Manouche Maestro |
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Ivor Mairants ~ Obituary
IVOR MAIRANTS was one of the most distinguished survivors of
the dance band tradition of the pre-war years. But he was much more than a
guitarist in a dance band: his inquiring mind led him into authorship, teaching,
journalism, commerce and, later, classical guitar composition.
He was
born in Poland, and came with his parents to England on the eve of the Great
War. His father was a Talmudic scholar who, in the words of his son, "meditated
with God", leaving his wife to run a haberdashery shop in Poland and, after
that, a sweets and tobacco shop in the East End of London.
After
hearing the Savoy Orpheans in a broadcast received on a
homemade crystal wireless set, Ivor Mairants made up his mind to become a
musician, and duly saved
3
pounds to buy his first instrument, a banjo, from Ebblewhite's
music shop in Aldgate. His first professional engagement, at
the age of 15, earned him 7s 6d, sufficient encouragement to launch himself on a
career in music.
Mairants
also appeared in two films, playing a beribboned period guitar in
Saraband for Dead Lovers (1948), and a more modern instrument in
The Battle of the River Plate (1956), in which, dressed in
Latin American costume, he performed as a member of a night-club band in
Montevideo.
Mairants's
technical manuals, embracing all guitar styles, met with varying degrees of
success, but his flamenco tutor achieved world-wide fame, selling steadily over
the years in various languages including Japanese. Yet well-meaning "experts"
had advised him not to pursue the project; and the great Segovia
even delivered a lofty snub with the words, "All my life I have striven to
lift the guitar to higher musical levels, therefore I am not interested in a
flamenco book and do not want to see it."
Throughout
this time, Mairants developed and refined his jazz playing to impressive
proportions. His frequent professional contact with the very best jazz
guitarists such as Django Reinhardt, Joe Pass, Barney Kessel and Herb
Ellis led, in 1995, to his monumental book The
Great Jazz Guitarists, the product of many years' hard labour.
In his
late eighties, he composed Jazz Sonatas for Solo Guitar,
classical in style but containing prominent elements of jazz. Two of the sonatas
were set pieces in the first competition for the Ivor Mairants Guitar
Award, held under the aegis of the Worshipful Company of
Musicians last December. Mairants, a member of the company and a
Freeman of the City of London, presided over the panel of judges with his usual
imperturbability; it was to be his last public appearance before the cancer
against which he had battled with fortitude finally overtook him, after a long
life of unremitting work in the service of music and five months short of his
90th birthday.
"Between May 1994 and July 1995 the guitar world was saddened by the irreplaceable loss of Joe Pass, Jimmy Raney, and Laurindo Almeida. The Sonatas are my memorial to my valuable friendships with them" - Ivor Mairants.
Ivor Mairants, guitarist, composer, writer and teacher: born Rypin,
Poland 8 July 1908; married 1931 Lily Schneider (one son, one
daughter); died London 20 February 1998.
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