Gerald Wilson
Collection
Gerald Wilson settled in Los Angeles in 1942. For
50 years he has been one of the principal composers and arrangers
in jazz. Wilson got his start in Jimmie Lunceford's swing orchestra
in 1939 (contributing the now-standard tune "Yarddog Mazurka")
and later wrote arrangements and originals for Duke Ellington,
Count Basie, Dizzie Gillespie, Ella Fitzgerald, Ray Charles, Benny
Carter, Lionel Hampton, Billie Holiday, Dinah Washington, Nancy
Wilson, Sarah Vaughn and many, many others. Wilson formed his
own orchestra, and in the late 50's made a series of superb albums
for Pacific Jazz, beginning with the "You Better Believe
It." The 70's, 80's and 90's have found Wilson (who was honored
as a National Endowment for the Arts American Jazz Masters fellow
in 1990) performing with his ace orchestra and producing such
fine albums as "Jenna" (Discovery) and "State Street
Suite" (MAMA).
His exciting and expanded version of Gershwin's
"Summertime" was debuted with his band at the Kennedy
Center in Washington, D.C. during summer 1997. Wilson's most recent
success was a work commissioned for the Monterey Jazz Festival's
40th anniversary. The composition entitled, "Theme for Monterey"
was premiered there on September 21, 1997 by the 19-piece Gerald
Wilson Orchestra.
To access descriptions of the Archive's Gerald
Wilson Collection,