Bill Russo Popular Books

Bill Russo Biography & Facts

William Joseph Russo (June 25, 1928 – January 11, 2003) was an American composer, arranger, and musician from Chicago, Illinois, United States. History A student of jazz pianist Lennie Tristano, Russo wrote orchestral scores for the Stan Kenton Orchestra in the 1950s, including 23 Degrees N 82 Degrees W, Frank Speaking, and Portrait of a Count. He composed Halls of Brass for the brass section, without woodwinds or percussion. The section recording this piece included Buddy Childers, Maynard Ferguson and Milt Bernhart. In 1954, Russo left the Kenton Orchestra and continued private composition and conducting studies, then moved to New York City in 1958, where he led the 22-piece Bill Russo Orchestra. In 1962, Russo moved to England and worked for the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). While working in London he founded the London Jazz Orchestra. He was a contributor to the third stream movement which sought to combine jazz and classical music. In 1965 he returned to his native Chicago and founded the music department at Columbia College Chicago. He was the director for the Center for New Music and the college's first full-time faculty member. He was the Director of Orchestral Studies at Scuola Europea d'Orchestra Jazz in Palermo, Italy. Besides writing for jazz ensembles, Russo composed classical music, including symphonies and choral works, and works for the theater, often mixing elements of the genres. His 1959 Symphony No. 2 in C "TITANS" received a Koussevitsky award, and marked his entrance into the classical-music world. It was performed by the New York Philharmonic that year with Leonard Bernstein conducting (Bernstein had commissioned the piece) and trumpeter Maynard Ferguson appearing as soloist. The 1973 album that included Russo's Three Pieces for Blues Band and Symphony Orchestra became a big seller for Deutsche Grammophon, with its cross-genre performance by the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra, with Seiji Ozawa conducting and the Siegel-Schwall Band. (Ozawa had premiered "Three Pieces for Blues Band and Symphony Orchestra" with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and the Siegel-Schwall Band in 1968.) The success prompted the label to release Russo's Street Music, A Blues Concerto in 1979, featuring Corky Siegel on harmonica and piano. Russo's theater works included a rock cantata, The Civil War (1968), based on poems by Paul Horgan. A politically charged multimedia piece for soloist, chorus, dancers, and rock band, The Civil War paralleled the American Civil War and the martyrdom of President Lincoln with the turbulent civil rights and antiwar movements of the 1960s and the murders of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy. Russo followed The Civil War with other rock-based multimedia music-theater works, including Liberation, Joan of Arc, Aesop's Fables, The Bacchae, and Song of Songs. These were performed by the Chicago Free Theater, which Russo founded and directed. The Free Theater spawned companies in Baltimore and San Francisco. In 1969, Russo and director Paul Sills, founding director of the Second City, and community activist Rev. Jim Shiflett testablished the Body Politic Theatre. Russo's other works for the theater include the operas John Hooton (1962), The Island (1963), Land of Milk and Honey (1964), Antigone (1967), The Shepherds' Christmas, The Pay-Off (1983–84), The Sacrifice, and Dubrovsky (1988), as well as a double bill of operas inspired by commedia dell'arte, Isabella's Fortune and Pedrolino's Revenge (performed off-Broadway in 1974), and a musical fairy tale for children, The Golden Bird, for singers, narrator, dancers, and symphony orchestra (premiered in 1984 under the auspices of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra). His collaborators included Adrian Mitchell, Arnold Weinstein, Jon Swan, Alice Albright Hoge, Irma Routen, Naomi Lazard, Robert Perrey, Donald T. Sanders, Albert Williams, Jonathan Abarbanel, and Denise DeClue. Russo also composed art songs set to poetry by Edna St. Vincent Millay, W. H. Auden, and Gertrude Stein, as well as scores for dance and film. As part of his work with Columbia College, he started the Chicago Jazz Ensemble (CJE), which was dedicated to preserving and expanding jazz. A few years later this ensemble disbanded but was reborn in 1991. Russo's successor as artistic director was trumpeter Jon Faddis. Russo appeared with the band at the Jazz Showcase nightclub during the week before his death. After struggling with cancer, he retired as chair of the Columbia College Music Department in 2002. He died in 2003. Personal life Russo married Shelby Jean Davis, a singer. The couple had one child: Camille Blinstrub. He later married Jeremy Warburg, a music teacher, who was a granddaughter of American magazine publisher Condé Nast. They had two children: Alexander Russo and Condée Nast Russo. His third wife was Carol Loverde, a classical soprano. He also had a daughter, Whitney C. Schildgen, from an extramarital relationship. Other activities Russo was a trombonist and composition teacher. His students included Neil Ardley, John Barry, Patrick Gowers, Mark Hollmann, Fred Karlin, Richard Peaslee, Joseph Reiser, Louis Rosen, Kenny Wheeler and Albert Williams. Russo composed more than 200 pieces for jazz orchestra, and there were more than 30 recordings of his work. His five-decade career included collaborations with his idol Duke Ellington, Leonard Bernstein, Seiji Ozawa, Stan Kenton, Cannonball Adderley, Yehudi Menuhin, Dizzy Gillespie, Benny Carter, Maynard Ferguson, Billie Holiday, Cleo Laine, and Annie Ross. He wrote four books on music: Composing for the Jazz Orchestra (1973), Jazz Composition and Orchestration (1968), Workbook for Composing for the Jazz Orchestra (1978) with co-author Reid Hyams and Composing Music: A New Approach (1983) written with former students Jeffrey Ainis and David Stevenson. In 1990, he received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. Discography As leader A Recital in New American Music (Dee Gee, 1951) (reissued as part of Jazz Composers Workshop (Savoy, 1951-52) with J Giuffre, S Rogers, S Manne, and latera as Deep People) The World of Alcina (Atlantic, 1956)) Something new, something blu (Columbia, 1959) A symphony of popular songs (Sesac late '50) School of Rebellion (Roulette, 1960) The Seven Deadly Sins (Roulette, 1960) Russo in London (Columbia, 1962) with London Jazz Orchestra Stereophony (FM, 1964) Stonehenge (Columbia, 1964) with London Jazz Orchestra Virtuosity : A contemporary look (Columbia 1964) The carousel suite (GM, 1983) As composer Three Pieces for Blues Band and Symphony Orchestra, Op. 50 (San Francisco Symphony, Seiji Ozawa, Siegel-Schwall Band) (Deutsche Grammophon, 1973) Street Music, Op. 65 (San Francisco Symphony, Seiji Ozawa, Corky Siegel) (Deutsche Grammophon, 1977) Three Pieces for Blues Band and Symphony Orchestra, Op. 50 (San Francisco Symphony, Seiji Ozawa, Siegel-Schwall Band), Street Music, Op..... 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  • The Observer synopsis, comments

    The Observer

    Bill Russo

    There is a dark chamber in the mind of every person where their deepest secrets are hidden away from friends, neighbors, and even themselves.For some individuals the door to this s...

  • Life is Only a Game Baseball is Serious synopsis, comments

    Life is Only a Game Baseball is Serious

    Bill Russo

    People who love baseball do strange things. The best basketball player on the planet gave up millions of dollars and left the NBA to play for a thousand a month with a low level mi...

  • The Third Wish is Death synopsis, comments

    The Third Wish is Death

    Bill Russo

    Living on a 64 mile long sandbar with barely enough topsoil to grow a dandelion, has forced Cape Codders to become wiley and wise far beyond their limited education. Perhaps no sin...

  • Two Pairs of Shorts synopsis, comments

    Two Pairs of Shorts

    Bill Russo

    Starting out with just two short stories, my book was to be, "A Pair of Shorts" but when the collection grew, I had to change the name. The third story in this preview edition (wit...

  • The Last Downtown Supermarket synopsis, comments

    The Last Downtown Supermarket

    Bill Russo

    The Last Downtown Supermarket is at once a look at the vanishing city centers and an examination of the enigma that is age. The very young and the very old play a special part in t...

  • Touring the Valley of Death synopsis, comments

    Touring the Valley of Death

    Bill Russo

    3.4 million acres a massive swath of the hottest, lowest, driest, and most barren landscape on Earth. It's a place so desolate and forlorn that the first people to venture into it...

  • The Killer Catfish of Cape Cod synopsis, comments

    The Killer Catfish of Cape Cod

    Bill Russo

    This is not a Halloween story though you might find monsters in it, depending on what your definition of a monster is. Rather, it is the tale of two young men in search of an eerie...

  • The Creature from the Bridgewater Triangle synopsis, comments

    The Creature from the Bridgewater Triangle

    Bill Russo

    Bill Russo's riveting story, as seen on National Television on 'Monsters and Mysteries in America', and on 'America's Bermuda Triangle'; as well as in the award winning documentary...

  • Christmas Classics Refreshed synopsis, comments

    Christmas Classics Refreshed

    Bill Russo

    Fifteen obscure heartwarming Christmas tales, most of them more than a century old, are brought to life in this delightful, family friendly collection. Unearthed from ancient magaz...

  • From Kabul Hitches to Salem Witches synopsis, comments

    From Kabul Hitches to Salem Witches

    Bill Russo

    The medics apply bandages to their exterior wounds, But their battle scars go to the bone and then push right through to the heart. Science has not yet found a way to stitch up the...

  • Mavis and 289 synopsis, comments

    Mavis and 289

    Bill Russo

    A 16 year old boy tries to push the motor of an antique car up to 100 miles per hour on 15 miles of straight highway. The car shudders and threatens to disintegrate yet seems to be...

  • The Sky Fell on Alabama synopsis, comments

    The Sky Fell on Alabama

    Bill Russo

    A graphic photo of an injured woman compelled me to research the picture and discover the backstory of the most unique person in the entire history of he world. Read on to get 'the...

  • Sherlock Holmes on Cape Cod synopsis, comments

    Sherlock Holmes on Cape Cod

    Bill Russo

    Sherlock Holmes comes out of retirement in 1912 and travels to America to once again confront his arch rival Moriarty, who is poised to take over the United States, one piece at a ...

  • How to be the Next King of All Media synopsis, comments

    How to be the Next King of All Media

    Bill Russo

    Grahm Jr. College was arguably the best school in Boston for would be television and radio performers.Andy Kaufman (Latka on Taxi) studied Transcendental Meditation there; although...

  • Diet By The Letters synopsis, comments

    Diet By The Letters

    Bill Russo

    Diet By The Letters is the fun and easy way to weight control and it really really works. The author, Bill Russo explains how his weight kept going up after his TV and Film appear...

  • The Top Tractor in the Pull synopsis, comments

    The Top Tractor in the Pull

    Bill Russo

    Baseball stopped for a war in the 1940s. In the 2000s a war in a deep South valley stopped for baseball. What follows is the tale of a small war and a battery (in baseball it's the...

  • The 85 Year Old Dot to Dot Detecrive synopsis, comments

    The 85 Year Old Dot to Dot Detecrive

    Bill Russo

    Retired Police Chief Rick Bates is always eager to dive into a case usually a case of wine. He didn't start drinking until he was 75; but now he's making up for lost time. But it'...

  • I Grew Up in Dodge City in 1875 synopsis, comments

    I Grew Up in Dodge City in 1875

    Bill Russo

    Contrary to popular belief the ‘Wild West’ was not nearly as violent as it was depicted in the newspapers of the late 1800s and still is, in today’s modern stories and films. But i...

  • The Very First Halloween Jack-O-Lantern synopsis, comments

    The Very First Halloween Jack-O-Lantern

    Bill Russo

    A Halloween tale straight from Hell for year round reading. It's the story of the mean spirited man named Jack whose despicable life resulted in the very first pumpkin being hollow...

  • The Invasion of Ragged Mountain synopsis, comments

    The Invasion of Ragged Mountain

    Bill Russo

    Along the starway of infinity there are millions of planets just like Earth. We need not be concerned with them. There are however many billions more that are not like Earth – thes...

  • Life Begins at Ten synopsis, comments

    Life Begins at Ten

    Bill Russo

    A few brief thoughts on second chances and an examination of whether one young man can turn an epiphany to reality and change his life 180 degrees.

  • The Life and Death of Blinstrubs synopsis, comments

    The Life and Death of Blinstrubs

    Bill Russo

    From the eyes of a college student living nearby in the 1960s, here's an in depth look at the life and times of Boston's biggest nightclub, Blinstrub's Village. You'll learn about ...

  • Weird Tales of Ebay Sales synopsis, comments

    Weird Tales of Ebay Sales

    Bill Russo

    Ebay is the market of millions with a billion items. Most are mundane and purpose driven but a very tiny fraction are outlandish, weird and fascinating. They are the most bizarre ...

  • Swamp Tales synopsis, comments

    Swamp Tales

    Bill Russo

    From Bill Russo, the author of The Creature From the Bridgewater Triangle, comes new tales from the 200 square mile area that is sometimes called 'America's Bermuda Triangle'. This...

  • How to Tell Fortunes With Regular Playing Cards synopsis, comments

    How to Tell Fortunes With Regular Playing Cards

    Bill Russo

    The Cards Indicate, but Never Dictate! With that said, after reading this short guide to 'Cartomancy' you'll be able to do amazing readings for your friends or maybe even as a payi...

  • The House With No Electricity synopsis, comments

    The House With No Electricity

    Bill Russo

    This is a fictional account of the experiences of a boy in the 1940s growing up in the only home in town without electricity. The central character is not me, though I have spent s...

  • Gods of Wood and Stone synopsis, comments

    Gods of Wood and Stone

    Mark Di Ionno

    Two men from disparate worlds search for what constitutes a meaningful life in a searing portrait of honor and masculinity, sport and celebrity, marriage and parenthood in this “ro...

  • TB-to-BT Too Bizarre to Be True synopsis, comments

    TB-to-BT Too Bizarre to Be True

    Bill Russo

    An interactive, arcane collection of aphorisms, pithy tales, and odd facts mostly about the third planet from the sun and its strange inhabitants

  • In a Land Where You Cannot Flip a Coin synopsis, comments

    In a Land Where You Cannot Flip a Coin

    Bill Russo

    My 100 Word Challenge StoriesI dared myself to write three short stories of 100 words each and one of them had to be true! I came in just slightly above 300 words for the trio. I h...

  • The Ladder Trees of New Hawaii synopsis, comments

    The Ladder Trees of New Hawaii

    Bill Russo

    No living thing on Earth or on any other planet wishes to die. If it were not so, the thing and all of its kind would become extinct in a flash.Every living thing develops some sor...

  • The Revenge of the E-I-E-I-Ohs synopsis, comments

    The Revenge of the E-I-E-I-Ohs

    Bill Russo

    Cape Cod is a horseshoe shaped island jutting out 40 miles into the deep Atlantic off the coast of Massachusetts. There’s only one road leading from the first village, Bourne; to t...

  • In Search of a Few Stories and a Final Chapter synopsis, comments

    In Search of a Few Stories and a Final Chapter

    Bill Russo

    From the man with the longest fingers in boxing to a collection of the adventures of both bad and good girls, here’s a group of new stories by Bill Russo the author of The Creatur...

  • Ten Dollars On The Nose synopsis, comments

    Ten Dollars On The Nose

    Bill Russo

    In the 1970s gambling in Massachusetts was taken out of the hands of hard working citizens called ‘bookies’ and put into the greedy, sticky mitts of the politicians in the form of ...