Eddie Duran

Eddie Duran
Birth name Edward Lozano Duran
Born (1925-09-06) September 6, 1925
San Francisco, California, U.S.
Genres Jazz, pop
Occupation(s) Musician
Instruments Guitar
Years active 1940–present
Labels Concord Jazz, Fantasy, Milestone
Associated acts Vince Guaraldi, Benny Goodman, Tania Maria

Edward Lozano Duran (born September 6, 1925) is an American jazz guitarist from San Francisco. He recorded often with Vince Guaraldi and was a member of the Benny Goodman orchestra during the 1970s.[1]

Career

Duran started playing guitar when he was twelve. By fifteen he was performing professionally with jazz musicians who visited San Francisco, beginning in the 1940s.[2]

Around 1957, Duran was the guitarist in the CBS Radio Orchestra under the direction of Ray Hackett for the Bill Weaver Show,[lower-alpha 1][3] a variety show broadcast by CBS's San Francisco affiliate, KQW, later renamed KCBS, from the Palace Hotel on Jesse Street at New Montgomery Street.[lower-alpha 2] Regular vocalists on the show included Ree Brunell, Bob Callahan, Ellen Connor, Ardene DeCamp, and Stan Noonan.[lower-alpha 3][4] While playing with the CBS Orchestra, Duran met Brunell and performed on her debut album, Intro to Jazz of the Italian-American. The album was the first LP recorded by San Francisco Jazz Records, a short-lived label that had been part of the production of the radio station at the time.

In 1954 his friend Vince Guaraldi, who had been playing with Cal Tjader, started a trio with Duran and bassist Dean Riley.[5] Guaraldi introduced Tjader to Duran and his two brothers, Carlos, a jazz pianist, and Manuel, a bassist. All three Duran brothers were members of Cal Tjader's Mambo Quintet in the mid 1950s.

In 1958, Duran played a concert at the Marines Memorial Auditorium with Tjader and Stan Getz, six years before Getz became famous. The concert was recorded by Fantasy Records. In an interview, Duran said, "There was no rehearsal before the date, no alternates, no second takes. It went very smoothly. It just kind of fell into place. The feeling was happy and relaxed.[6]

Also in 1958, Duran was joined by his brother, Manuel, on Tjader's album, San Francisco Moods. Duran led his own trio from 1960 to 1967. In 1962, he was joined by his brother Carlos on Benny Velarde's[lower-alpha 4] album, Ay Que Rico.

From 1976 to 1981, Duran was a member of Benny Goodman's orchestras, which included an acclaimed performance with Goodman's octet at Carnegie Hall on June 28, 1976, in connection with the Newport Jazz Festival.[7]

During his first two years with Goodman, Duran's wife, Arlene, mother, Ellen, and childhood friend, Vince Guaraldi, died. Of his four children, he was still raising two.

Between 1980 and 1982, Duran recorded with Tania Maria.[8] In 1983, Duran remarried to Madeleine ("Mad") Askew. In the late 1980s, after his last two children had grown, Duran moved to New York City and performed in a quartet that he organized.

Duran crossed paths with Getz again in 1983 while recording the Dee Bell studio album, Let There Be Love.

The list of jazz artist he has performed with extend to Charlie Parker, George Shearing, Red Norvo, and Earl Hines.[8]

Duran was once a licensed barber.[2][9]

Family

Duran's father, Fernando Duran (1889–1942) was born in Mexico worked in a cigar factory in the Bay Area. Duran's middle name, Lozano, was the maiden name of his mother, Emma E. Duran (1893–1977), who in 1940 married Ignacio Torez Maun (1894–1986).

Duran started on piano at age seven and switched to guitar at 12. After about seven months of lessons, he began teaching himself. He had five brothers and one sister. His brother, Carlos (1917–1998), was a jazz bassist and his brother, Manuel, (1923–2005) was a jazz pianist. His daughter, Sharman Laura Duran, is a keyboardist and vocalist. Another daughter, Pilar F. Duran, is a guitarist.

Duran's first wife of twenty-five years, Arlene (née Arlene Ruth Wolf), died in 1977 — the same year his mother died. On October 19, 1983, he married Madeleine ("Mad") Askew in Sonoma County, California. Mad Duran, who is twenty-eight years younger than Eddie Duran, is a classically trained flutist and saxophonist and music educator. Duran and his wife have collaborated on five albums, including From Here to the Moon: Mad and Eddie Duran, which they produced in 1996.

Discography

As leader

  • Eddie Duran Jazz Guitarist (Fantasy, 1956) OCLC 15717251[10]
  • Ginza (Concord Jazz, 1979) OCLC 12632005
  • Let There Be Love (Concord Jazz, 1982)
  • One by One (Concord Jazz, 1984)
  • From Here to the Moon: Mad and Eddie Duran (Milestone, 1996) OCLC 43512890
  • Eddie Rides Again – Eddie Duran, Alone (Mad & Eddie Duran Recordings, 2000)
  • Brazilian Passion (2000)
  • That Bossa Nova Thing (2000)
  • Samba Cocktail (2000)

As sideman

With Dee Bell

  • 1982 Let There Be Love (Concord Jazz) OCLC 10424273
  • 1984 One by One (Concord Jazz) OCLC 12657628

With Vince Guaraldi

  • 1956 Vince Guaraldi
  • 1957 A Flower Is a Lovesome Thing
  • 1963 In Person OCLC 9149358
  • 1964 Jazz Impressions
  • 1964 The Latin Side of Vince Guaraldi
  • 1965 A Charlie Brown Christmas
  • 1968 Oh, Good Grief! OCLC 42573529
  • 1968 Vince Guaraldi with the San Francisco Boys Chorus
  • 1969 Alma-Ville
  • 1969 The Eclectic Vince Guaraldi

With Tania Maria

  • 1980 Piquant (Concord) OCLC 66518352
  • 1981 Taurus, (Concord Jazz) OCLC 178688531, 472742033
  • 1983 Come with Me (Concord Jazz) OCLC 9691846, 760335330

With others

  • 1954 Tjader Plays Tjazz, Cal Tjader
  • 1956 Earl "Fatha" Hines Plays Fats Waller, Earl Hines (Fantasy) OCLC 33810314
  • 1958 Cal Tjader-Stan Getz Sextet, Stan Getz/Cal Tjader OCLC 35228265
  • 1962 Ay Que Rico!, Francisco Aguabella/Benny Velarde
  • 1975 Tell Me the Truth, Jon Hendricks
  • 1981 Seven Stars, Eiji Kitamura (Concord Jazz) OCLC 16713741
  • 1981 The Three Horns of Herb Steward, Herbie Steward (Famous Door) OCLC 16809746
  • 2001 Gus Mancuso & Special Friends, Gus Mancuso[11]

Selected videos

"Prelude To a Kiss" Video on YouTube
  • Fritz Brothers Guitars
Eddie Duram Model Video on YouTube

References

Notes

  1. Bill Weaver was the pseudonym of William Francis Ward (1920–1996)
  2. Duran's tenure with the CBS Radio Orchestra at Palace Hotel is not precisely known. His engagement with the orchestra secured stable income as a performer and strengthened his proficiency as a straight-ahead player in a studio orchestra, a genre that Duran repeated in the late seventies with Benny Goodman.
  3. Stan Noonan (né Stanley Jack Noonan; 1912–1996)
  4. Benny Velarde (born 1929), a percussionist, immigrated to the United States and became a naturalized citizen in 1950. His birth name was Epimenides Bayardo Velarde. When he was naturalized, he changed his legal name to Bayardo Crespo Velarde.

Inline citations

  1. "Disc-ussion — Pair Excels Back to Back," by Christopher Colombi, Jr. (1942–1991), Plain Dealer, November 23, 1979, pg. 207
  2. 1 2 Ginell, Richard S. "Eddie Duran". AllMusic. Retrieved 5 December 2017.
  3. "Deaths: William F. Ward," Broadcasting & Cable, Vol. 126, No. 53, December 30, 1996, pg. 68
  4. "Radio Orchestras of San Francisco," by Jack M. Bethards (né John Bethards; born 1940), Paramount Theatre Music Library, Oakland, California (2010), reprinted from the AFM Local Six Newsletter
  5. Vince Guaraldi at the Piano by Derrick P. Bang (1955), McFarland & Co. (2012), pg. 358; OCLC 770876349
  6. Interview with Eddie Duran," Liner Notes, Cal Tjader / Stan Getz Sextet (re-issue), Fantasy Records (2011); OCLC 700137213
  7. "Goodman's Stamp Marks Octet," by John S. Wilson, New York Times, June 30, 1976
  8. 1 2 Conversations with Great Jazz and Studio Guitarists, by Jim Carlton, Bill's Music Shelf: Mel Bay Publications (2009), pg. 148; OCLC 560167410
  9. The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz,, Barry Dean Kernfeld, PhD, & Stanley Sadie (eds.), Macmillan; OCLC 5104900439
        1st ed. (2 vols.) (1988); OCLC 16804283
        1st ed. (reissue, combining 2 vols.) (1994); OCLC 30516743
        2nd ed. (3 vols.) (2002); OCLC 46956628
  10. West Coast Jazz: Modern Jazz in California, 1945–1960 by Ted Gioia, University of California Press (1992); OCLC 24009620
  11. "Eddie Duran | Credits | AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved 5 December 2017.
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