Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

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dershem
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by dershem »

Mine was Dean "Sandy" Weishaupt. Former navy band player and instructor. He was Bill Watrous' teacher at the navy music school, and had the same beautiful tone, and the ideas just flowed like water. Same wicked sense of humor, too.
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Savio
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by Savio »

Mine was just a few, George Roberts, Philip Jones Brass ensemble, Chicago brass section. Today there is so many heroes, I cant pick out one. So many good players to listen, even many we never hear about. Many young ones, so many great women players. The world changes all the time. As I get older I listen more and more singers, and another instruments. Cello, violins, viola. Just to listen how they express them self and get some ideas. Played in a strange ensemble today where I was close to a viola player. She had a great sound and musically easy to be with.

But trombone heroes we grow up with will always be there.

Leif
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by Chatname »

Michel Becquet.
Slidehamilton
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by Slidehamilton »

So far no one has mentioned one of my all time favorites. He was a big influence on me and I listened to him play a lot on the Basie band, and of course that is the late great Al Grey! I got to hear him play live with the Basie band as well. No one ever sounded like him!
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LeTromboniste
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by LeTromboniste »

As a teenager it was Lindberg, Alain Trudel and Jörgen van Rijen and locals Dave Martin (who I went on to study with) and Pierre Beaudry. Jörgen's sackbut CD inspired me to try the sackbut during my undergrad. From there it was my teacher Catherine Motuz, Simen van Mechelen and Adam Woolf.
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JohntheTheologian
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by JohntheTheologian »

Although my sound concept is nothing like how he plays, the late Bill Pearce was my trombone hero growing up in suburban Chicago in the 1960s. I heard him live several times, including here in Iowa where we moved to when he was close to retirement on the trombone.

He could do amazing things with the trombone. It didn't hurt that most of his playing was in the sacred music genre which is something I'm very interested in. Doug Yeo has also done some very nice work in that area and we often listen to one of his CDs in particular on the way to church on Sunday morning.

Dan Barrett is also someone that I really have admired for his playing in the many small group swing era style jazz groups that he recorded. He has a tone that I aspire to on small bore.
sf105
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by sf105 »

Two more I haven't seen mentioned yet, both very much individuals:
Dickie Wells
Jimmy Knepper.
Macbone1
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by Macbone1 »

Another vote for Bill Watrous. My high school band director played a side of Manhattan Wildlife Refuge for me when I was about sixteen. Of course the album is almost all big band "fusion" (not a fan) but the impact of that technique on me was hard to overestimate.

A couple of years after that friend in college played me a record of the first Tommy Dorsey I had ever heard, also a strong influence.
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timbone
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by timbone »

In no order- Bill Watrous, JJ, Frank R, Wayne Henderson, Bruce Fowler, Curtis Fuller
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tbdana
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by tbdana »

timbone wrote: Mon Oct 07, 2024 9:54 am In no order- Bill Watrous, JJ, Frank R, Wayne Henderson, Bruce Fowler, Curtis Fuller
Interesting to see Bruce Fowler in there, in a kind of "which one of these is not like the others" way. I liked Bruce. He was a friend. But he was nothing at all like the rest of those guys.

And I do love the inclusion of Wayne Henderson and Curtis Fuller. :)
Cmillar
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by Cmillar »

I have to add James Pankow of Chicago for sure. Probably one of the reasons for wanting to become a musician in the first place!

But the first big heroes were the 'Trombones Unlimited' recording musicians... Mike Barone and Frank Rosolino, with Bobby Knight on bass trombone. We were young kids, but that was exciting, beautiful music with great arrangements...still is!

Urbie Green and the NYC studio cats playing on the Enoch Light and the 'Brass Menagerie' albums.

Then came Denis Wick and the 'Star Wars' movie music for sure.

Another unsung hero had to be Bob Edmonson, because we were young kids when my parents played nothing but Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass and his trombone playing was on all the recordings!
timbone
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by timbone »

Bruce Fowler did amazing things on trombone. That Zappa stuff was awesome and I also saw him play third in Toshiko's band in the 80's, playing unison with the sax solis. There is a release of the Fowler Brothers (5 of them) called "Breakfast for Dinosaurs" . Amazing playing, writing, production. Bruce later went on to carve himself a niche in Hollywood much like JJ who also wrote for pictures.
timbone
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by timbone »

I have to say now that I reviewed this, Bobby Brookmeyer was again a standout voice, and on valve trombone. His work opposite Clark Terry demanded a great player. Gingerbread Men, and Mumbles are classics! You need to hear him if you hadn't. Yet another bone player that also was into arranging and orchestration.
MaxPirone
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by MaxPirone »

Urbie Green
Carl Fontana
Frank Rosolino
JJ Johnson
Dick Nash
Jack Teagarden
Tommy Dorsey
And many more
nwoodsxx
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by nwoodsxx »

In order of when they came on my radar:
Urbie Green
Jimmy Pankow
Bill Watrous
Dave Steinmeyer
Carl Fontana

In more recent years:
Bob McChesney
Nils Landgren
John Allred
brassmedic
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by brassmedic »

James Pankow
JJ Johnson
Frank Rosolino
Ralph Sauer
Jay Friedman
Bill Watrous
Christian Lindberg
Mark Lawrence
Brad Close Brass Instruments - brassmedic.com
JTeagarden
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by JTeagarden »

Jack Teagarden
Lawrence Brown
Urbie Green
Harold Steiman
Bill Harris
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harrisonreed
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by harrisonreed »

Never would have guessed!! 😆
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davdud101
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by davdud101 »

I guess I'm still growing up. But for me, Urbie Green for sure, and more recently, Andy Martin and John Allred.
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baBposaune
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by baBposaune »

George Roberts
Phil Teele
Frank Rosolino
Jeff Reynolds
Albert Mangelsdorff
Raul De Souza
Hoyt Bohannon
Dick Nash
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BPBasso
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by BPBasso »

Many low brass players from movie soundtracks and symphony/orchestra pieces that I heard growing up in the 90s/00s

Edward Kleinhammer
Doug Yeo
Don Harwood
Charlie Vernon
Randy Hawes
Slowly discovered them after switching to bass trombone around 2004.

James Markey
I fell in love with Markey's playing and sound in 2009 once I discovered his CD, On Base.
- BP
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jonathanharker
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by jonathanharker »

Christian Lindberg and Tommy Dorsey initially, then I found an old LP of Urbie Green's 21 Trombones...
sterb225
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by sterb225 »

In high school in the mid eighties, the first recordings of a soloist I encountered and sound I wanted to emulate were of Per Brevig (NYC Ballet). In 1987 as a college freshman I nearly quit playing after first hearing Lindberg, but recovered and got hooked on the CSO sound. Alessi was 'the man' for a while, for me. Now in my 50s, the ridiculous versatility of opera players like Sasha Romero are my primary influence. As I look back at my studies, all but one of the teachers I've worked with was from the Met or NY Ballet.
JTeagarden
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by JTeagarden »

And Harold Betters!
Grotewobbo
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by Grotewobbo »

Well I didn't listen to "horn" music until I was 18 and I got hit with the Ska virus around '98. It was the kind of music I really needed and any good Ska band had at least a couple of good horn players. So I wanted to play in a Skaband and I picked up the trumpet and later switched to trombone. At 1st I only listened to the fast Ska bands and later I dug a bit deeper and went all the way to the '60s in Jamaica and found Don Drummond and Rico Rodriguez. Those 2 are still my heroes 26 years later. For old Skool Ska-Jazz and Reggae the trombone is ideal. It can cut deep through the music. You can play "lazy" tunes as well and then the art lies in the fact that you have to come up with simple melodies no one else have come up with. Don Drummond was named one of the world's best at some point.
cb56
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Re: Who were your trombone heroes growing up?

Post by cb56 »

Urbie, JJ, Kai, Pankow, Wesley, Wayne Henderson, Shearer,
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