Tommy Vig
Tommy Vig | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Born | 14 July 1938 |
Origin | Budapest, Hungary |
Genres | Jazz, classical |
Occupation(s) | Musician, composer, arranger, bandleader |
Instruments | Vibraharp, drums, percussion, xylophone, marimba |
Years active | 1940s–present |
Labels | Klasszikus Jazz, Milestone, Discovery, Tom Tom, Pannon Jazz, Dobre, Mortney, Take V, Luz |
Website | tommyvig |
Tommy Vig (born July 14, 1938) is a percussionist, arranger, bandleader, and composer.
Life and work
Born to a musical family in Budapest, Tommy Vig was internationally recognized as a child prodigy by the age of 6, playing drums with his father, clarinetist Gyorgy Vig. He performed concerts in Budapest on State Radio, at the City Theatre, the Academy of Music, and the National Circus. At the age of 8, he made the album The World Champion Kid Drummer with Austrian jazz players in Vienna, including Hans Koller, Ernst Landl, and the Hot Club of Vienna for Elite Special. At the age of 9, his drumming won him the 1947 MGM-Jazz Competition in Budapest. As a result, he made several recordings with the Chappy's Mopex Big Band for His Master's Voice.
Vig completed his studies at the Bartók Conservatory in 1955 and the Ferenc Erkel Music High School in 1956. Following the crushing of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, he fled to Vienna, where he played concerts with Fatty George and Joe Zawinul. After moving to the United States, he was given a scholarship to Juilliard School of Music. Since then he has been writing and conducting concerts. Vig worked with Red Rodney, Don Ellis, Cat Anderson, Terry Gibbs, Art Pepper, Milcho Leviev, Joe Pass, and the Miles Davis-Gil Evans Big Band. In 1961 he settled in Las Vegas, where he performed with Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jr., Tony Curtis, Woody Allen, Judy Garland, and Tony Bennett. He was the percussionist on many of Rod Stewart's albums.
In 1970, Vig moved to Los Angeles, where he worked in the studios of Warner Bros., Fox, Universal, CBS, Columbia, ABC, Disney, Goldwyn, MGM, and Paramount. He participated in about 1500 studio sessions in Hollywood, including two Academy Awards, and produced, directed, and conducted the official 1984 Olympic Jazz Festival for the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee. He also organized and conducted the annual Las Vegas Caesars Palace Mini-Jazz Festivals for many years. He wrote the music for 30 films and television shows, including They Call Me Bruce? and The Kid with the Broken Halo. As a percussionist, he participated in the recording of Quincy Jones's soundtrack to Roots. He played on the Jazz Festival Münster 1986 with Lajos Dudas and participated with the hr-Jazzensemble and Martin Breinschmid.
Vig gave master classes at California State University, Northridge, and at the Tatabánya Jazz Academy. Over the past fifty years his classical compositions were performed by symphony orchestras in the United States, Germany, and Hungary. He was vice president of the American Society of Music Arrangers and Composers. Vig was awarded the EmErTon Prize by the Hungarian State Radio in Budapest in 1994. The Hungarian Jazz Federation awarded him first prize in Musical Arrangement in 2006, while the Budapest Jazz Orchestra commissioned and performed his piece "Budapest 1956" in front of U.S. Ambassador April H. Foley at the Museum of Fine Arts.
Since 2006, Vig has lived with his wife Mia (of The Kim Sisters) in Hungary, where they have been performing concerts,[1] appearing on radio and television,[2] and recording albums, including ÜssDob (B'eat It!, Tom-Tom Records), Now and Then (Pannon Jazz), and Welcome to Hungary! The Tommy Vig Orchestra 2012 Featuring David Murray (Klasszikus Jazz, 2011).
Vig invented the scientific method of Non-Subjective Valuing (U.S. Patent 6038554) which is detailed in his book How to Tell What Things Are Really Worth.
Awards
- Gold Medal Recognition from the President of Hungary (2011)[3]
- Nominee; Playboy Magazine (Chicago) for Best Bandleader of the Year
- Winner; Down Beat Magazine (Chicago) Critic's Poll Talent Deserving of Wider Recognition for Vibraharp
- Winner; Hungarian Jazz Society Arranger Competition (2006)
- Vibe Summit Honoree;[4] Los Angeles Jazz Society Top Award for Vibraharp (2002)
- Winner; EmErTon Prize by the Hungarian State Radio in Budapest (1994)
- "Olympic Jazz Festival Week" declared by Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley for Vig's production of the official Olympic Jazz Festival (1984)
Discography
Albums
- The Tommy Vig Orchestra (Take 5, 1964)[5]
- Encounter with Time a.k.a. Space Race (Discovery, 1967)
- The Sound of the Seventies (Milestone, 1968)[6]
- Just for the Record (1971)
- Tommy Vig in Budapest (Mortney, 1972)
- Somebody Loves Me (Dobre, 1976)
- Encounter with Time (Discovery, 1977)
- Tommy Vig 1978, (Dobre, 1978)
- ÜssDob (Tom-Tom, 2008)
- Welcome to Hungary! The Tommy Vig Orchestra 2012 Featuring David Murray (Klasszikus Jazz, 2011)
- Tommy Vig 75! (Klasszikus Jazz, 2014)
Film and television scores
- 1970s–1980s: This Is the Life (TV series)
- 1974: Nightmare Circus (aka The Barn of the Naked Dead or Terror Circus)
- 1975: Forced Entry
- 1975–1976: Doctors' Hospital (TV Series)
- 1979: Starsky and Hutch (TV Series) "Birds of a Feather"
- 1981: Ruckus
- 1981: Texas Lightning
- 1982: The Kid with the Broken Halo (TV movie) [7]
- 1982: They Call Me Bruce?[8]
- 1983: Sweet Sixteen
Compositions
Tommy Vig's compositions performed in the U.S. and Europe include:
- Concerto for Clarinet, Vibraharp and Orchestra
- Concerto for Vibraharp and Orchestra [9]
- Concerto for Timpani and Orchestra
- Concerto for Tenor Saxophone and Orchestra
- Four Pieces for Neophonic Orchestra
- Collage for Four Clarinetists[10]
- A Clarinetist and a Harpist
- Music for Tuba and Vibraharp [11]
- Budapest 1956 (Concerto for Jazz Drums and Orchestra)[12][13]
Collaborations
With The Beach Boys
- L.A. (Light Album) (CBS Records, 1979)
With Stephen Bishop
- Bish (ABC Records, 1978)
With Art Garfunkel
- Watermark (Columbia Records, 1977)
- Scissors Cut (Columbia Records, 1981)
With Bruce Roberts
- Bruce Roberts (Elektra Records, 1977)
- Cool Fool (Elektra Records, 1980)
With Diana Ross
- Red Hot Rhythm & Blues (EMI, 1987)
With Marlena Shaw
- Acting Up (Columbia Records, 1978)
With Dusty Springfield
- It Begins Again (United Artists Records, 1978)
With Rod Stewart
- A Night on the Town (Warner Bros. Records, 1976)
- Foot Loose & Fancy Free (Warner Bros. Records, 1977)
- Blondes Have More Fun (Warner Bros. Records, 1978)
- Tonight I'm Yours (Warner Bros. Records, 1981)
- Body Wishes (Warner Bros. Records, 1983)
- Pastiche (Atlantic Records, 1978)
See also
References
- ^ Tommy Vig & Budapest Jazz Orchestra (featuring Mia Kim of The Kim Sisters): Aranyszimfóniák (2014) on YouTube
- ^ Tommy and Mia Vig on FÁBRY (2018) on YouTube
- ^ President Award (Jazzma.hu)
- ^ Vibe Summit IV honoring Terry Gibbs on YouTube
- ^ Tiegel, Eliot (23 October 1965). The Jazz Beat. Nielsen Business Media. pp. 10–. Retrieved 31 August 2018.
- ^ Milestone Records 9000 series discography Archived 2012-09-10 at archive.today
- ^ The Kid with the Broken Halo (TV movie) on YouTube
- ^ They Call Me Bruce? on YouTube
- ^ Concerto for Vibraphone and Orchestra (2013) on YouTube
- ^ Performance at Artists Club of Budapest (2010) on YouTube
- ^ Music for Tuba and Vibraphone (2013) on YouTube
- ^ "In Memory of 1956" Concert (2018) on YouTube
- ^ Concerto for Orchestra (2018) on YouTube
External links
- 20th-century American composers
- 20th-century American drummers
- 20th-century classical composers
- 21st-century American composers
- 21st-century American drummers
- 21st-century classical composers
- 1938 births
- American classical composers
- American film score composers
- American jazz bandleaders
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- American jazz educators
- American jazz percussionists
- American jazz vibraphonists
- American male classical composers
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- Avant-garde jazz musicians
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- Free improvising musicians
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- Hungarian classical composers
- Hungarian classical musicians
- Hungarian male conductors (music)
- Hungarian emigrants to the United States
- Hungarian film score composers
- Hungarian jazz musicians
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- Living people
- Hungarian male classical composers
- American male film score composers
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- American male conductors (music)
- Marimbists
- Musicians from Budapest
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