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George Siravo

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Name
  
George Siravo


Role
  
Composer

George Siravo marcmyerstypepadcoma6a00e008dca1f088340120a64

Died
  
February 28, 2000, Medford, Oregon, United States

Albums
  
Portraits In Hi-Fi, Golden Oldies, Dance Date, Swingin' Hi-Fi in Studio A, All You Need From, Polite Jazz

Music group
  
Glenn Miller Orchestra (1938 – 1942)

Similar People
  
Axel Stordahl, Buddy Clark, Stanley Black, Hugo Winterhalter, Nelson Riddle

Helen kane betty boop aba daba honeymoon 1951 george siravo his orchestra


George Siravo (Staten Island, New York, 2 October 1916 - Medford, Oregon, 28 February 2000) was a composer, arranger, conductor, saxophonist, and clarinetist.

Contents

He began his career playing reeds with the Cliquot Club Eskimos and later was a member of the orchestras of led by Glenn Miller, Gene Krupa, Charlie Barnet, and Jan Savitt. He played alto saxophone in the first Glenn Miller orchestra, appearing on the 1937 recording "Community Swing".

As an arranger he worked with Frank Sinatra, Rosemary Clooney, Vic Damone, Tony Bennett, Connie Boswell, and Doris Day.

He orchestrated two of Frank Sinatra's germinal 1950s albums: Sing and Dance with Frank Sinatra on Columbia and Songs for Young Lovers with Nelson Riddle on Capitol.

He arranged Doris Day's "It's Magic" and Tony Bennett's "Who Can I Turn To?" He also recorded instrumental albums under his own name such as Seductive Strings by Siravo which featured trumpeter Doc Severinsen.

He orchestrated the 1947 Universal International film Something in the Wind starring Deanna Durbin and Donald O'Connor.

In Old Madrid (Siravo) - George Siravo and his Orchestra - Decca DL 8464


References

George Siravo Wikipedia