Alvino Rey
Alvino Rey | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Alvin Henry McBurney |
Born | Oakland, California, U.S. | July 1, 1908
Died | February 24, 2004 Salt Lake City, Utah, U.S. | (aged 95)
Genres | Jazz, swing |
Occupation(s) | Musician, musical director, inventor |
Instrument(s) | Guitar, steel guitar |
Years active | 1927–1994 |
Alvin McBurney (July 1, 1908 – February 24, 2004),[1] known by his stage name Alvino Rey, was an American jazz guitarist and bandleader. He is also known for being the grandfather of Win Butler and Will Butler and grandfather-in-law of Regine Chassagne, Win Butler's wife.
Career
[edit]Alvin McBurney was born in Oakland, California, United States,[1] but grew up in Cleveland, Ohio. Early in life he had a knack for music and electronics. When he was eight, he built his first radio, and within a couple years he was one of the youngest ham radio operators in the country.[1] In his teens, he was given a banjo as a birthday present. His professional career began in 1927 when he got a job playing banjo with Cleveland bandleader Ev Jones. During the following year, he became a member of the Phil Spitalny Orchestra. He switched from banjo to guitar, then changed his name to Alvino Rey to take advantage of the popularity of Latin music in New York City at the time.[1][2][3]
From 1932 to 1938 he was a member of Horace Heidt and His Musical Knights. He drew attention to himself and the band when he started playing steel guitar. The Gibson corporation asked him to develop a pickup for the guitar. In 1937, he married Luise King of the King Sisters.[1][2][3]
In 1939, he formed his own band with the King Sisters and moved to Hollywood, where he became musical director at KHJ Mutual Broadcasting radio network. As leader of the house band, he recorded a version of "Deep in the Heart of Texas" that was a hit in 1942.[3][4] During the same year he hired Al Cohn, Ray Conniff, Neal Hefti, Zoot Sims, and arranger Billy May. In the 1940s he also worked with saxophonist Herbie Steward, drummer Dave Tough, and arrangers Nelson Riddle, Johnny Mandel, and George Handy.[2]
The band did not record in 1943 due to the musicians' strike. The band broke up, and Rey found work at Lockheed as a mechanic. In 1944, he enlisted in the U.S. Navy, where he worked on radar systems and directed a band. After his service, he formed an orchestra that had fifteen horns and recorded a cover version of "Cement Mixer" by Slim Gaillard that became a hit.[2][3] During the 1950s, he played steel guitar in small groups, often with Buddy Cole, his brother-in-law.[3]
Beginning about 1957, Rey produced many of the George Greeley piano recordings for Warner Bros. Records.[5]
During the 1960s, he was music director for The King Family Show with the King Sisters. Rey made frequent appearances on the show performing "The Alvino Rey Talking Guitar" which was in fact a pedal steel. He also played steel guitar in recording sessions with Jack Costanzo, George Cates, Esquivel, and the studio group the Surfmen.[2][3] These musicians were associated with the short-lived genre exotica, which combined Hawaiian music, Latin music, lounge jazz, and unconventional instruments from Burma and Indonesia.[6] In 1978, he was inducted into the Steel Guitar Hall of Fame.[7]
In the early 1990s, Rey moved with his wife Luise to her native Utah. In Salt Lake City, he formed a jazz quartet which played in local clubs, sometimes with Luise sitting in. He retired from performing in 1994.[2] Luise died in 1997 after 60 years of marriage. In 2004, after breaking his hip and suffering complications including pneumonia and congestive heart failure, Rey died at the age of 95 at a rehabilitation center.[1]
Pioneer of electrified instruments
[edit]Rey amplified his banjo in the 1920s. In 1935, Gibson hired him to develop a prototype pickup[2] with engineers at the Lyon & Healy company in Chicago, based on the one he developed for his banjo. The result was used for Gibson's first electric guitar ES-150. The prototype is kept in the Experience Music Project museum in Seattle.
In 1939, Rey invented an early version of a "talk box" device that modified the sound of his electric steel guitar to sound like words.[8] For performances of his big band, he created an animated mechanical character he named "Stringy", shaped like a guitar, that "sang" the altered guitar sounds.[9] A later commercial version of the talk box, using a different technology developed by Bob Heil, was made famous by guitarist Peter Frampton.
Around 1959 to 1960, Rey collaborated with composer Euel Box of PAMS Productions of Dallas to bring his distinctive pedal steel guitar sounds to radio jingles. This jingle package was part of the new Top Forty radio format and was heard on such innovative radio stations as K-BOX in Dallas and W-FUN Miami. Rey is also credited with inspiring the later, ground-breaking "Sonosational" PAMS Jingles Series 18 in 1961 which featured the talking or singing instrument effects of Rey's "sonovox".
Discography
[edit]As leader
[edit]- Swingin' Fling (Capitol, 1958)
- Refreshing Melodies (Sacred, 1958; reissued 1976)
- My Reverie (Decca, 1959)
- Ping-Pong! (Capitol, 1960)
- That Lonely Feeling (Capitol, 1960)
- Alvino Rey! ...His Greatest Hits [re-recordings] (Dot, 1961)
- As I Remember Hawaii (Dot, 1962)
- The Big Band Steel Guitar (Steel Guitar Record Club, 1977)
- Dance With Me ...The Big Band Sound of Alvino Rey (Alysa, 1978)
- The Greatest Jazz Band (Alysa, 1979)
As sideman
[edit]- Joe "Fingers" Carr, The Riotous, Raucous, Red-Hot 20's! (Warner Bros., 1961)
- George Cates, George Cates' Polynesian Percussion (Dot, 1961)
- Elvis Presley, Blue Hawaii (RCA Victor, 1961)
- Stan Kenton and Tex Ritter, Stan Kenton! Tex Ritter! (Capitol, 1962)
- Kirby Stone Four, Frank Loesser's Broadway Hit 'Guys & Dolls' (Columbia, 1962)
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f Popa, Christopher (2004). "Alvino Rey "Wizard of the Steel Pedal Guitar"". Big Band Library. Retrieved 10 January 2017.
- ^ a b c d e f g Yanow, Scott (2013). The Great Jazz Guitarists. San Francisco: Backbeat. p. 163. ISBN 978-1-61713-023-6.
- ^ a b c d e f Ankeny, Jason. "Alvino Rey". AllMusic. Retrieved 17 February 2017.
- ^ "Alvino Rey". Google Books/Billboard magazine. 4 April 1942. p. 4. Retrieved 16 September 2017.
- ^ Todd Everett, (2004), The Best of the Popular Piano Piano Concertos, (Re-release) Collectors' Choice Music, CD, Liner Notes
- ^ Unterberger, Richie. "Martin Denny". AllMusic. Retrieved 17 February 2017.
- ^ Scott, DeWitt. "The Steel Guitar Hall of Fame/". scottysmusic.com. The Steel Guitar Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on October 14, 2018. Retrieved May 6, 2021.
- ^ "Electro-Harmonix". Electro-Harmonix.
- ^ "The Alvino Rey big band, featuring "Stringy"". YouTube.
Sources
[edit]External links
[edit]- Alvino Rey at Find a Grave
- Alvino Rey Interview NAMM Oral History Program (2001)
- 1908 births
- 2004 deaths
- 20th-century American guitarists
- American jazz guitarists
- American jazz bandleaders
- Converts to Mormonism
- American Latter Day Saints
- Big band bandleaders
- Pedal steel guitarists
- Musicians from Oakland, California
- Musicians from Salt Lake City
- Capitol Records artists
- Deaths from pneumonia in Utah
- Amateur radio people
- King family (show business)
- American jazz banjoists
- Guitarists from California
- Guitarists from Utah
- American male guitarists
- Musicians from Cleveland
- Burials at Cypress Lawn Memorial Park
- Jazz musicians from California
- Guitarists from Ohio
- Jazz musicians from Ohio
- 20th-century American male musicians
- American male jazz musicians