George Shearing was a pioneering British jazz pianist who greatly influenced the development of bebop and cool jazz styles. He had a prolific career spanning over 60 years, recording hundreds of albums and compositions. Some of his most famous works include the standard "Lullaby of Birdland". Shearing was honored with many awards including an OBE and knighthood for his significant contributions to music and strengthening UK-US relations.
George Shearing was a pioneering British jazz pianist who greatly influenced the development of bebop and cool jazz styles. He had a prolific career spanning over 60 years, recording hundreds of albums and compositions. Some of his most famous works include the standard "Lullaby of Birdland". Shearing was honored with many awards including an OBE and knighthood for his significant contributions to music and strengthening UK-US relations.
George Shearing was a pioneering British jazz pianist who greatly influenced the development of bebop and cool jazz styles. He had a prolific career spanning over 60 years, recording hundreds of albums and compositions. Some of his most famous works include the standard "Lullaby of Birdland". Shearing was honored with many awards including an OBE and knighthood for his significant contributions to music and strengthening UK-US relations.
George Shearing was a pioneering British jazz pianist who greatly influenced the development of bebop and cool jazz styles. He had a prolific career spanning over 60 years, recording hundreds of albums and compositions. Some of his most famous works include the standard "Lullaby of Birdland". Shearing was honored with many awards including an OBE and knighthood for his significant contributions to music and strengthening UK-US relations.
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George Shearing
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This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (June 2013) Sir George Shearing
Shearing in 1959 Background information Born 13 August 1919 Battersea, London, England Died 14 February 2011 (aged 91) New York City, New York, United States Genres Jazz Bebop Swing Cool jazz Occupations Musician Instruments Piano Years active 19472011 Labels MGM Capitol Concord Savoy Website www.georgeshearing.net/ Sir George Shearing, OBE (13 August 1919 14 February 2011) was a British jazz pianist who for many years led a popular jazz group that recorded for Discovery Records, MGM Records and Capitol Records. The composer of over 300 titles, including the jazz standard "Lullaby of Birdland", he had multiple albums on the Billboard charts during the 1950s, 1960s, 1980s and 1990s. [1] He died of heart failure in New York City, at the age of 91. Contents [hide] 1 Early life 2 US Years 3 Later career 4 Personal life 5 Awards and honors 6 Discography 7 Filmography 8 References 9 External links Early life[edit] Born in Battersea, London, Shearing was the youngest of nine children. He was born blind to working class parents: his father delivered coal and his mother cleaned trains in the evening. He started to learn piano at the age of three and began formal training at Linden Lodge School for the Blind, where he spent four years. [2]
Though he was offered several scholarships, Shearing opted to perform at a local pub, the Mason's Arms in Lambeth, for "25 bob a week" [3] playing piano and accordion. He even joined an all-blind band during that time and was influenced by the records of Teddy Wilson and Fats Waller. [1] Shearing made his first BBC radio broadcast during this time after befriending Leonard Feather, with whom he started recording in 1937. [2] In 1940, Shearing joined Harry Parry's popular band and contributed to the comeback of Stphane Grappelli. Shearing won seven consecutive Melody Maker polls during this time. Around that time he was also a member of George Evans's Saxes 'n' Sevens band. US Years[edit] In 1947, Shearing emigrated to the United States, where his harmonically complex style mixing swing, bop and modern classical influences gained popularity. One of his first performances in the US was at the Hickory House. He performed with the Oscar Pettiford Trio and led a jazz quartet with Buddy DeFranco, which led to contractual problems, since Shearing was under contract to MGM and DeFranco to Capitol Records. In 1949, he formed the first George Shearing Quintet, a band with Margie Hyams (vibraphone), Chuck Wayne (guitar), later replaced by Toots Thielemans (listed as John Tillman), John Levy (bass) and Denzil Best (drums) and recorded for Discovery, Savoy and MGM, including the immensely popular single "September in the Rain" (MGM), which sold over 900,000 copies; "my other hit" to accompany "Lullaby of Birdland". Shearing said of this hit that it was "as accidental as it could be." [3] He credited the Glenn Miller Orchestra's reed section of the late 1930s and early 1940s as an important influence. Shearing's interest in classical music resulted in some performances with concert orchestras in the 1950s and 1960s, and his solos frequently drew upon the music of Satie, Delius andDebussy for inspiration. He became known for a piano technique known as "Shearing's voicing", a type of double melody block chord, with an additional fifth part that doubles the melody an octave lower. (This style is also known as "locked hands" and the jazz organist Milt Buckner is generally credited with inventing it.) In 1956, Shearing became a naturalized citizen of the United States. [3] He continued to play with his quintet, with augmented players through the years, and recorded with Capitol until 1969. He created his own label, Sheba, that lasted a few years. Along with dozens of musical stars of his day, Shearing appeared on ABC's The Pat Boone Chevy Showroom. Earlier, he had appeared on the same network's reality show, The Comeback Story, in which he discussed how to cope with blindness. Later career[edit] In 1970, he began to "phase out his by-now-predictable quintet" [1] and disbanded the group in 1978. One of his more notable albums during this period was The Reunion, with George Shearing (Verve 1976), made in collaboration with bassist Andy Simpkins and drummer Rusty Jones, and featuring Stphane Grappelli, the musician with whom he had debuted as a sideman decades before. Later, Shearing played with a trio, as a soloist and increasingly in a duo. Among his collaborations were sets with the Montgomery Brothers, Marian McPartland, Brian Q. Torff, Jim Hall, Hank Jones and Kenny Davern. In 1979, Shearing signed with Concord Records, and recorded for the label with Mel Torm. This collaboration garnered Shearing and Torm two Grammys, one in 1983 and another in 1984. Shearing remained fit and active well into his later years and continued to perform, even after being honoured with an Ivor Novello Lifetime Achievement Award in 1993. He never forgot his native country and, in his last years, would split his year between living in New York and Chipping Campden, Gloucestershire, UK, where he had bought a house with his second wife, singer Ellie Geffert. This gave him the opportunity to tour the UK, giving concerts, often with Torm, backed by the BBC Big Band. He was appointed OBE in 1996. In 2007, he was knighted. "So", he noted later, "the poor, blind kid from Battersea became Sir George Shearing. Now that's a fairy tale come true." [citation needed]
In 2004, he released his memoirs, Lullaby of Birdland, which was accompanied by a double- album "musical autobiography", Lullabies of Birdland. Shortly afterwards, however, he suffered a fall at his home and retired from regular performing. In 2012 Derek Paravicini and jazz vocalist Frank Holder did a tribute concert to the recordings of Shearing. Ann Odell transcribed the recordings and taught Paravicini the parts, as well as being the MD for the concerts. Lady Shearing also endorsed the show, sending a letter to be read out before the Watermill Jazz Club performance. Personal life[edit] Shearing was married twice, first to the former Trixie Bayes, to whom he was married from 1941 to 1973. Two years after his divorce he married his second wife, the singer Ellie Geffert. Geffert survived him after he died on 14 February 2011. [4]
Awards and honors[edit] Performed for U.S. Presidents Gerald Ford Jimmy Carter Ronald Reagan Performed at Royal Command Performance for Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip. 1975, honorary degree of Doctor of Music from Westminster College, Salt Lake City, Utah. 1978, Horatio Alger Award for Distinguished Americans. Grammys: 1983 - An Evening with George Shearing & Mel Torm 1984 - Top Drawer 1993, Ivor Novello Award for Lifetime Achievement. 1994, honorary degree of Doctor of Music from Hamilton College in New York. 1996, included in the Queen's Birthday Honours List and invested by Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace as an Officer of the Order of the British Empire for his "services to music and Anglo-US relations". 1998, the first American Music Award by the National Arts Club, New York City. 2002, honorary degree of Doctor of Music from DePauw University in Indiana. 2003, "Lifetime Achievement Award" from BBC Jazz Awards. [5]
2007, knighted for services to music. Discography[edit] 1947: Piano Solo Savoy 1947: Great Britain's Marian McPartland & George Shearing Savoy Jazz (Released 1994) 1949: Midnight on Cloud 69 Savoy 1949: George Shearing Quintet Discovery 1950: You're Hearing George Shearing and his Quintet MGM (E-3216) 1951: An Evening with the George Shearing Quintet 1951: Souvenirs London 1951: Touch of Genius MGM 1952: I Hear Music Metro 1955: Shearing Caravan MGM 1955: Shearing in Hi Fi MGM 1955: The Shearing Spell Capitol 1956: Latin Escapade Capitol 1956: Black Satin Capitol (T858) 1956: By Request London 1956: Velvet Carpet Capitol 1957: Shearing on Stage Capitol 1958: Blue Chiffon Capitol 1958: Burnished Brass Capitol 1958: Latin Lace Capitol 1958: George Shearing on Stage! Capitol 1958: Latin Affair Capitol 1958: In the Night with Dakota Staton Capitol 1959: Satin Brass Capitol 1959: Satin Latin MGM 1959: Beauty and the Beat! (with Peggy Lee) Capitol 1960: San Francisco Scene Capitol 1960: On the Sunny Side of the Strip GNP 1960: The Shearing Touch Capitol (T1472) 1960: White Satin Capitol 1961: George Shearing and the Montgomery Brothers Jazz 1961: Mood Latino Capitol 1961: Nat King Cole Sings/George Shearing Plays (with Nat King Cole) Capitol 1961: Satin Affair Capitol 1961: The Swingin's Mutual! (with Nancy Wilson) Capitol 1962: Concerto For My Love - ST-1755 Capitol 1962: Jazz Moments Blue Note 1962: Shearing Bossa Nova Capitol 1962: Soft and Silky MGM 1962: Smooth & Swinging MGM 1963: Touch Me Softly Capitol 1963: Jazz Concert Capitol 1963: Rare Form Capitol 1963: Old Gold and Ivory Capitol 1963: Latin Rendezvous Capitol 1964: Out of the Woods Capitol 1964: Deep Velvet Capitol 1966: That Fresh Feeling Capitol 1966: Live Jazz from Club 15 Request (Live, released 2006) 1968: Shearing Today Capitol 1969: In the Mind Capitol 1969: The Fool on the Hill Capitol 1970: Out of This World (Sheba Records) 1970: It's Real George (CRS 2023 Crown Records) 1971: The Heart and Soul of George Shearing and Joe Williams (Sheba) 1972: As Requested (Sheba) 1972: Music to Hear (Sheba) 1972: The George Shearing Quartet (Sheba) 1973: GAS (Sheba) 1973: The George Shearing Trio, Vol. 1 1974: Light Airy and Swinging MPS/BASF 1974: Swinging in a Latin Mood MPS/BASF 1974: My Ship MPS/BASF 1974: The Way We Are MPS/BASF 1975: The Best of George Shearing Capitol 1975: Continental Experience MPS/BASF 1976: The Many Facets of George Shearing - MPS/BASF 1976: The Reunion MPS/BASF (with Stephane Grappelli) 1977: Windows MPS/BASF 1977: 500 Miles High - MPS/BASF 1977: Feeling Happy - MPS/BASF 1979: Getting in the Swing of Things MPS/BASF 1979: Live Concord Jazz 1979: Blues Alley Jazz (Live) Concord Jazz 1979: Concerto for Classic Guitar and Jazz Piano Angel 1980: Two for the Road (with Carmen McRae) Concord 1980: In Concert at the Pavilion Concord Jazz 1980: On a Clear Day Concord Jazz 1981: Alone Together (with Marian McPartland) Concord Jazz 1981: First Edition Concord Jazz 1982: An Evening with George Shearing & Mel Torm (Live, with Mel Torm) 1983: Top Drawer Concord Jazz (Live, with Mel Torm) 1984: Live at the Cafe Carlyle Concord 1985: An Elegant Evening Concord Jazz (with Mel Torm) 1985: Grand Piano Concord Jazz 1986: Plays Music of Cole Porter Concord 1986: More Grand Piano Concord Jazz 1987: A Vintage Year Concord Jazz (Live, with Mel Torm) 1987: Breakin' Out Concord Jazz 1987: Dexterity Concord Jazz (Live, featuring Ernestine Anderson) 1988: The Spirit of 176 Concord Jazz (with Hank Jones) 1988: Perfect Match Concord Jazz (with Ernestine Anderson) 1989: George Shearing in Dixieland Concord 1989: Piano Concord Jazz 1990: Mel and George "Do" World War II Concord (Live, with Mel Torm) 1991: Get Happy! - EMI Classics 1992: I Hear a Rhapsody: Live at the Blue Note - Telarc (Live) 1992: Walkin': Live at the Blue Note Telarc (Live) 1992: How Beautiful Is Night Telarc 1994: That Shearing Sound Telarc 1994: Cocktail for Two Jazz World 1995: Paper Moon: Songs of Nat King Cole 1997: Favorite Things Telarc 1998: Christmas with The George Shearing Quintet Telarc 2000: Just for You: Live in the 1950s Jazz Band 2001: Live at the Forum, Bath 1992 BBC Legends (Live) 2001: Back to Birdland Telarc (Live) 2002: The Rare Delight of You (with John Pizzarelli) - Telarc 2002: Pick Yourself Up Past Perfect 2002: Here and Now. New Look - with G.S. Quintet and String Choir 2004: Like Fine Wine Mack Avenue 2005: Music to Hear Koch 2005: Hopeless Romantics (with Michael Feinstein) Concord 2012: George Shearing at home (with Don Thompson) Jazzknight Records 001, New York Filmography[edit] 2003: George Shearing - Jazz Legend 2004: George Shearing: Lullaby of Birdland [6]
2004: Swing Era - George Shearing 2004: Joe Williams with George Shearing: A Song is Born [7]
2005: Duo Featuring Neil Swainson References[edit] 1. ^ Jump up to: a
b
c Richard S. Ginell. "George Shearing". Retrieved 2007-02-26. 2. ^ Jump up to: a
b "George Shearing Biography". Retrieved 2007-02-26. 3. ^ Jump up to: a
b
c George Shearing (interview with Les Tomkins): "How I Found the Sound", Jazz Professional, 1966. 4. Jump up^ Jake Coyle, "Jazz Pianist George Shearing Dies at 91", Associated Press, 14 February 2011. 5. Jump up^ BBC Jazz Awards 6. Jump up^ "George Shearing: Lullaby of Birdland", View Video Listing. 7. Jump up^ "Joe Williams with George Shearing: A Song is Born", View Video Listing.