Category Archives: Uncategorized

The New York Scene

Even in my day NYC was special like no other place on the planet.  I am a new kid just having moved to Manhattan playing in a club on 52nd street in 1979.  A record producer walks in and says “I like your playing would you like to do a session for me” and i say sure. He tells me when and where.  I walk in the studio and it is Phil Wilson , Al Klink ,  John Bunch , George Mraz and Mousey Alexander who’s album it was.  No rehearsal mostly one takes and we hit it sink or swim. That’s the NY experience and as the song says “if you can make it there you can make it anywhere”.  Glenn

Cottontail :


My First Jazz Quintet

I was 12 years old and we appeared several times on the Chubby Jackson TV show below.  This quintet was also part of a big band and we won a contest to appear at the Atlantic City Jazz Festival.  I remember that “hang” like yesterday with Diana Washington , The Oscar Peterson Trio , Gerry Mulligan and Art Blakey who had Wayne Shorter in his band. Also below is a track from an album we recorded with the quintet at the time.  Glenn

Greeesleeves :


Glenn Z 1

 

My “Kid” Christmas Album


Sleigh Ride

I was part of a jazz band when i was a kid check out the photo above just sent to me i guess i was destined to be a bandleader !  We had a ball and did a Christmas Album organized by pianist Stu Hemmingway a student of Bill Evans at the time..  Also we won a competition for the Stamford High School Jazz band led by Russ Martino who was the director and played the Atlantic City Jazz festival with Gerry Mulligan , Dinah Washington and many other jazz stars.  I didn’t live in Stamford and wasn’t in high school as you can see and I was “imported” from Portchester NY into that band !  I remember vividly being in the wings at the festival waiting to go on mesmerized watching the great Dinah Washington a real diva sing her big hit of the day “What a difference a day makes” like it was last night.   I recently hooked up with a good friend who was the saxophone player during that period Rod Blumenau second from the front in the picture and trombonist Dave Barnebl in front the “main reindeer pulling the sled. and he was very strong and i didn’t have to use the “rod” in my right hand too much at all.  Rod Blumenau is not only a wonderful saxophone player but also a pianist with several CDs out himself.  I will be posting more tracks from the albums i did during that period but here is one from the Christmas album. As a piece of trivia we recorded this at Nola Penthouse in NY one of the finest studios and 22 years later i did my Christmas Album in the same studio. Glenn

Greensleeves :

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NAMM 2013

Glenn Zottola Legends SeriesVery exciting at NAMM this weekend with RS Berkeley as they released the Glenn Zottola Trumpet Mouthpiece Model.  Also a real tribute to my dad who was a master brass mouthpiece maker. In 1979 I went to my dad to make some modifications to meet all my demands. I wanted a mouthpiece that would give me the fire in the upper register but also a fat warm sound across the horn. This became a one of a kind mouthpiece and was never released in his standard line up. I played this mouthpiece my whole career on over 40 jazz albums and touring the world , Carnegie Hall and on network Television and it has served me well in every possible setting.  RS Berkeley is a cutting edge instrument company producing incredible Saxophones with Vintage quality that no longer exists.  They also have started a Legend mouthpiece line for both Saxophone and Trumpet making available copies of the actual mouthpieces of the greatest jazz legends in history. My hats off to Les Silver the president of RS Berkeley for all he has done for all artists and music and continues to do so.  Thank you Les from all of us.  Glenn

Salute To Count Basie

I was rummaging through old LPs out of print and found this album I did for Butch Miles for Famous Door Records.  It was a great album with Basie alumni, the great Freddie Green on guitar, Frank Wess , Milt Hinton etc.   I remember dragging a tenor sax to the session along with my trumpet.  Harry Lim, the producer said in the liner notes, “Glenn Zottola is experimenting with tenor and this is his first recorded solo on the tenor”, which it was.  Harry was very gracious allowing me to do these kind of things off the cuff at a session no less.  You will hear 2 tenors trading back and forth, Frank Wess and George Anders and then I play the last solo 2 choruses on tenor from the trumpet section after the short ensemble break , what a sight seeing a trumpet player standing up in the trumpet section taking a tenor solo !!  Count Basie was probably the most beloved bandleader in history.  I will never forget the first and only time I met him.  I was playing the warm up act for his big band with my quintet.  I came off stage after my set and as I was walking past his dressing room I hear this voice “young man, young man come in here”.   I walk in and there he is smiling and for another generation it’s like seeing Elvis Presley or Michael Jackson.  He says “You’ve been listening to Pops”  and I say yes for sure.  He says “You sound great don’t change anything keep doing exactly what you are doing”.  I couldn’t believe Count Basie took the time out to compliment me like that and I was in heaven.

I Can’t Believe You Are In Love With Me :


Classic Jazz Trio Live

This is the Classic Jazz Trio “live” at the Rotherham Arts Center in England that i would like to release someday.  The Jazz Titans CD recently released on the Classic Jazz Label is the studio recording of the band when it was first formed also wonderful.  We did a grueling 35 concert tour after that recording in 30 days and the intensity just kept building as only a live performance can do.  Mark Shane was playing at Teddy Wilson’s level in his prime and I was capturing Benny Goodman’s intensity that I vividly remember from working with him.  This Idea all started for me after working in Benny’s sextet for 2 years and he still had that intensity.  I vividly remember one thing i will never forget as Benny would play “The world Is Waiting For The Sunrise”  at  breakneck speed and at one point he would wave the whole band out except just him and guitar and I was amazed as the Intensity did not drop at all which was a real tribute to his time and swing.  I wanted this trio to capture the intensity of his historic trio with Teddy Wilson and Krupa and I feel we certainly achieved that as one can hear from this track and what a great audience this was which certainly helps.

Glenn

After You’ve Gone :

Suzanne Somers TV Show Audio “Air Checks”

I will be putting the audio broadcast “air checks” as we call it from the Suzanne Somers show on the website as I find and edit them. By “air checks” i mean music coming in and out of commercial breaks in the TV studio at Universal Studios.   Suzanne gave me carte blanche musically and I ran with the ball.  We were getting standing ovations in the studio at Universal Studios as people never heard music like this on network Television.  I played everything from swing to Brazilian, Ballads, R&B and “Be Bop” like this cut on “I Got Rhythm” just like i would do on a jazz gig.  Everything had to be timed perfectly to the second and I learned the knack of creating  and playing while wearing an ear piece with the director talking in my ear and counting down to come out of commercial breaks which is what was happening during this cut.  It’s like “compartmenting” your mind and multi – tasking one part for bandleading at a very intense precise level because of Television and the other for pure creativity all at the same time !  I got to like it once I got it down and it became a challenge and fun !  And by the way since any downtime or mistakes cost $50,000 per hour there was extra “incentive” to get it right the first time !!!
Glenn

I got Rhythm :

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Stardust :

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Sidewinder type groove :

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Lady Be Good :

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7 Steps To Heaven :

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I thought About You :

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This was early morning and we had some down time. Suzanne and the director asked me to “warm up” the audience . If i remember she was sitting on the stage and got into what i was doing as you can hear !!  Great times !!

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Glenn Zottola “Christmas in Jazz Time”

Christmas in Jazztime

I loved doing this Christmas Album with all my friends and some real legends here that are no longer with us. Everyone was extremely busy on the road etc. with various bands so i scheduled the session in NYC on a day everyone was in town. We did the entire album in 7 hours straight unheard of !  Funny story there was a set up guy in the studio and after we were done he came up to me in shock. He said “i have never seen anything like this before and last week we had a rock band in here and they spent 1 full week trying to get a balance on the drums and you jusy did an entire album in 7 hours”. That’s what happens when you have total pros!

Read more and listen

Happy Holidays and enjoy!  Glenn

Some Trivia :

The verse to “White Christmas” written by Irving Berlin is seldom heard and If you listen to the lyrics you will hear the story on how he was in LA when he wrote it missing the holidays in NY and boy can i relate to that!!

Also when I was 14 years old I recorded a Jazz Christmas Album at Nola Penthouse one of the top studios in NY with a jazz quintet led by a dear friend Stuart Hemmingway who was a school mate and pianest from CT and was a student of Jazz Legend Bill Evans and now here i was in the same studio 25 years later doing a Jazz Christmas album.   Lifes cycles are amazing!

Maxinne Sullivan and Glenn Zottola

Maxine Sullivan Sings the Music of Jule Styne

As you can see i have had the privilege to work with some great singers and stars from Sinatra to Tony Bennett , Mel Torme , Ella Fitzgerald , Peggy Lee , Joe Williams and many more. There is one singer extremely underrated who was a “musicians singer” meaning she was truly part of the band Maxine Sullivan who had a big hit in the 40s on a Celtic folk song she did swing style called “Lock Lomond”. She guested on my Christmas Album and i did several albums for her. We also traveled on the road together and did many live gigs. Maxine played trumpet also and i have a video of that i have to get transferred to DVD. She was an inspiration to a lot of people including Peggy Lee and she knew how to deliver a song in the most simple direct way and she could swing. This is the second album i did for her which was all Jule Styne music and Maxine was in her 70s at the time. There was one song on this album we did together “Killing Time” and the story goes that the lyricist was dying of cancer when she wrote these lyrics. I wanted to share this poignant moment and song with you and i decided to use the Harmon Mute for the solo on this song as i thought it was appropriate to the mood and the message. Glenn

Killing Time :


Suzanne Somers and Glenn Zottola “But Beautiful”

In my career I have had several what you might call “foils” to create with. These are artists where i had a tremendous rapport right from the start and it was just easy to make music together. In the Jazz world Benny Goodman was one of those artists who I spent 2 years with side by side on stage. Bob Wilber the great soprano player was another and we were together several years and recording many albums.  Suzanne Somers was a very special artist and we had a rapport or “simpatico” that was very special from the first moment as is very obvious from this clip. This song one of my favorite standards “But Beautiful” is the one that started that musical relationship with Suzanne that lasted for 9 years and definitely was a high point to an illustrious career for me. This clip is from our live show on a video titled Suzanne Somers Live featuring Glenn Zottola.

Summertime

I was driving with my wife Diana to the studio to record an album in the 90s and a thought came into my head.  I realized “Summertime” could work perfectly in the format of “All Blues” from the historic Miles Davis album “Kind of Blue”.  When I arrived at the studio I told the Rhythm section you play “All Blues” and i will play “Summertime” and it will all work out.  No arrangement or rehearsal and this was the result which became the title tune.  It’s great when things happen spontaneous like that which is what jazz is all about.  Glenn

Summertime :


Story about Glenn Miller

The Glenn Miller Band was the first band that I went on the road with when I was 17 years old. Obviously Glenn Miller was gone and great clarinetist Buddy Defranco was leading the band.  Many years later I was on tour in England with Peanuts Hucko and we were playing for the Glenn Miller society.  As you might know Glenn was huge in England and very loved as they used to broadcast from there during the war giving so much relief through music.  Peanuts was in that band during that time and had such wonderful stories.
Anyway after the gig one night a lady came up to me to tell me how much she loved my playing. She then proceeded to tell me she worked in the tower at the airport the night Glenn took off to fly over the English Channel to get to a gig.  She said she went up to him and begged him not to take off as she knew he wasn’t going to make it because of weather and other factors but he did anyway.  As we all know he never arrived on the other side that fateful night.

Glenn

Peggy Lee and Glenn Zottola

Love Held Lightly

Recorded Aug 29th and Sept 2 1988

Love Held Lightly

What an honor to do this album with Peggy. This was one of her last albums and she wanted to do a jazz album of rare Harold Arlen songs that have not been heard that much. What an amazing band with Myself , Ken Peplowski , George Masso , Phil Bodner along with Jay Leonhart and Grady Tate. The arrangements were beautifully done by pianist Keith Ingam who i had done several of Maxinne Sullivan’s albums with prior. Funny story as i had not met Peggy before this session and we really hit it off not only musically but telling each other Benny Goodman stories. She said to me “do you know what Benny paid me for my big hit that i wrote “Why don’t you do me right”  ?   I knew what might be coming but was shocked when she said $25.00 including the session !   Peggy’s health was not good and she did this album in a wheel cheer but her spirit was great and that voice unmistakable. Also i mentioned t her all my work with Maxinne Sullivan and she said Maxinne was a huge influence on her and i never thought of it before but i can definetly see the similarily in her style with Maxinne with that light no effort natural swinging approach they both have delivering a song in it’s most simple beautiful way like Billie Holiday check out “got to wear you off my mind”. These are moments that make it all worth it. One more thing kind of inside and i hope Peggy wouldn’t mind me related this story. She did this album in a wheelchair due to her health with a nurse in the studio. She told me she got TB years ago in Europe and only had one lung. The point i want to make was her spirit was so beautiful at the session we laughed and told stories and she sang her heart out. Try to imagine me sitting there seeing Peggy Lee with all her glorious history in a wheelchair singing the very last tune on this album  “My Shining Hour” just her and John Chiodini on guitar and check out the lyrics of this song as she departed shortly after and what a statement.   What i way to sign off and  I will never forget that moment !  I feel so fortunate to have had these experiences. Glenn

Got To Wear You Off My Mind :


My Shining Hour :


Louis Armstrong

Lillette Jenkins

Recorded 12 January 1988

  Louis Armstrong was my first mentor and inspriration and this album i did for Bob Wilber was a true joy. Great band and great material. Check out this arrangement Bob did on “Hotter Than That” where he took Louies original scat solo from the 1920s note for note and arranged it for 4 horns. Listen to the ensemble in the middle of the song after the tenor solo and can you believe how far ahead Louie was in every way rhythmically , harmonically and we are talking 1920s here. True genius  Wow !!

Hotter Than That :


Upcoming Release Tenor Album Volume 2

This is the second tenor album I just finished that will be released shortly after the first one “Too Marvelous For Words”.  What a beautiful rhythm section to play with and I love the Vintage RS Berkerley Tenor and Stan Getz Legend Mouthpiece especially for this kind of playing  ! Glenn

Sample Track “Jeepers Creepers”  :


Glenn Zottola Playing Tenor and Trumpet with the Bechet Legacy

I was amazed to find this on you tube and as never knew I played saxophone with the Bechet Legacy and I am sure this is the only time.  When I was on the road in Europe with The Classic Jazz Trio around 1991 a group just released on CD called “Jazz Titans” on the Classic Jazz Records the promoter rented a tenor for me and I can only assume I did this date with the Bechet Legacy around the same time that we were touring with the trio.  Wow it is fun finding these things and I have to “confess” no pun intended having the audience appreciate your work like this and give a standing ovation is very rewarding !  It’s also great after all these years I finally got the oppurtunity to do a full tenor album which will be out shortly on the Music Minus One Label.   Glenn

Bechet Legacy In Europe

New Release “Tribute To Charlie Parker”

This is the 3rd Album soon to be released with a combination of orchestra and strings and small group to give a nice spectrum of settings Charlie Parker recorded in.   ”Moonlight In Vermont” is the opening song of this album and is one of my favorites and has that classic 50s string feel of the era.  The small group track which is next is “lady be good” and what a ball playing with this Rhythm section that included really tasteful pianist  Don Abney along with jazz legends Oscar Pettiford and Kenny Clarke real stars from the Golden Age of Jazz who played extensively with Charlie Parker.  The last track “i’m in the mood for love” is a beautiful arrangement slightly more contemporary that i am sure Charlie Parker would of loved to blow on as i did. Click “Go to Full Album” below to read more on this project and Charlie Parker .  Glenn

Sample Tracks:

Moonlight In Vermont – with strings


Lady Be Good – small group


I’m In The Mood For Love – with strings


Go to full album

New Release And Time Travel To 52nd Street

This Tenor Album is something I have been wanting to do for quite awhile and there is a story behind it as you will see in the liner notes. This All Star Rhythm section was originally recorded in 1952 by Irv Kratka which launched the historic Music Minus One series and included jazz greats Kenny Clarke, Osie Johnson, Bobby Donaldson, Oscar Pettiford, Milt Hinton, Wilbur Ware, Jimmy Raney, Mundell Lowe, Barry Galbraith, Nat Pierce and Don Abney all who are on this album and were the players that were playing every night with legends like Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis, Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young and Stan Getz on what was called “The Street”.  When I was 9 years old being an “ear player” and having an aversion to practicing out of books I just wanted to make the music I already heard in my head and these records helped me shape my jazz style.  I took these same tracks from 1952  and recorded my tenor in Dec 2011 taking my own 55 year “time travel” journey.  I wanted the listener to experience a taste of the sound and spirit of 52nd street in NYC during the “Golden Age of Jazz”.  I want to thank Les Silver of RS Berkeley Instruments for providing me with the Virtuoso Vintage Tenor and Stan Getz Legend Mouthpiece both a joy to play for this album and Bev Getz for keeping her Dad’s legacy alive.  Check out these tracks from the upcoming album release and enjoy ! Glenn

Too Marvelous For Words


Three Little Words


Jazz Education

I have never been one for the traditional educational route in music and since i was very young all my learning has come on the bandstand having the priviledge of being mentored by the greats.  I finally decided to take the plunge and attempt to pass down to others what i have had the priviledge of receiving these last 50 years. I just finished 2 albums with that in mind and I am working on a third with my good friend Irv Kratka at Music Minus One. I will keep you informed as this new endeavor unfolds. Glenn

Encounter With Miles Davis

miles

It was 1961 and i had just finished the Ted Mack show (see video) and my dad took me to the famous jazz club in NYC Birdland.  Those days if you were under age you could sit in a section called the bleachers and watch the shows and they didn’t serve alchohol. At the time my dad was working with Maynard Ferguson making him a mouthpiece and he was performing that night with his famous 1961 big band. Also headlining was the classic Miles Davis Sextet above with Cannonball Adderly and John Coltrane in the front line with Miles. After Miles finished his set i went over to the bandstand to take a look at his horn from a distance. As i was looking this head pops out from behind the courtain (Miles) and he says in that voice “what are are you doing”.  I reply “i am a trumpet player and i am just looking at your horn”.  Miles says “alright” and dissapears and i never saw him again !   After Maynard saw my performance on Ted Mack he asked my dad if he could take me out on the road as his protege in which my dad politely said “thankyou but i would like him to have a normal childhood”.  Amazing times !  Glenn

New Release “Jazz Titans”

Jazz Titans
When I left the Benny Goodman Sextet after 2 years i joined Bob Wilber who formed the Bechet Legacy and we did many tours and albums . Both those gigs allowed me to hone my skills playing in a classic jazz format that attracted me when i was very young with Louis Armstrong who was my first influence. I always wondered what it would be like to play in the format Benny had with his famous trio with Teddy Wilson and Gene Krupa. I met Mark Shane in the Bechet Legacy and he blew me away with his playing out of the Teddy Wilson style. I had played with Teddy briefly and Mark definetly did that better than anyone since Teddy plus added other flavors of later styles like Hank Jones. I wanted this music even though it had no bass to have a spectrum from classic jazz to swing and even Be-Bop. I was on tour with Peanuts Hucko and Mark Shane was in that band also. The english drummer Mark Manniat also was a booking agent and brought over several american jazz artists like Peanuts to tour. We decided this would be a nice thing to try so Mark booked us on 2 tours in England two years in a row to rave reviews. After the second tour was over in 1994 I left for LA to be bandleader on the Suzanne Somers TV show. It’s great that Irv Kratka at Classic Jazz took an interest in this music and remastered the sound and pacakaged it so beautifully to preserve it. Glenn

Read more

Sample Tracks:

Jubilee – Trumpet


These Foolish Things – Alto


spring cleaning – vocal


Record Producers

Through the years i have worked with several record producers. It’s a very tough game and many are no longer here. Recently i hooked up with one such producer Irv Kratka who may have as many stories as me and we have become music friends as he is a true jazz lover. He is a real survivor and an icon in many ways and still enjoys creating which i admire greatly. He released an album I did in 1994 in Europe “Jazz Titans” that was dormant and I just finished 2 tenor saxophone albums for him geared toward jazz education. These new albums which will shortly be released will give you interesting insight into my history with his label and the roll it played in my musical developement. Below is an article that was recently published on his activities and record label Music Minus One. Glenn

Music Minus One, the company with the unique, unforgettable name, was begun in 1950, with a first recording devoted to Schubert’s Trout Quintet, with all five instruments omitted in five different MMO’s This release received a full page review in The New York Times As a result articles appeared in Look, Life, Time, Newsweek and hundreds of papers across the USA and Europe

In the following years we continued to release chamber music and jazz rhythm recordings utilizing the best of New York’s players at the time, many of whom are legends in music. Such names as Stan Getz, Hank Jones, Max Roach, Sam Baron, Julius Baker, Murray Panitz, Doriot Dwyer, Elaine Douvas, Donald Peck, Armando Ghitalla, Stanley Drucker and countless other first chair players in the five major American orchestras were prevailed upon to add their skills to MMO recordings.
Today, 61 years after our inception, MMO offers close to nine hundred albums, devoted to classical, chamber music, opera, lieder, popular , jazz and religious music from all times and periods, from the Baroque, thru the Romantic and Classical periods in music. MMO set the tone and style for the dozens of other publishers in music. We now offer their product as well, bringing our total offerings close to seven thousand book/record combinations. MMO was begun by a college student, in his 24th year, Irv Kratka, who remarkably enough is still at the helm of this extraordinary Westchester, New York company. He is now eighty-five and still active in the daily productions of the company which encompass recording both in the USA and in Europe where major orchestras are commissioned to perform the great concerti in music.

Irv Kratka
CEO, President

The Special Bond Amongst Musicians

When i launched my website i was contacted by a musician i went to high school with whom i haven’t spoken to in 45 years. He sent me pictures of all the musicians from school who have stayed connected all these years along with stories. There is a special bond amongst musicians that is a beautiful thing and i think the world would benifit greatly from that.  Glenn

Maxinne Sullivan and Glenn Zottola

Maxine Sullivan Sings the Music of Jule StyneAs you can see i have had the privilege to work with some great singers and stars from Sinatra to Tony Bennett , Mel Torme , Ella Fitzgerald , Peggy Lee , Joe Williams and many more. There is one singer extremely underrated who was a “musicians singer” meaning she was truly part of the band Maxine Sullivan who had a big hit in the 40s on a Celtic folk song she did swing style called “Lock Lomond”. She guested on my Christmas Album and i did several albums for her. We also traveled on the road together and did many live gigs. Maxine played trumpet also and i have a video of that i have to get transferred to DVD. She was an inspiration to a lot of people including Peggy Lee and she knew how to deliver a song in the most simple direct way and she could swing. This is the second album i did for her which was all Jule Styne music and Maxine was in her 70s at the time. There was one song on this album we did together “Killing Time” and the story goes that the lyricist was dying of cancer when she wrote these lyrics. I wanted to share this poignant moment and song with you and i decided to use the Harmon Mute for the solo on this song as i thought it was appropriate to the mood and the message. Glenn


Playing with Frank Sinatra

What a thrill to work with Frank Sinatra. Bobby Rosengarden and i were already doing the Jerry Lewis Telethon every labor day in NY and we got a call one year from Mary Tyler Moore who was launcing her own Telethon in LA for Juvenille Diabetes. Bobby called Doc Severinsen who he was very good friends with from the Tonight Show when it was in NY as Bobby was the drummer on that show. We both flew out to LA to put together the show and Doc graciously loaned us the whole tonight show band for this gig. These classic Sinatra arrangements were amazing and my trumpet almost played itself that night and what a band that was especially playing next to trumpet player and friend Snooky Young who swings like no other plus playing for the “Chairman of Board” is something i wont forget for sure. The twist and turns in life are amazing. I played with The Benny Goodman Sextet for 2 years and Benny was part of Frank’s launch at the famous Paramount Theatre in NY with lines of kids around the block and 50 years later here i am on TV with Frank who’s career went well beyond Benny.

Glenn

RS Berkeley Instruments and Rico Reeds

Thorough the years i have been involved with several companies and instruments. I Recently i teamed up with Les Silver who is a dear friend and president of RS Berkeley Instruments. He had a dream to not only develop beautiful vintage saxophones but preserve the sound of the great legends in jazz by reproducing the mouthpieces they played. I am very honored that he will be making available my personal trumpet mouthpiece i have used on all my recordings and television through the years which is a tribute to my dad who was a master brass mouthpiece maker. Also in coordination with Stan Getz’s daughter Bev Getz and Charlie Parker’s daughter Kim he has released the mouthpieces of those 2 legends with more to follow. On the tenor album i just completed i played the RS Berkeley Virtuoso Tenor Saxophone and the Stan Getz Legend series mouthpiece shown in this photo both a joy to play. Also i have played Rico reeds exclusively for 40 years and they have always come through for me in every situation and i  finally hooked up with them on a official endorsement basis. Both these companies beside having truly great products are some of the nicest people to do business with. For more information go to the links on the right of my website.  Glenn

Family and Career

When you are young and on your way up you kind of have tunnel vision to keep it moving as it is intense expecially in the music business which is not like a normal job. I just became a grandfather and i found this clip in my archives as i am always looking for things to include on this journey. That is my daughter at the end of the concert coming up on stage and i can’t believe she is grown up now with a baby. She is a wonderful visual artist now and thank god she didn’t continue her trumpet career by copying me any further ! Some great players here Marty Napoleon on piano who was with Louie Armstrong for years , Linc Milliman on bass also a great player and good friend who was on my first album at Eddie Condons , Ray Mosca on drums played with everybody including Gerry Mulligan and Oscar Peterson and Harold Ousley on Tenor Sax.