacity by fans of the great master drummer.
After opening Buddy's Place II, Rich introduced new tunes with elements
of rock into his repertoire, demonstrating his ability to adapt to his
audience's changing tastes and establishing himself as a great rock
drummer.
Known for his caustic humor, Rich was a favorite on several television
talk shows including the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, the
Mike Douglas Show, the Dick Cavett Show and the Merv Griffin Show.
During these appearances, audiences were entertained by Rich's constant
sparring with the hosts and his slights of various pop singers.
This famed musician received outstanding recognition throughout his
career. The Downbeat Magazine Hall of Fame Award, the Modern Drummer
Magazine Hall of Fame Award and the Jazz Unlimited Immortals of Jazz
Award are just a few of his numerous honors. Rich gained international
attention for such master compositions as his 10-minute West Side Story
medley. During his lengthy career, Rich toured around the globe,
performing for millions of fans and several world leaders including the
King of Thailand, King Hussein of Jordan the Queen of England, and U.S.
presidents Franklin Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy and Ronald Reagan.
On April 2, 1987, Rich died of heart failure following surgery for a
malignant brain tumor. Longtime friend, Frank Sinatra, spoke a touching
eulogy at Rich's funeral. Today, Buddy Rich is remembered as one of
history's greatest musicians. According to jazz legend
Gene Krupa, Rich
was “The greatest drummer ever to have drawn breath.”
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Artist's Buddy Performed With
Louis Armstrong
Count Basie
Dorsey Brothers
Tommy Dorsey
Frank Sinatra
Roy Eldridge
Duke Ellington
Bunny Berigan
Norman Granz
Herb Ellis
Flip Phillips
Bill Reddie
Don Piestrup
Gus Kahn
Oliver Nelson
Irving Berlin
Benny Carter
Nat King Cole
Miles Davis
Ella Fitzgerald
Helen Forrest
Stan Getz
Dizzy Gillespie
Benny Goodman
Dusty Springfield
Max Roach
peppe merolla
Maynard Ferguson

Buddy Rich with Don Osborne and Gene Krupa.

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