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词条 Buddy Boudreaux
释义

  1. Early life

  2. Education

  3. Music career

  4. Military service

  5. Other ventures

  6. Personal life and death

  7. Broadcasts and films

  8. Discography

  9. References

  10. External links

{{Infobox musical artist
| name = Buddy Boudreaux
| image =
|image_size = 200
| caption = Buddy Boudreaux in 1985
| background = non_vocal_instrumentalist
| birth_name = John Landry Boudreaux
| birth_date = {{birth date|1917|12|27}}
| birth_place = Donaldsonville, Louisiana, United States
| death_date = {{death date and age|2015|6|13|1917|12|27}}
| death_place = Baton Rouge, Louisiana, U.S.
| instrument = Saxophone
Clarinet
| genre = Big Band
Jazz
| occupation =
| years_active =
| label =
| associated_acts =
| website =
| current_members =
| past_members =
}}John Landry “Buddy” Boudreaux (December 27, 1917 – June 13, 2015) was a big band and jazz musician in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. He played saxophone and clarinet. Since 1934, he directed and played in a number of bands that have toured the southern United States and drawn nationally known performers to Baton Rouge. The State-Times newspaper called him “the city’s sound of big band.” [1] His bands backed such artists as Andy Williams, Bernadette Peters, Doc Severinsen, Dionne Warwick, Gladys Knight and the Pips, Burt Bacharach, Johnny Mathis, The Four Tops, Bob Hope, George Burns and Joan Rivers. He opened shows for Tony Bennett, Tony Orlando, Louise Mandrell, The Beach Boys and Bill Cosby.[2] He was co-author—with his barber, Michael T. Abadie—of “My Baton Rouge,” which in 1998 was declared the city’s official song.[2][2]

Early life

Boudreaux was born in Donaldsonville, Louisiana, and moved to Baton Rouge with his family six months later.[3] His father, Edward Lawrence Boudreaux (1893-1970), was a machinist supervisor at the Standard Oil refinery in Baton Rouge.[3] His mother, Rena Marie Landry Boudreaux (1889-1954), who played piano, encouraged her son’s interest in music, staying up late at night with the boy listening to live broadcasts of big band on the radio in the 1920s.[1][4][5]

A music teacher heard Boudreaux blowing a cousin’s saxophone and talked him into lessons. With money earned caddying for a neighbor who was the golf professional at a Baton Rouge country club, Boudreaux, at age 12, bought a saxophone and, for $10, a dozen music lessons, the only formal training he ever had.[1][4][5]

Education

Boudreaux was a 1936 graduate of Baton Rouge High School, where he played in the band.[6] To please his father, he enrolled as a chemical engineering major at Louisiana State University, but music remained his first interest. He played in the LSU Tiger Marching Band.[4][7] He dropped out of LSU after one semester to pursue a music career.[7] More than a decade later, after serving in World War II, he finished his studies on the G.I. Bill, earning a bachelor's degree in business administration at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1950.[7]

Music career

In 1929, Boudreaux joined a 12-piece neighborhood children’s orchestra that played for Saturday kiddie shows at the Paramount Theater.[8][9] He played his first professional engagement in 1932, at age 14, and two years later joined the Clovis Hendry Orchestra.[10] He began his career as a band leader in 1939 by visiting Baton Rouge clubs and claiming to have a band that was booked solid out of town for two months. Impressed, “the club owners hired him,” the State-Times newspaper wrote later. “Then he went out and formed a band.”[9] In addition to his own, Boudreaux performed with the Bob Crosby Orchestra, and the Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra under the direction of Lee Castle. He toured the South with the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra under the direction of Warren Covington.[8]

Those groups specialized in the swing music popular in the United States in the 1920s, ‘30s and ‘40s, when big bands criss-crossed the country to perform. Those nationwide tours became unprofitable in later decades as younger audiences turned to rock music. “However, the public had not lost its taste for swing or an evening of dancing,” Jazz Society reported, “and this spawned the growth of regional big bands, like Boudreaux’s Buddy Lee Orchestra, groups of top-notch musicians who only play locally.”[11]

The 16-piece Buddy Lee Orchestra was co-founded in 1973 by Boudreaux and Lee Fortier, a trumpet-playing friend from their days in the youth orchestra.[8] It was the best known of Boudreaux’s bands. In 1986, the Buddy Lee Orchestra alternated sets with Buddy Rich’s big band during a Baton Rouge performance billed as the Buddy Buddy Concert.[5]

Boudreaux performed from his early teens well into his 90s,[12] playing for Mardi Gras balls, dances, wedding receptions, riverboat parties, restaurant brunch crowds, and debutante balls.[8][5] Depending on the occasion, he assembled a seven-piece Buddy Boudreaux Dance Band (with vocalist Jerie Ford), a six-piece Buddy Boudreaux Jazz Ensemble, or a four-piece XL-Acoustic Jazz Combo.[5] “Over half a century,” the State-Times wrote in 1991, “he’s galvanized musicians who have entertained the city and drawn to it stars who would not have entertained here had there not been top quality musicians to back them up.”[9]

Military service

Boudreaux was a World War II veteran who served in the Army Air Corps from February 1943 to September 1945 in Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and Italy. He was attached to the 20th Replacement Battalion and reached the rank of sergeant major.[3] He took his music with him, performing in a seven-piece army band, the Dukes of Rhythm, for United Service Organization (USO) shows, officer dances and public dances in French Morocco.[5][3]

Other ventures

Boudreaux’s day job until 1980 was at the Standard Oil (now ExxonMobil) refinery and chemical plant complex in Baton Rouge. He started as an office boy in 1937 and retired as senior supervisor of the Financial Analysis and Reporting Operations Analysis sections.[9]

Between 1950 and 1990, he served as leader and representative of Local 538 of the American Federation of Musicians.

In 1998, he helped form the Louisiana Octogenarian Golf Team, which entered tournaments across the South and donated its winnings to the sponsoring charities. In his 80s, he won 32 Senior Olympics golf medals in Louisiana.[13] During his sons’ growing years, he served as a leader of their Cub Scout and Boy Scout packs.

Personal life and death

Boudreaux married Ruth Bowman Suthon (born 1925), an LSU graduate and Standard Oil co-worker, in 1947. They have four sons—Richard L. Boudreaux (1948) a journalist; John L. Boudreaux Jr. (1950), a retired FedEx pilot; Ronald C. Boudreaux (1956), a professional drummer; and Jeffrey L. Boudreaux (1959), a professional drummer—three grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.[9][5]

Boudreaux died in Baton Rouge on June 13, 2015, aged 97.[14]

Broadcasts and films

Boudreaux performed on the Derby Show, a daily broadcast on the Baton Rouge radio station WJBO to promote a three-month-long dance marathon in 1940. Boudreaux's music appeared in the movies The Toy (1982), Blaze (1989), and the French film Louisiana (1984).[5]

Discography

  • The Buddy Boudreaux Quartet (1983)
  • The Buddy Boudreaux Jazz Ensemble (1984)
  • My Baton Rouge (1985)
  • Buddy Lee Orchestra (1985)
  • XL-Acoustic Jazz Combo (1985)
  • The Buddy Boudreaux Dance Band (1985)

References

1. ^{{cite news|last1=Pennington|first1=Judy|title=Living life at his own tempo|publisher=State Times|date=June 28, 1991|location=Baton Rouge, LA}}
2. ^Resolution 27239, Metropolitan Council of the Parish of East Baton Rouge and City of Baton Rouge, March 23, 1998
3. ^T. Harry Williams Center for Oral History Collection (LSU Library), Interview with Buddy Boudreaux, April 11, 1999. Collection 4700.1138. Retrieved September 14, 2014.
4. ^“BR band with a big sound,” by Mildred Feldman, in the Morning Advocate, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, November 16, 1980
5. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.jazz.com/encyclopedia/boudreaux-buddy|title=Boudreaux, Buddy|website=jazz.com|access-date=2016-04-22|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20141006094028/http://www.jazz.com/encyclopedia/boudreaux-buddy|archivedate=2014-10-06|df=}}
6. ^{{Cite web|url=http://brhsfoundation.net/hall-of-fame|title=Hall of Fame Members « Baton Rouge High School Foundation|website=brhsfoundation.net|access-date=2016-04-22}}
7. ^“Living life at his own tempo,” by Judy Pennington, in the State-Times, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, June 28, 1991
8. ^“BR band with a big sound,” by Mildred Feldman, in the Morning Advocate, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, November 16, 1980.
9. ^“Living life at his own tempo,” by Judy Pennington, in the State-Times newspaper, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, June 28, 1991.
10. ^“Big Band sound to be featured at benefit for downtown landmark,” the Advocate, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, November 16, 1997.
11. ^“In Preseptive: Buddy Boudreaux,” by Sarah Bukhalter, Jazz Society, volume 3, number 4, April 1991.
12. ^{{Cite web|url=http://theadvocate.com/csp/mediapool/sites/Advocate/assets/templates/FullStoryPrint.csp?cid=9047392|title=Shows to Watch for May 2-8, 2014|date=May 2, 2014|website=theadvocate.com|access-date=2016-04-22|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160426034321/http://theadvocate.com/csp/mediapool/sites/Advocate/assets/templates/FullStoryPrint.csp?cid=9047392|archivedate=April 26, 2016|df=}}
13. ^“High Octane; 14-man team of 80-something golfers going strong while raising money for charity,” by Eddie Sefko in the Houston Chronicle, October 13, 1999.
14. ^{{cite news|last1=Wirt|first1=John|title=Saxophonist Buddy Boudreaux, leader of local jazz and dance bands since 1939, dies|url=http://theadvocate.com/news/12651472-123/saxophonist-buddy-boudreaux-leader-of|accessdate=15 June 2015|agency=The Advocate|date=14 June 2015}}

External links

{{authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Boudreaux, Buddy}}

9 : 1917 births|2015 deaths|American jazz clarinetists|American jazz saxophonists|American male saxophonists|Jazz musicians from Louisiana|Musicians from Baton Rouge, Louisiana|People from Donaldsonville, Louisiana|Male jazz musicians

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