Name Verne Byers | Died December 19, 2008 | |
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Chuck Par-Due and the Verne Byers Band 1982
Verne Byers, aka Vern Byers, (né Vincent LeRoy Beyer, March 14, 1918 in Denver, Colorado – December 19, 2008 in Las Cruces, New Mexico) was an American bandleader of a territory band, a bassist, a concert promoter, and an owner-operator of several live music clubs and restaurants in Denver. Byers is most widely known and remembered as the man who, as executive producer and promoter, brought The Beatles to Denver — their only Denver appearance. The Beatles performed at the Red Rocks Amphitheatre on August 26, 1964.
Contents
- Chuck Par Due and the Verne Byers Band 1982
- Bandleader
- Selected venues
- Concert promoter
- Nightclub owner
- Growing up
- High school
- College
- Musicians Union
- Merchant Marines
- Post war danceband era
- Return to Denver in 1946
- Retirement
- Family
- Las Vegas years
- References
Bandleader
Verne Byers & His Orchestra — The Band That Sings and Swings — played compositions of the World War II dance bands, including those of Glenn Miller, Artie Shaw, and Tommy Dorsey. The orchestra toured the Midwest and Rocky Mountain area in the 40's and 50's as one of many territory bands, playing in venues such as dance halls, ballrooms, and hotels — mostly in Colorado, New Mexico, Iowa, and Minnesota. The band often played at Elitch Gardens; and once opened for Benny Goodman there. The band had twelve players. During the 1950s, bookings for the orchestra were handled by the Omaha office of National Orchestra Service.
Selected venues
† At Danceland and at the Pagosa Springs Lions Club, the band was billed as: Verne Byers and His CBS Orchestra — The Most Danceable Band in the Land.
Concert promoter
Byers also was a concert promoter. He was best known for producing the Beatles concert at the Red Rocks Amphitheatre August 26, 1964 — a 32-minute affair that stands as the group's only Denver appearance. As head of Lookout Mountain Attractions, Byers said he had never heard of the Beatles before booking them. Byers also booked and promoted concerts by Peter, Paul & Mary, Otis Redding, Count Basie, James Brown, Glen Campbell.
Nightclub owner
Byers also was the owner and operator of several live music clubs in the Denver area during the 1960s and 1970s, including the "Baja" on Stout Street and the jazz nightclub, the "Robins Nest" atop Lookout Mountain.
Growing up
Born and raised in Denver, Byers (known growing up as Vince Beyer) started playing piano at age 9 but switched to double bass in junior high because "there was more call for it."
High school
Byers was a graduate of South High School, Denver.
College
As an undergraduate, Beyer attended the University of Denver for two years — 1937–38 and 1938-39. His transcripts, under the name Vernon LeRoy Beyer, show that he was a liberal arts major and had enrolled in several journalism classes.
Musicians Union
At the age of 19, in 1937, Byers joined the Denver Musicians Union for $50. In his naivete, he incorrectly thought that music jobs would come to him.
Merchant Marines
Before graduating from college, Byers joined the Merchant Marines (around 1939) and ended up playing with the Navy Concert Band during World War II.
Post war danceband era
Later, Byers worked with Ted Fio Rito for a year and then toured with Herb Miller, Glenn's brother. Byers likes to tell people how Herb was jealous of his more famous brother and refused to play any of his songs. He also played with Tommy Tucker, Teddy Powell, and Jan Garber.
Return to Denver in 1946
Retirement
Byers retired in 2002 and moved to Columbus, New Mexico.
Family
At the time of Byers' death, he had been married to Jeanne Byers for 58 years. Jeanne was once married to one of Verne's fellow band-mates, Jimmy Bemis, a trumpet player and college student at the University of Denver.
Before playing with Verne Byers, sometime around 1941, Bemis was a featured trumpeter — known as "the mite-sized trumpet player" — with Joe Buzze and His Orchestra, a Texas territory band. Bemis died in 1947 at the age of 27 on the band bus from a sudden illness while being rushed back to Denver a traveling gig in Kansas.
Three years after the Jimmy's death, Jeanne and Verne were urged by mutual friends to date. They married in the Summer of 1950, two weeks after their first date. They honeymooned at one of Verne's gigs in at Grand Lake, Colorado.
Byers died in Las Cruces, New Mexico, December 19, 2008, at the age of 90.
Las Vegas years
Verne and his wife, Jeanne, moved to Las Vegas in 1983, a time that Byers refers to as when the music industry began to fall apart in Las Vegas. In Las Vegas, Byers was able to recruit high quality musicians willing to travel with his territory band.
The swing band era was at a low, and major casinos were switching from live bands to taped music, which resulted in a major musicians strike. And interest in swing bands seemed to be waning. When traveling for territory bands waned, his orchestra played regularly in Las Vegas until his move into retirement to Columbus, New Mexico, in 2002.