Anthony Ortega (musician)

Anthony Robert "Tony" Ortega (born June 7, 1928 in Los Angeles, California) is an American jazz clarinetist, saxophonist, and flautist.

Ortega was heavily influenced and introduced to musicians and started his career in Watts, Los Angeles by cousin and acclaimed Vocalist and Trombonist Ray Vasquez

Ortega began to play the saxophone at age 14 and studied the instrument under Lloyd Reese.[1] He played in 1947 with Earle Spencer, but from 1948 to 1951 he served in the U.S. Army. Following this he became a member of Lionel Hampton's group, which toured Europe; while there he also recorded with Gigi Gryce, Art Farmer, and Milt Buckner, as well as with Norwegian players while in Oslo in 1954. He also met his future wife, pianist and vibraphonist Mona Ørbeck, at the Penguin jazz club in Oslo; they married later that year.[1] Upon his return to southern California he put a band together and worked briefly in Los Angeles, but relocated to New York City in 1955, playing with Nat Pierce for two years. In 1958 he came back once again to Los Angeles, where he worked with Paul Bley, Claude Williamson, and the Lighthouse All Stars.

In the 1960s he played mostly in the Southwest and California, and worked on film soundtracks such as The Pawnbroker.[2] Tony also recorded the soundtrack for the movie "Gloria" starring Gena Rowlands. He can be heard playing throughout the movie with Tommy Tedesco on guitar. He worked with Don Ellis and Gerald Wilson in 1965 and with Lalo Schifrin in 1968. In the early 1970s he toured internationally with Quincy Jones and continued working with Wilson into the 1980s. He toured and recorded in Paris several times in the 1990s. He is still active, playing locally at the club Mr. Peabody's in Encinitas, California.[1]

Discography

  • A Man and His Horns (1956)
  • Chamber Music for Moderns with the Nat Pierce Quintet (Coral, 1957)
  • Jazz for Young Moderns (And Old Buzzards, Too) (Bethlehem, 1958?)
  • New Dance (Revelation, 1967)
  • Permutations (Revelation, 1968)
  • A Delanto (Jazz Chronicles, 1976)
  • Rain Dance (Discovery, 1978)
  • On Evidence (Evidence, 1992)
  • Neuf (Evidence, 1996)
  • Bonjour (Harmonia Mundi, 2001)
  • Scattered Clouds (hatOLOGY, 2001)
  • Afternoon in Paris (hatOLOGY, 2007)

References

  1. Anthony Ortega: Encinitas reedman calls himself a ‘lucky man’. The Coast News, April 5, 2012.
  2. "Anthony Ortega". The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz. 2nd edition, ed. Barry Kernfeld.
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