Virgil Gonsalves
Virgil Gonsalves (5 September 1931 – 20 October 2008)[1] was an American saxophonist and clarinetist, though primarily a baritone saxophonist.
Career[]
Born in Monterey, California, Gonsalves was a baritone saxophonist with the orchestras of Alvino Rey (1950) and Tex Beneke (1952). In 1954 he formed an ensemble with Bob Enevoldsen, the tenor saxophonist Buddy Wise, Lou Levy, Harry Babasin, and Larry Bunker, and recorded the album Virgil Gonsalves Sextet in 1954 on Nocturne Records 8. Among the group's later members were Leo Wright, Junior Mance, Ron Crotty (born 1929), and Eddie Khan. Gonzalves also worked as a freelance, mainly in the San Francisco area (may be with[2] The Electric Flag).[3][4] He was a member of the Pacific Gas & Electric rock band from 1971 to 1972.[5] He died in Salinas, California.
Selected discography[]
As leader
- Virgil Gonsalves Sextet
- Los Angeles, September 23, 1954, Nocturne
- Virgil Gonsalves (baritone sax), Bob Enevoldsen (vocal, trombone), Buddy Wise (tenor sax), Lou Levy (pianist)|Lou Levy (piano), Harry Babasin (double bass), Larry Bunker (drums)
- Virgil Gonsalves, Jazz – San Francisco Style
- San Francisco, c. 1955, Liberty
- Bob Bagley (vocal, trombone), Danny Pateris (tenor sax), Virgil Gonsalves (baritone sax), Clyde Pound (piano), Ron Crotty (double bass), Max Hartstein (double bass), Gus Gustafson (drums)
As sideman
- Rudy Salvini Orchestra, Intro to Jazz
- San Francisco 1957
- Rudy Salvini, Allen Smith, Al Del Simone, Wayne Allen, Billy Catalano (trumpets), Van Hughes, Archie Lecoque, Chuck Etter, Ron Bertuccelli (trombones), Charles Martin (alto sax), Jerry Coker, Tom Hart, Howard Dudune (tenor sax), Virgil Gonsalves (baritone), John Marabuto (piano), Dean Reilly (double bass), (drums), Jerry Cournoyer, Jerry Mulvihill, Jerry Coker (arrangers)
As leader
- Virgil Gonsalves, Jazz at Monterey: Virgil Gonsalves Big Band Plus Six
- San Francisco, c. 1959, 1959
- San Francisco, c. 1959
References[]
- ^ Obituary: Gonsalves, Virgil; 77; Salinas CA, The Salinas Californian, October 25, 2008
- ^ "Electric Flag Featuring Erma Franklin San Francisco 1968". Big O. Retrieved 17 August 2017.
- ^ The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, Second edition, Volume 2 of 3, edited by Barry Dean Kernfeld (born 1950) (2002)
- ^ Fred M. Hall (born 1923), It's About Time: the Dave Brubeck Story, University of Arkansas Press (1996)
- ^ Who's Who in Rock Music, by William York, Charles Scribner's Sons, New York (1982)
- Jazz baritone saxophonists
- 1931 births
- 2008 deaths
- Cool jazz saxophonists
- American jazz baritone saxophonists
- Musicians from the San Francisco Bay Area
- 20th-century American musicians
- 20th-century saxophonists
- Jazz musicians from California
- Buddy Miles Express members