The great jazz arranger/composer and NEA Jazz Master Bill Holman died last year (May 2024), but his spectacular 16-piece band will play one last concert, to celebrate his life and work, and...just for the fun of it. The concert will take place at CATALINA Jazz Club:
"The Bill Holman Band has been rehearsing, concertizing, touring and recording for half a century", says Jeff Holman, Bill's son. "No single event could accurately portray the range, breadth, and depth of his lifetime's work, but we intend to come as close as humanly possible."
Born and raised in Orange County, California, Bill Holmanstarted playing clarinet in junior high, then switched to tenor saxophone and formed his first band in high school. As a young man his initial field of interest was mechanical engineering, which he studied while serving in the U.S. Navy (1944-1946) and subsequently at UCLA. But by the end of the 1940s, his attention turned more to music. He enrolled at Westlake College of Music, and also studied privately with Russ Garcia. Among his earliest gigs was as tenor saxophonist in the Charlie Barnet Orchestra in the early 1950s.
When Stan Kenton hired Holman in 1952, he set in motion a multi-tiered musical partnership to last 27 years. After playing tenor in the sax section for a few years, Holman started to write arrangements for Kenton's band, which he continued to do for decades after he had left the band as a player. Among the many arrangements and compositions Holman wrote for the band, perhaps the most important was Contemporary Concepts, an album now considered not only a masterpiece but a portal to a new way of writing for jazz bands.
Holman's chief musical influence throughout his career was fellow tenor player Lester Young, about whom Holman spoke in reverential terms for his entire life. An avid classical music fan, Holman drew inspiration from this world as well, perhaps the most striking example being his arrangement for the Kenton band of What's New?, which was reportedly inspired by the 3rd and 4th string quartets of Bela BartĂłk.
In 1975 he formed the Bill Holman Band, a 16-piece ensemble which rehearsed every week for 45 years, until the pandemic took rehearsals off the agenda in 2020. Until that time, the band performed in clubs, concerts and festivals throughout both the U.S. and Europe. The band recorded 5 albums: The Bill Holman Band (JVC, 1987); A View from the Side (JVC, 1995); Brilliant Corners: The Music of Thelonious Monk (JVC, 1997); Live (Jazzed Media, 2005) and Hommage (Jazzed Media, 2007). The second album's namesake piece, "A View from the Side", won a Grammy in 1996 for Best Instrumental Composition, and his arrangement of "Straight, No Chaser" for the third album won a Grammy in 1998 for Best Instrumental Arrangement. In 1987 he won a Grammy for his arrangement of "Take the A Train", written for Doc Severinsen and The Tonight Show Band. He and/or his band were nominated 14 additional times over the years, most recently in 2012, for Best Instrumental Composition for his "Without a Paddle". There are earlier big band recordings, made with a different ensemble: The Fabulous Bill Holman (Coral, 1958); In a Jazz Orbit (Andex, 1958) and Bill Holman's Great Big Band (Capitol, 1960); and an album made later (1982) with the WDR Big Band, The Third Stone, featuring Jiggs Whigham on trombone, Mel Lewis on drums, and a string section on the title track.
For many years Holman did weeks-long residencies with some of the best jazz bands in Europe, writing compositions and arrangements for the groups, and conducting the bands at concerts. Among these ensembles are the very fine bands housed at radio stations in London, Amsterdam, Frankfurt, Stuttgart, and Berlin. He did recordings with some of them, like The Norwegian Radio Big Band Meets Bill Holman (1989); My Instrument is the Orchestra: Bill Holman Conducts The SWR Big Band; Further Adventures: Bill Holman with the Netherlands Metropole Orchestra; and Echoes of Aranjuez with the HR-Bigband Frankfurt. With the WDR Big Band in Cologne, he made many recordings, not commercially released but now archived at the station.
For decades Holman enjoyed teaching at composing/arranging clinics and master classes throughout both the U.S. and Europe. In the U.S., he taught at the Berklee, Eastman, Manhattan, and Grove Schools of Music and at many universities. After multiple residencies at Elmhurst College in Illinois, the school bestowed an honorary doctorate on Holman in 2009. Outside the U.S., in such countries as Germany, Holland, Switzerland, England and in Scandinavia, he was frequently invited to conduct established resident jazz orchestras at radio stations and festivals, in addition to educational clinics and workshops.
In 2010, the National Endowment for the Arts bestowed the NEA Jazz Masters Award - the nation’s highest honor in jazz - on "composer, arranger and tenor saxophonist Bill Holman" and seven others, in recognition of a lifetime of extraordinary achievement. In announcing the awards, the NEA issued this statement: “These master artists have dedicated their lives to shaping and advancing the rich tradition of jazz. The NEA is pleased to recognize their individual creative talents and celebrate their combined musical contributions.” The awards ceremony took place at Frederick P. Rose Hall, home of Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York City. Wynton Marsalis and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra performed, in a program honoring the recipients’ lives and works. Mr.Holman conducted the Orchestra in one of his compositions as part of the ceremonies. In 2000, the Smithsonian Institution established the Bill Holman Collection, housing mostly scores and memorabilia. In 2008, Holman won the Golden Score Award, issued by the American Society of Music Arrangers and Composers and in 2025, he was given a lifetime achievement award by the Los Angeles Jazz Society. A film about Mr. Holman, Charting Jazz: The Mastery of Bill Holman, is currently in production.