Bill Holman

Bill Holman

Person from United States

Genres: cool jazz, jazz, swing, traditional pop, big band music, Big Band, West Coast Jazz, cool

Bill Holman

About Bill Holman

Bill Holman (May 21, 1927 - May 6, 2024) was an American songwriter, conductor, composer/arranger, and saxophonist working primarily in the jazz idiom. Born Willis Leonard Holman in Olive, California, near Santa Ana, Holman took up clarinet in junior high school and tenor saxophone in high school. By his late teenage years he was leading his own band. After serving in the United States Navy, where he studied engineering, he decided in the late '40s that he wanted to write big band music. He studied for a while at the Westlake College of Music in Los Angeles. His teachers included Dave Robertson and Dr. Alfred Sendrey. He also studied composition privately with Russ Garcia and saxophone with Lloyd Reese. Holman played with the Ike Carpenter Band in 1949. During the '50s he was active in the West Coast jazz movement, playing in small bands led by Shorty Rogers and Shelly Manne. He wrote for Charlie Barnet in 1951; began his association with Stan Kenton in 1952, for whom he wrote and played for many years, eventually becoming Kenton's chief arranger and creating a large portion of the band's 1950s repertoire; and co-leading a quintet with Mel Lewis in 1958. In the '60s Holman widened his writing associations, eventually contributing pieces to libraries and recordings of bands led by Louie Bellson, Count Basie, Terry Gibbs, Woody Herman, Bob Brookmeyer, Buddy Rich, Gerry Mulligan, Doc Severinsen, and others. He has also written for such singers as Natalie Cole (her Grammy winning "Unforgettable" album, among others), Tony Bennett, Carmen MacRae, Mel Torme, Woody Herman, Anita O'Day, Sarah Vaughn, June Christy, and the Fifth Dimension. His arrangement of "Take The 'A' Train" for Severinsen's "Tonight Show Orchestra" earned Holman a Best Instrumental Grammy in 1987. Holman maintained The Bill Holman Band, a loose group of colleagues and top-flight studio players who specialize in playing Holman's writing, sporadically from the late 1950's until his death. The band made several albums: 1960's "Great Big Band" 1988's "The Bill Holman Band"; 1995's "A View From The Side", for which Holman won a Best Instrumental Composition Grammy for the title track; and 1997's "Brilliant Corners: The Music of Thelonious Monk". 2005's "Bill Holman Band Live", which was nominated for a Best Large Jazz Ensemble Grammy. After 1980 Holman was increasingly active in Europe, writing, conducting and playing lengthy works for the West German Radio Orchestra in Cologne, Germany, and the Metropole Orchestra in the Netherlands, that featured such soloists as Phil Woods, Sal Nistico, and Lee Konitz.

Taken from Last.fm

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On RadioStar

10
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15
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Bill Holman — Top 15 songs

Artist Song title Like / Dislike
Bill Holman Blue Daniel (Bill Holman Band Live)
Bill Holman 'Round Midnight
Bill Holman Thelonious
Bill Holman No heat
Bill Holman Goodbye Pork Pie Hat
Bill Holman Lush Life
Bill Holman Straight, No Chaser
Bill Holman Bright Eyes
Bill Holman A Day In The Life (Bill Holman Band Live)
Bill Holman Bary Me Not (Bill Holman Band Live)
Bill Holman Donna Lee (Bill Holman Band Live)
Bill Holman Zoot 'n' Al (Bill Holman Band Live)
Bill Holman Blue Jazz
Bill Holman The Moon Is Blue
Bill Holman The Moon of Manakoora
Blue Daniel (Bill Holman Band Live)
'Round Midnight
Thelonious
Goodbye Pork Pie Hat
Lush Life
Straight, No Chaser
Bright Eyes
A Day In The Life (Bill Holman Band Live)
Bary Me Not (Bill Holman Band Live)
Donna Lee (Bill Holman Band Live)
Zoot 'n' Al (Bill Holman Band Live)
Blue Jazz
The Moon Is Blue
The Moon of Manakoora