Bud Spangler

Bud Spangler

Bud Spangler in 2005
Background information
Birth name Robert Spangler
Born (1938-12-07)December 7, 1938
Norwalk, Ohio, U.S.
Died January 16, 2014(2014-01-16) (aged 75)
Genres Jazz, R&B, blues, funk[1]
Occupation(s) Producer, composer, instrumentalist, radio personality, concert organizer
Instruments Percussion
Years active 1950s-2014
Labels Strata Records, Blue Note Records, Tribe Records, Monarch Records, Amoeba Music
Associated acts Tribe, Tom Peron, Interplay, Jessica Williams, Joe Gilman, Lyman Woodard, Contemporary Jazz Quintet
Website BudSpangler.com
Notable instruments
Drum set

Robert "Bud" Spangler (December 7, 1938 – January 16, 2014) was an American jazz percussionist, composer, radio broadcaster, music producer, and concert organizer.[2] He began his music career in the Detroit music scene of the 1960s, engineering for R&B, blues, and funk-oriented bands, and working as a drummer for jazz groups.[3] In the 1970s[1] that included working with Strata Records, Blue Note,[4] and Tribe Records.[3]

After moving to Northern California in the 1970s, Spangler produced Grammy-nominated recordings for jazz artists such as Taylor Eigsti, Mark Levine, and Cedar Walton,[5] and from 1982 co-led and performed in the modern jazz ensemble Tom Peron-Bud Spangler Interplay Quartet.[6] From 1991 to 2007[7] Spangler helped create and produce the Woodside, California concert series Jazz at Filoli. He worked as a host-producer at radio stations from the late 1950s,[8] including KCSM (FM)[9] in San Mateo and KJAZ (FM) in San Francisco.[1]

Early life

Robert "Bud" Spangler[4] was born in Norwalk, Ohio on December 7, 1938.[1] He moved to Wyandotte, Michigan at a young age, where he attended high school. Despite having had polio as a child, he began to learn percussion in the 7th grade, and took a particular interest in jazz.[5]

Career

Music in Detroit

Spangler moved to Lansing, Michigan in the late 1950s to attend Michigan State University.[4] Around that time he began drumming close to Detroit in Wyandotte, Michigan, where he played his first gigs with saxophonist Dick Lozon. He also performed locally while attending school, and through the Stan Kenton Summer Jazz Workshops at Michigan State met New Yorkers like trumpeter Marvin Stamm and saxophonist Charlie Mariano. He played gigs with both of them locally and in nearby Saugatuck.[1]

During the mid-'60s he connected with veteran saxophonist Benny Poole of Michigan, and started drumming for a number of jazz groups. He encountered a young Paul Motian, a percussionist who introduced him to Mose Allison. Other jazz musicians Spangler collaborated with include Larry Nozero, Lyman Woodard, Ron English, Teddy Harris, Jr., and Leonard King. He performed with trumpeter Eddie Henderson, organist Gene Ludwig, pianist Jessica Williams, saxophonist Archie Shepp, and a single gig with Stan Getz. He began work as a studio recording engineer for a number of R&B, blues, and funk-oriented bands.[1]

Throughout the 1970s[1] Spangler was active within the Detroit musical co-operative Strata Records, notably as the drummer for Kenny Cox’s Contemporary Jazz Quintet (aka CJQ) on the Blue Note label. In CJQ Spangler was a dual drummer with Danny Spencer, creating an unusual sound for the era. Also in the 1970s he was the drummer for a Detroit band called Tribe, an artistic cooperative run by Phil Ranelin, trumpeter Marcus Belgrave,[4] and Wendell Harrison.[3]

Spangler/Peron Quartet

"Jessica Williams was living in Sacramento, and she called me and said, 'Find us a gig in the Bay Area. I've got a trumpet player, and you're just gonna fall in love with his playing.' It turned out to be Tom Peron, who was then in his late teens. We hit it off immediately, both personally and musically, and we've been playing music together ever since."
— Bud Spangler (1997)[6]

Spangler moved to California in the 1970s. For years Spangler co-led and drummed in the Tom Peron-Bud Spangler Interplay Quartet,[7] a California-based modern jazz ensemble that also Tom Peron on trumpets.[1] Peron and Spangler became musical partners in 1982, when they were introduced by pianist Jessica Williams.[6]

Jessica Williams went on to play piano on the first Peron/Spangler album in 1994, Interplay, which was released on the San Francisco-based Monarch label. The group also came to consist of bassist Scott Steed and pianist Joe Gilman (later replaced by pianist Jacob Semetko). The group's second album on the Monarch label, Dedication, mixed well-known modern-jazz pieces with originals, mostly by Peron. Spangler has stated about the ensemble's method, "We believe in taking a piece of music and treating it as a vehicle for improvisation. We expand things sometimes well beyond the parameters of the original song, but with great respect for the tune and its form and the traditions of jazz."[6]

Production

Spangler produced Grammy-nominated recordings for jazz artists such as Mark Levine and Cedar Walton,[5] and has also produced music for Anton Schwartz, Taylor Eigsti, Kitty Margolis, Joe Gilman, Mimi Fox, Dave Ellis, Clairdee, Ellen Robinson, Ed Reed, Nicolas Bearde,[7] Kristen Miranda,[10] and several dozen others.[7]

Concerts

Jazz at Filoli concert series

From 1991 to 2007[7] Spangler helped create and produce the concert series Jazz at Filoli at Woodside, California[1] According to Spangler, “I’d gotten to know Chuck Huggins, who was CEO of See's Candies, through musician Turk Murphy...Chuck called me one day and asked, ‘Do you know Filoli?’ I said I’d never heard of it. He replied that was the problem — many Bay Area residents had never heard of what was a real local treasure. Being a jazz aficionado, it occurred to him that a series of jazz concerts on the grounds might introduce Filoli to more people." Spangler was brought on as producer, and the first concert, a tribute to Duke Ellington, occurred on Father’s Day in June, 1991.[5]

Cotati Jazz Festival

In June 1996, he performed at the 16th Annual Cotati Jazz Festival, along with artists such as Madeline Eastman and Joyce Cooling.[11]

Salute to Bud Spangler

On July 13, 2011, the live jazz show "A Salute to Bud Spangler" was held in Oakland. Among the performers were Khalil Shaheed & The Oaktown Jazz Workshop, The Ellen Robinson Band, Mimi Fox, Kitty Margolis, Mark Levine & The Latin Tinge, and the Bobby Hutcherson Band.[2]

Radio and television

Spangler at the KJAZ office in 1983

During the late 1950s Spangler was a student DJ on Michigan State University’s radio station WKAR-FM.[4] Later he became a DJ on the public radio station WDET-FM in Detroit, presenting the show Jazz Today in the 1960s.[1] He was producer and director of the Wayne State University TV Department from 1967 to 1971, and after that was the program director for jazz at WDET from 1971 to 1975.[8]

For a short period of time he worked at WJCT-FM[1] and the TV station WJCT-TV in Jacksonville, Florida, and after that, he did a year in Orlando at the radio station WMFE-FM.

After moving to Northern California in the 1970s,[4] Spangler joined the radio station KCSM (FM) in San Mateo and KJAZ (FM) (now KREV) in San Francisco[1] as a host-producer, and he has remained a radio personality in Oakland, California for several decades.[12] By the early 1980s Spangler was hosting "The Turk Murphy Show"[9] and the live jazz performance show[7] "Sunday Sunday Night" on KCSM.[9] He also hosted "See’s Sunday Night Jazz Show" on KJAZ,[5] and has done hosting and producing for National Public Radio.[7]

Personal life and death

As of 2013 Bud Spangler lived in Oakland, California.[12] His nephew is drummer RJ Spangler of Eastlawn Records in Detroit.[3] He died of lung cancer on January 16, 2014.[13][14]

Selected discography

Instrumentals

Year Title Artist or group Label Role
1975 Saturday Night Special The Lyman Woodard Organization Strata Records Percussion
1976 Vibes From The Tribe Phil Ranelin Tribe Records Drums, co-producer
1981 Watch That First Step Bruce Stephens Strawberry Records Drums
1990 Fine and Mellow Mary Stallings Amoeba Music Percussion, co-producer, remix[15]
1994 Interplay Tom Peron and Bud Spangler Quartet Monarch Records Drums, group leader[16]
1996 Dedication Tom Peron and Bud Spangler Quartet Monarch Records Drums, group leader
1996 An Anthology Of Tribe Records: 1972-1976 Various Tribe Records Drums

Production

Year Title Group Label Role
1974 Maulawi Maulawi Nururdin Strata Records Production
1994 A Handful of Stars Dave McKenna Concord Records Engineer
1994 Evolution Kitty Margolis Mad-Kat Records Co-producer
2001 Vibes From The Tribe Phil Ranelin Amoeba Music Co-producer[15]
2006 Radiant Blue Anton Schwartz Antonjazz Co-producer
2007 75th Birthday Bash Live! Kenny Burrell Blue Note Records Location producer
2011 Sagacious Grace Dee Bell Laser Records Resurrection Engineer
2014 Flash Mob Anton Schwartz Antonjazz Co-producer

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Nastos, Michael G. "Bud Spangler Artist Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved 2014-01-05.
  2. 1 2 "A Salute To Bud Spangler". San Francisco Chronicle. July 13, 2011. Retrieved 2014-01-05.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Gallo, Mark E. (March 2002). "Feature & Interview - R.J. Spangler". Blues on Stage. Retrieved 2014-01-05.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Bud Spangler". 180 Proof Records. Retrieved 2014-01-05.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 Gulker, Linda Hubbard (June 19, 2012). "Bud Spangler tells the sweet tale of how summer jazz concerts came to Filoli". InMenlo. Retrieved 2014-01-05.
  6. 1 2 3 4 Gilbert, Andrew (September 11–17, 1997). "Togetherness". Metro. metroactive. Retrieved 2014-01-05.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Bud Spangler". BudSpangler.com. Retrieved 2014-01-05.
  8. 1 2 Darling, Robin (7 April 2011). "Oral history interview with Bud Spangler, 2011, April 7 [electronic resource]". Wayne State University Libraries: Cass Corridor Documentation Project. Retrieved 2014-01-05.
  9. 1 2 3 "For KCSM 91.1 FM's Music Director Jesse "Chuy" Varela, music roots have run deep.". Jazz 91.1 FM. Retrieved 2014-01-05.
  10. "Kristen Miranda". Sacramento Talent Magazine. February 1, 2013. Retrieved 2014-01-05.
  11. "Livin' Is Easy: Cotati Jazz Festival". Retrieved 2008-04-01.
  12. 1 2 "Bud Spangler Profile". LinkedIn. Retrieved 2014-01-05.
  13. "Bud Spangler". Jazz from Gallery 41. Retrieved 2014-01-16.
  14. http://jazztimes.com/sections/news/articles/117497-drummer-producer-and-broadcaster-bud-spangler-dies-at-75
  15. 1 2 "Bud Spangler - Credits". Amoeba Music. Retrieved 2014-01-05.
  16. Yanow, Scott. "Tom Peron / Bud Spangler - Interplay Review". AllMusic. Retrieved 2014-01-05.
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