Pete Jolly | |
Background: | non_vocal_instrumentalist |
Birth Name: | Peter A. Ceragioli Jr. |
Birth Date: | 5 June 1932 |
Birth Place: | New Haven, Connecticut, United States |
Death Place: | Pasadena, California, United States |
Genre: | Jazz |
Occupation: | Musician, composer |
Instrument: | Piano, accordion |
Years Active: | 1947–2004 |
Pete Jolly (born Peter A. Ceragioli Jr., June 5, 1932 – November 6, 2004)[1] was a two-time Grammy-nominated American West Coast jazz pianist and accordionist. He is known for his performance of television themes and movie soundtracks.
Jolly began playing the accordion at age three[2] and appeared on the radio program Hobby Lobby at the age of seven. He was raised in Phoenix, Arizona, a hotbed of jazz at the time. One of his best friends and collaborators in Phoenix was guitarist Howard Roberts, whom he met at the age of 13. Following Roberts to Los Angeles in 1952, he immediately began working with the best players on the West Coast jazz scene, including Shorty Rogers. He moved easily into studio and session work.[3] Besides his performances as a pianist, he also played the accordion.
His composition "Little Bird" (a minor hit on Fred Astaire's Ava Records) was nominated for a Grammy Award in 1963, and he formed the Pete Jolly Trio in 1964. With the Trio and as a solo artist, he recorded several albums, including earning a Grammy nomination for Best Instrumental Jazz Performance – Small Group or Soloist with Small Group. One of the last albums was a collaboration—aptly entitled Collaboration—with Jan Lundgren, Chuck Berghofer, and Joe LaBarbera in 2000. His final album, It's a Cool Heat, was recorded in Phoenix in May 2004 shortly before his death. He worked with Buddy DeFranco, Art Pepper, and Red Norvo, and for many years with music arranger and director Ray Conniff and Herb Alpert, recording on Alpert's record label, A&M as both sideman and leader.
Jolly's music can be heard on television programs such as Get Smart, The Love Boat, I Spy, Mannix, M*A*S*H and Dallas, as well as hundreds of movie soundtracks. He recreated some of Bud Powell's playing with Charlie Parker for Clint Eastwood's biographical movie about Parker, Bird. By day, Jolly worked in the studios; by night, with his trio. He continued to perform with his trio in Los Angeles jazz clubs until shortly before being hospitalized in August 2004. His final public performance with his trio was in Reno, Nevada. Jolly died at the age of 72 in November 2004 in Pasadena, California, from complications of multiple myeloma. He is buried at San Gabriel Cemetery in San Gabriel, California.
The Pete Jolly Trio had only one bassist, Chuck Berghofer, and one drummer, Nick Martinis. Berghofer later said, "In all that time, Pete never once told me how to play or what to play."
Year recorded | Title | Label | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1955 | Jolly Jumps In | RCA Victor | With Shorty Rogers (trumpet), Jimmy Giuffre (tenor sax, baritone sax), Howard Roberts (guitar), Curtis Counce (bass), Shelley Manne (drums)[4] | |
1955? | Duo, Trio, Quartet | RCA Victor | ||
1956? | When Lights Are Low | RCA Victor | ||
1959? | Impossible | MetroJazz | ||
1960 | The Duo | VSOP | Duo, with Ralph Peña (bass) | |
1962? | 5 O'Clock Shadows | MGM | ||
Continental Jazz | Stereo Fidelity | |||
1963? | The Sensational Pete Jolly Gasses Everybody | Charlie Parker | ||
1963 | Little Bird | Äva | Some tracks trio, with Chuck Berghofer (bass), Larry Bunker (drums); some tracks with Howard Roberts (guitar), Kenny Hume (percussion) added[5] | |
1963 | Sweet September | Äva | Most tracks trio, with Chuck Berghofer (bass), Larry Bunker (drums); some tracks quartet, with Howard Roberts (guitar), Berghofer (bass), Nick Martinis (drums);[6] Nominated for a Grammy for Best Instrumental Jazz Performance – Small Group or Soloist with Small Group | |
1964 | Hello, Jolly! | Äva | Two tracks trio, with Chuck Berghofer (bass), Howard Roberts (guitar), and Nick Martinez (drums); all others with orchestra arranged and conducted by either Dick Hazard or Dick Grove. | |
1960–65? | Live in L.A.: Red Chimney and Sherry's Bar | VSOP | Most tracks with Chuck Berghofer and Ralph Peña (bass; separately), Nick Martinis (drums); in concert; released 1994[7] | |
1965? | Too Much, Baby | Columbia | Trio, with Chuck Berghofer (bass), Nick Martinis (drums)[8] | |
1968? | Herb Alpert Presents Pete Jolly | A&M | With John Pisano (guitar), Chuck Berghofer (bass), Earl Palmer (drums), orchestra[9] | |
1969 | Timeless | VSOP | With Chuck Berghofer (bass), Nick Ceroli (drums) | |
1970? | Give a Damn | A&M | With Chuck Berghofer (bass), Nick Ceroli (drums), brass; in concert[10] | |
1970? | Seasons | A&M | With Chuck Berghofer (bass), Paul Humphrey (drums), John Pisano (guitar), Milt Holland and Emil Richards (percussion), brass | |
1980? | Strike Up the Band | Atlas | ||
1993? | Yours Truly | Bainbridge | Trio, with Chuck Berghofer (bass), Nick Martinis (drums)[11] | |
Gems | Holt | |||
1995 | Yeah! | VSOP | With Chuck Berghofer (bass), Nick Martinis (drums) | |
2001 | Collaboration | With Jan Lundgren (piano), Chuck Berghofer (bass), Joe LaBarbera (drums) |
Compilations
With Elmer Bernstein
With Kenny Burrell
With Buddy Collette
With Jerry Donato
With Joni James
With J. J. Johnson
With Quincy Jones
With Johnny Mandel
With Gerry Mulligan
With Jack Nitzsche
With Shorty Rogers
With Tom Waits