Bob Florence | |
---|---|
Birth name | Robert Chase Florence |
Born |
Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
May 20, 1932
Died | May 15, 2008 Los Angeles |
(aged 75)
Genres | Jazz, big band, pop |
Occupation(s) | Musician, composer, arranger, band leader |
Instruments | Piano |
Years active | 1950s–2000s |
Labels | Liberty, Trend, MAMA |
Bob Florence (May 20, 1932 – May 15, 2008) was an American pianist, composer, arranger, and big band leader.
A child prodigy, Florence began piano lessons before he was five years old and at seven gave his first recital. Although his early education was in classical music, he was drawn to jazz and big band. He went to Los Angeles City College and studied arranging and orchestration with Bob McDonald. He joined the college big band, and his classmates included Herb Geller and Tommy Tedesco.
Florence spent most of his career with big bands, as a leader, performer, composer, and arranger. After graduating from college, he was a member of bands led by Les Brown, Louis Bellson, and Harry James. His arrangement of "(Up A) Lazy River" for Si Zentner was a hit in 1960 and won a Grammy Award.Dave Pell hired him to work full-time as an arranger for Liberty Records. The job gave him the opportunity to write in several genres: bossa nova with Sergio Mendez, jazz with Bud Shank, and pop vocal with Vic Dana.
He worked often in Hollywood as a bandeader, composer, and arranger for TV variety shows, hosted by Dean Martin, Red Skelton, and Andy Williams, and he wrote arrangements for the Tonight Show band led by Doc Severinsen. He won an Emmy Award for a program by Linda Lavin (1981) and another for a concert by Julie Andrews (1990).
In 1979 he returned to a recording career that had been sidetracked by other work. Twelve years separated Pet Project (World Pacific Records, 1967) from Live at Concerts by the Sea (Trend, 1979). His album Magic Time (1983) was the first to be credited to his eighteen-piece big band, the Bob Florence Limited Edition. The band released albums throughout the 1980s and '90s. In 2000, Serendipity 18 won the Grammy Award for Best Jazz Performance by a Large Ensemble. He received fifteen Grammy nominations during his career.