Stewart "Dirk" Fischer

Stewart Roussin Fischer (September 1, 1924 – February 25, 2013) known professionally as Dirk Fischer or Dirty Dirk Fischer[1][2] was an American composer, arranger, educator, trumpeter, and valve trombonist. Before moving to California in 1959, he spent his young adulthood in the Northern Plains, performing with and writing for territory bands booked out of Omaha, Nebraska. He was the brother of Clare Fischer.[1]

Stewart "Dirk" Fischer
Birth nameStewart Roussin Fischer
Also known asDirk Fischer, Dirty Dirk Fischer
Born(1924-09-01)September 1, 1924
Durand, Michigan, U.S.
OriginMuskegon, Michigan
DiedFebruary 25, 2013(2013-02-25) (aged 88)
Valencia, California
GenresJazz, swing
Occupation(s)Musician, arranger
InstrumentsTrumpet, valve trombone
Years active1940s–2013
Associated actsTeddy Philips, Little John Beecher Orchestra, Joe Vera Latin Ensemble, Walter Martie, John Paul Jones, Lee Williams

Fischer was a faculty member at College of the Canyons, as Jazz Band Director and Instructor of Jazz Studies, from 1977 to 2005.[1][2]

Growing up

Fischer was born in 1924 in Durand, Michigan.[1] His mother, Luella Blanche Roussin, was of French descent, and his father, Cecil Harold Fischer, was of German descent. Both were born in Canada at the turn of the 20th century. Fischer was the oldest of four children. One of his brothers was Clare Fischer. His mother played piano, his father played banjo, and his uncle played C melody saxophone. There was always music in his house.

Fischer began playing the trumpet at age 13[1] and then saxophone the following year. His mother nicknamed him "Dirk"[1] when he was 13. While playing in territory bands, friends endearingly called him "Dirty Dirk." Fischer graduated from South High School in Grand Rapids, Michigan

Before being drafted, Fischer and three friends formed a quartet called the Aristocats[1] that played at Club Cherrio in Muskegon, Michigan. The band included Rich Henry (alto), Hamilton Allen (piano), and Mike Balish (drums).

Army years

During World War II, Fischer was drafted and served three years in the U.S. Army where he worked his way up to the Army Service Forces Bands.[1] He entered the Army at Camp Barkley, Texas, near Abilene, where after basic training he enrolled in cooks-and-baker school. While working for a company kitchen, he began playing saxophone and trumpet with the local Medical Replacement Training Center Band. The Army transferred him from the kitchen to the band. He formed a lifelong friendship with jazz saxophonist and clarinetist Al Drootin from Boston. On the recommendation of a warrant officer who led an Army band at Camp Reynolds, Pennsylvania, a general changed Fischer's transfer overseas and sent him instead to Camp Lee, Virginia, home of the band training unit for the Armed Forces. Fischer spent six months at Fort Lee where instructors such as Gil Evans[3] and Sanford ("Sandy") J. Siegelstein were assigned. The Camp housed two hundred and fifty Allied Forces musicians. Although Fischer took a course in arranging from Evans, who had been drafted, he already knew and practiced what Evans was teaching.[4] Fischer was a member of a black military big band in Pennsylvania. When the Army segregated soldiers by race, music helped him bridge the gap.

1944 Photo, Victory News, Camp Reynolds, Pennsylvania[5] 331st Army Service Forces Jazz Ensemble, Camp Reynolds When a black warrant officer wondered what that white guy was doing in the trumpet section, CWO (band director) Taylor (bandleader) said, "Can't you tell?"[6] Trumpets: Richard Clark, Dirk Fischer, Oscar Gamby, Jr., Horace Sullivan Lee Turner; Saxophones: Unknown, Henry Kirkland, Jon Micheaux (Bari); Drums: James W. Barnes

Territory bands

Under the G.I. Bill, Fischer studied trumpet with Daniel Benner Tetzlaff and orchestration with William Muelbe. Both were members of the Minneapolis Symphony.[3] He studied tonal materials with Jack Nowicki, who had studied with Paul Hindemith and Joseph Shillinger, and 20th Century counterpoint with Ernst Krenek.

Early in his career, Fischer played trumpet and valve trombone in several territory bands,[3] all booked out of Omaha by the National Orchestra Service, including the Teddy Philips band, Little John Beecher Orchestra, Joe Vera Latin Ensemble, Walter Martie, John Paul Jones, and Lee Williams. These bands became the outlet for his arrangements and compositions during the late 1940s and 1950s. He directed some shows, wrote most of the "special" arrangements, and drove the sleeper bus. He was also road manager for John Beecher. In 1959 he left the Beecher band when the National Orchestra service was going out of business.

Living in California

Fischer arrived in Los Angeles in 1959. He spent the next six years working in recording studios, ghost writing for other composers and arrangers. Little of his work had his name on it. He did some union contracting for strings and other people in orchestras, including his brother's recording sessions, and did a lot of copy work.

Having been separated from his first wife for some time, his second wife appeared at the Rams Restaurant, in Los Angeles, where Fischer was working. Fischer hired her in November 1965, and they were married on September 5, 1966. They opened the Owl Coffee Shop in Van Nuys and ran it for fourteen years. The business allowed him to go to music school and his wife to enter nursing school. After transferring credits earned on the GI bill from a college in Minnesota, Fischer earned credits from Cal State Los Angeles and Cal State Northridge[3] to complete a California Teaching Credential. A California Teaching Credential is a certification given in lieu of a traditional diploma to people with professional expertise and experience who complete accredited, collegiate hours to teach at a junior college. Candidates needed strong recommendation letters. The Army gave him special considerations well above his rank of Private First Class.

In the 1970s, jazz studies was only beginning to enter traditional music pedagogy.[7] Finding qualified teachers, those at the pinnacle of their field, meant having to draw from the jazz profession rather than academia. The College of the Canyons found Fischer by accident. At the suggestion of his wife, Fischer visited the college as a way to play music and meet others with his interest. In 1977, he became the first Instructor of Jazz Studies at College of the Canyons.[3] He led the college's first annual RK Downs Jazz Festival.[2][8]

Personal life

Fischer had two sons and a daughter from his first marriage to Lula Frances Leak (b. 1930, married 1948, divorced August 1966, Los Angeles). Lula was a big band singer. His eldest son, Louis André Fischer, is a record producer, drummer with Rufus, and an administrator at McNalley Smith College of Music in St. Paul, Minnesota.

Fischer had stepsons and a son from his second marriage of 40 years to Rosalindo ("Roz") Joyce Fischer, former surname Satin, née Baum (b. 1938 - d. 2005). They were married in Las Vegas on September 5, 1966.[9]

Fischer died on February 25, 2013 in Valencia, California.[1][2] Before his death, he suffered from colon cancer.[1]

Discography

  • Thesaurus, Clare Fischer Big Band (Discovery, 1968)
  • George Stone & Friends Perform the Music of Stewart "Dirk" Fischer (Sea Breeze, 2004)
  • Coming of Age, Dirk Fischer and George Stone, (Sea Breeze, 2011)

Compositions

  • "Funquiado" (Clare Fischer, arr. D. Fischer)
UNC Jazz Press
  • "Gaviota" (Clare Fischer, arr. D. Fischer)
UNC Jazz Press
  • "Pensativa" (Clare Fischer, arr. D. Fischer)
UNC Jazz Press
  • "Whisper Not" † (Benny Golson, arr. D. Fisher)
  • "Coco B" (Clare Fischer, arr. D. Fischer)
UNC Jazz Press
  • "Let Me Count the Ways" † (Victor Feldman, arr. D. Fischer)
  • "Melody for Thelma" † (Blue Mitchell, arr. D. Fischer)
  • "Our Delight" † (Tad Dameron, arr. D. Fischer)
  • "Donde" (words Barbara Ransom) 1958 | 1992
Walrus Music Publishing
  • "Donde" † (instrumental only)
Walrus Music Publishing
  • "Cinoton" 1959 | 2007
  • "Bitter Leaf: Quintet" 1960 | 2001
  • "Calamus" † 1969 | 2001
Walrus Music Publishing
  • "Rocl" † 1970 | 2003
Walrus Music Publishing
  • "Malookanus Gookum" 1977 | 2007
  • "Down, Down, Down" 1977 | 2007
  • "Hurry Home" † 1978 | 1995
Walrus Music Publishing
  • "And Freckles" † 1978 | 2003
Walrus Music Publishing
  • "All Ta' Once" 1979 | 2003
Walrus Music Publishing
  • "Sing Dammit!" 1979 | 2003
Walrus Music Publishing
  • "Plea for Deductive" † 1980 | 1998
Walrus Music Publishing
  • "Escalera" † 1981 | 2003
Walrus Music Publishing
  • "Plucky" † 1982 | 1998
Walrus Music Publishing
  • "Tonito" † 1982 | 2003
Walrus Music Publishing
  • "Omaha Gathering" 1983 | 2007
  • "Hamilton Allen Esquire" † 1986 | 1998
Walrus Music Publishing
  • "Escalera Numero Dos" 1990 | 2007
  • "Heavy Cussin"' 1996 | 2000
Walrus Music Publishing
  • "Mambo Estudio" 1997 | 2003
Walrus Music Publishing
  • "Conversation" Pending 2007
  • "Quartet O' Sax's" Pending 2007
  • "Keep Going Charlie"
  • "Backup (reserves)" 2004 (big band bossa nova, soprano sax feature)
  • "Ghostly Chu" 1995 (big band ballad, alto sax feature)
  • "Canto" 2007 (big band bossa nova, trombone feature)
(† On the George Stone Album)
gollark: Pinta does not work properly.
gollark: * Naïvecoin.
gollark: Or I could fork NaiveCoin.
gollark: Gimp is too complicated. Inkscape, maybe.
gollark: <@331320482047721472>

See also

References

  1. Peeples, Stephen K. "COC Jazz Legend Stewart 'Dirk' Fischer Dead at 88". SCVNews.com. Santa Clarita, California: SCVTV. Retrieved 2013-03-01.
  2. "Former COC Jazz Band Director Dirk Fischer passes away". Cougar News. College of the Canyons. 2013-02-25. Retrieved 2013-03-01.
  3. Kemp, Larry (26 June 2018). Modern Jazz Trumpet Legends. Dorrance Publishing. pp. 1–. ISBN 978-1-4809-7649-8. Retrieved 19 September 2018.
  4. TV interview of Dirk Fischer by Stephen K. Peeples, December 1, 2004; transcription published January 23, 2005, SCVTV
  5. The Victory News was printed by the Record Argus in Greenville, Pennsylvania.
  6. Eugene Tong, Living, Leading, and All That Jazz Music Teacher Has a Lesson or Two., February 9, 2004.
  7. Ratliff, Ben (26 April 2000). "Juilliard School to Introduce a Jazz Studies Program". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 September 2018.
  8. The Jazz Festival is named after Robert K. Downs, tenor saxophonist, clarinetist, high school band director, first Music Department Chair at College of the Canyons, big band arranger, and Fischer's credentialing mentor. The first festival was in 1976.
  9. Clark County Recorders Office, Marriage Records, Book 233, pg. 379
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