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Pete Candoli born 28 June 1923

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Pete Candoli (born Walter Joseph Candoli; June 28, 1923 – January 11, 2008) was an American jazz trumpeter and the brother of trumpeter Conte Candoli. He played with the big bands of Woody Herman and Stan Kenton and worked in the studios of the recording and television industries.
Pete & Conte

Candoli was born and brought up in Mishawaka, Indiana, with his younger brother Secondo, known to the jazz world as Conte Candoli, also a renowned trumpeter and soloist. Their father, a factory worker of Italian descent, played cornet in a local marching band and was keen for his sons to take up music as a way to a better life. 

Growing up in a household littered with instruments, it was little wonder that both boys showed promise, with Pete proficient on bass and French horn by the age of 12, before he changed to the trumpet, on which he was self-taught. So remarkable was his progress that he was soon playing local Polish weddings and dance jobs, qualifying for his musician's union card while still in his early teens. 

His first real break came when he joined the popular Sonny Dunham orchestra in 1941 for two years, before moving on to play lead trumpet with the Will Bradley, Ray McKinley and Tommy Dorsey orchestras. These were among the best bands of their day, but Candoli's greatest triumphs came when he joined the explosive Woody Herman big band in summer 1944, his 16-year old brother briefly alongside in the trumpet section until their mother hauled him back home to finish his education. 

The Herman orchestra (aka the First Herd) was then at the height of its fame, packed with star jazz soloists and great section players, Candoli paramount among them. His power and bandstand flamboyance earned him the title of "Superman with a horn" - so much so that he began to appear on stage in a Superman costume (which his first wife had made for him), leaping out from the wings to electrifying effect. 

This led to Candoli's routine as the superhero, described by Herman as: "One of our most successful gimmicks, which he initiated on his own. We were playing the last chorus of Apple Honey when he jumped out on stage in time to play his walloping passages. It brought the house down and remained part of our act." At the Paramount theatre in New York, Candoli refined his gimmick by sliding down a wire from a high balcony, arriving with split-second timing to play his high notes. 


                             

He won many awards, notably his selection as one of Esquire magazine's new stars of 1946. He can be heard screeching boppishly on many of the Herman Herd's greatest recordings, and played first trumpet when Igor Stravinsky premiered his Ebony Concerto, written specially for Herman. After the clarinettist disbanded the Herd temporarily, Candoli moved on again to play lead for a couple of years with the Tex Beneke and Jerry Gray bands. 

In the 1950’s he played  with Stan Kenton's New Concepts orchestra, where he teamed up with brother Conte once more, Candoli made for Los Angeles, where he stayed for the rest of his life. He entered fully into studio life, taking part in more than 5,000 recording sessions; and his lead talents were in constant demand for jazz dates, movie soundtracks (notably the Frank Sinatra vehicle, The Man with the Golden Arm), and television series, such as the Peter Gunn show. 

Pete conducting Orchestra for Judy Garland

He also found time to perform with Les Brown's Band of Renown and formed several combos with his brother, continuing intermittently until Conte's death in 2001. At other times, he was a member of the studio orchestra, again with his brother, for the Johnny Carson television show, and backed such singers as Peggy Lee and Ella Fitzgerald. He also managed to imitate Louis Armstrong, vocally and instrumentally; this act was launched during a tour of Japan with Benny Carter. 

The Candoli brothers were especially close (Pete once said they'd never exchanged a harsh word in their lives), and Pete suffered a devastating blow when Conte succumbed to cancer in December 2001. Pete didn't play much after that but still showed up at various jazz events. But he too had cancer, and it claimed his life on January 11, 2008, at age of 84. 

Candoli's three marriages, all to fellow performers, ended in divorce. He was married first to the actor Vicky Lane; then briefly to actor Betty Hutton in the 1960s; and finally to actor and singer Edie Adams, with whom he had appeared in nightclubs. As well as leading her orchestra and playing trumpet with them, Candoli also sang and danced on stage. 

(Edited from The Guardian, AllAboutJazz & Wikipedia)

Here’s Pete Candoli with Rosemary Clooney and Jeri Southern on piano on Clooney’s show in 1956.


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