Manouche Maestro |
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Django Reinhardt and Harry Volpe
Harry Volpe's instruction booklets
containing 12 lessons ranging from "How to Hold the Guitar", and "How to Tune
the Guitar" and "How to Read Music" to playing simple melodies. The book
was published in 1945 and shows some wear, but all the pages are there.
Voted for three years "Most outstanding swing guitarist" by the American Guild of BM & G. Concerts with the Volpe Quintet. Gretsch announces the new Synchromatic 400 Harry Volpe jazz guitar. 1941-44 Concerts with his "Strings in Rhythm", works with Paramount, RCA. Writes for musical magazines : Metronome, Orchestra World, Fretted Harmony, B.M.G. 1945 Voted "World's Greatest Jazz Guitarist" by W.E.V.D. N.Y (Well in their eyes) 1946 Meeting with Django Reinhardt , in New York for the Duke Ellington tour, guest at Volpe's. All night long they are involved in a memorable jam session
Harry Volpe (1906 - 1995) was a pioneer of the guitar before that phrase was
ever coined. He was an established teacher, studio and recording musician in New York
already in the 1920's and 1930's. He was the first guitarist selected to the
Radio City Music Hall staff where he was a featured soloist. A prolific
composer, Harry Volpe wrote several pieces for the guitar including his
interpretation of Rachmaninoff's Prelude in C# Minor. Among his other
compositions are Volpette, June Memories, Two Guitars and Marreqita. The early
guitar duets he penned and recorded with Frank Victor in 1936 remain classics of
the guitar duet form. For many years Harry
Volpe ran a music store in New York where he offered lessons to the young
guitarists seeking their fortunes as jazz guitarists.
Compare carefully these two guitars from the Gretsch
stable -
If Volpe was given these by Gretsch he did not
readily lend them for recording or allow Django to practice with them for the
Ellington Band. - was the intended Gibson ES-300 a delivery problem or the
alleged free Epiphone Saga?
A prolific composer, Harry Volpe wrote several pieces for the guitar including his interpretation of Rachmaninoff's Prelude in C# Minor. Among his other compositions are Volpette, June Memories, Two Guitars and Marreqita. The early guitar duets he penned and recorded with Frank Victor in 1936 remain classics of the guitar duet form. Some of his teaching materials are still available through Mel Bay Publications. For many years Harry Volpe ran a music store in New York where he offered lessons to the young guitarists seeking their fortunes as jazz guitarists. Among his students were Johnny Smith, Sal Salvador and Joe Pass. Although his playing was not purely in the jazz idiom, Harry Volpe remains a significant figure in the history of jazz guitar if for no other reason than that he played with and taught some of the best guitarists of the last century.
1904
Born
in Sicily, Grotte near Agrigento, at midnight on April 7.
1919 In New York,
playing the Banjo in "Barber shop" trio.
1921 In his first group
: "The Aurora Troubadours", at the guitar.
1922 RKO
Circuit Tour
1924-1932
With the Ted Navarre Band
1932-1935 Discovered by the violinist
Al Dufy , the
NBC
invites
him for an audition and joins the
Radio City Music Hall orchestra
as
lead guitar
, Erno Rapee and Charles Previn directors.
Takes part in
NBC and
CBS's broadcasts,
also in duet with violinist Al Dufy.
Composes and teaches for
Paramount
Tour with Vincent Lopez Orchestra. Publishes with Al Rocky acquiring international acknowledgments. Recordings in duet with Karl Kress .
1936-1941 Opens the Volpe's Guitar
Centre , a meeting
point for musicians in New York, frequented, among others, by Tony Mottola,
Sal Salvador, Al Caiola.
Founded a musical
publishing house (Volpe Music Company).
Voted for three years
"Most outstanding swing guitarist" by the
American Guild of BM & G.
Concerts with the
Volpe Quintet
.
![]() Gretcsh announces the new Synchromatic 400 Harry Volpe jazz guitar.
1941-44
Concerts with his "Strings in Rhythm", works with
Paramount, RCA.
Writes for
musical magazines
: Metronome, Orchestra
World, Fretted Harmony, B.M.G.
1945
Voted "World's Greatest Jazz Guitarist" by
Radio W.E.V.D. New York.
1946 Meeting with Django Reinhardt
, in New York for the Duke Ellington tour, guest at Volpe's. All night long
they are involved in a memorable
jam session
.
Django at Harry Volpe's Jackson Heights Studio, Harry Volpe front right, Django's interpreter back left, Harry's son Joe (Back right), 1946
1948-1953
Makes the music and plays at the prize winner "The time of the Cuckoo" at
the Empire Theatre, Broadway
, with his quartet; actress
Shirley Booth
and
Geraldine Brooks
.
Conducts the Pan-American
Orchestra in SESAC-Columbia recordings.
From the
department of the state of Washington he becomes the
candidate for the "American Specialist" in the musical field for a cultural
exchange program.
Town Hall
concert
.
Because of
law
questions , concerning the separation from his wife, he
loses the SESAC royalties (registered by his wife so as the Volpe Music
Company), is forced to reduce the scale of his production centre and
(perhaps a "daring" solution of his lawyer!) goes to jail. There the editor
Charles Colin helped him acquiring and selling books and all the press
machines of the Volpe's centre.
Goes out from jail, and
recuperates in Florida where he forms a trio
and solves his questions by resorting to the law. He settles in Miami.
Some TV shows and
jazz clubs concerts
while devotes himself to
teaching at the Frost Conservatory. Among his most
famous pupils, here and at New York: Sal Salvador, Al Caiola, Tony
Mottola, Joe Pass, John Colens, Johnny Smith. Publications
with Charles Hansen.
1955-1960
With Rasha Rodell signs a contract for top shows
at the Eden Rock
Hotel, Miami Beach,
where he plays with Nat King Cole, Ella Fitzgerald, Cab Calloway,
Count Basie, Perry Como, Jimmy Durante.
In trio, a week, with
Arthur Godfrey in a TV show
aired coast to
coast.
1960-1995
Goes on publishing
with Charles Hansen and taking part to the
David Williams Hotel' exhibitions at
Coral Gables .
Teaches at the
Miami-Dade Junior College .
Dies in 1995, January
The Harry Volpe Master Class??
c.1940
Joe Pass - A year later in 1944 Pass's parents sent him to New York to study with the highly respected studio guitar player Harry Volpe. When Volpe realized that Pass improvised better than he did, he focused on teaching Pass to sight read music. Pass became frustrated with his lessons and returned to Johnstown — though not for long. When his father became ill, he dropped out of the tenth grade and moved to New York. Django & Harry Volpe (8 mm), 1946
On 6th
February 1947, guitarist Harry Volpe brought Django to N.Y
City Harbour where Django boarded a ship bound for
Le Havre, the departure was filmed by Volpe’s son Joe as
Django waived from the gang plank and left the U.S. behind.
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