Ruben McFall

{{short description|American trumpeter and jazz arranger (born 1931)}}

Reuben McFall (aka Ruben and Rubin and Ruban; born 1 Feb 1931 Los Angeles) is an American trumpeter and jazz arranger who performed as a sideman with Freddie Slack, Vido Musso, Floyd Ray, Roy Porter (from 1949 to 1950), Glen Henry, Lalo Guerrero, Stan Kenton (from 1952 to 1953), Gerry Mulligan, Woody Herman (from 1953 to 1955), Teddi King, and Gerald Wilson.

Career

; As sideman, performed with

  • Freddie Slack
  • Vido Musso
  • Floyd Ray (né Floyd Edward Ray; 1909–1985)
  • Roy Porter from 1949 to 1950
  • Glen Henry (né Glenn Alba Henry, Jr. 1915–1993) Band in 1950, with Joe Maini on saxophone, Jimmy Knepper on trombone, and Bill Trujillo (né William Lee Trujillo; born 1930) on saxophone
  • Lalo Guerrero — toured with his band from 1951 to 1952, with Lennie Niehaus on alto sax, Bill Trujillo on tenor, Frank Quijada (1917–1953) on drums, and Al León on piano
  • Stan Kenton from 1952 to 1953 — McFall was a member of the band during a milestone in jazz, when Kenton's band recorded the first of 5 sessions in 9 days for Capitol in Chicago for the New Concepts of Artistry In Rhythm album.

: Conte Candoli, Buddy Childers, Don Dennis (né Donald Duane Dennis; 1927–1995), and Maynard Ferguson were in the trumpet section

: Bill Holman, Richie Kamuca were on tenor sax

: Lee Konitz, Vinnie Dean (né Vincent N. DiVittorio; 1929–2010) on alto sax

: Bill Russo, Bob Fitzpatrick (né Francis Steven Fitzpatrick; 1920–1995), Keith Moon (né Gordon Keith Moon; 1929–2006), George Roberts, and Frank Rosolino on trombone

: Kenton directing and on piano, Derek Walton on percussion, Sal Salvador on guitar, Don Bagley on bass, Stan Levey on drums

: Kay Brown singing

  • Gerry Mulligan — see album compilation, Gerry Mulligan: The Quintessence/New York Los Angeles Paris 1946-1955

: Recording sessions: March 21, 1946 to October 31, 1955

  1. Chicago
  2. Los Angeles
  3. New York
  4. Paris
  5. San Diego
  6. Stockton

; Jazz discography, sessions, transcribed broadcasts, recorded concerts

Selected discography

; As sideman

With Stan Kenton

:: Norma Japan – NLP 5011, Vantage Records (2) – NLP 5011

:: McFall on side B only

:: B1 thru B4 recorded July 7, 1953, live, Rendezvous Ballroom, Newport Beach, California

:: B1: "Sometimes I'm Happy"

:: B2: "Buzzy"

:: B3: "How High The Moon"

:: B4: "Short Stop"

:: Personnel: Herb Geller, alto sax; Bill Perkins, Jack Montrose, tenor saxes; Bill Holman, bari sax; Bob Edmondson, Bob Enevoldsen, Herbie Harper, trombones; Conrad Gozzo, Don Dennis, Maynard Ferguson, Ruben McFall, Shorty Rogers, trumpets; Lorraine Geller, piano; John Simons, acoustic bass; Chuck Flores, drums

  • Shorty Rogers Big Band, Live at the Rendezvous Ballroom, Newport Beach, California; {{OCLC|33018185|812798198}}

:: Recorded July 11, 1953, Rendezvous Ballroom

:: Personnel: Herb Geller, Bill Perkins, Jack Montrose, Bill Holman, saxophones; Bob Enevoldsen, Bob Edmondson, Herbie Harper, trombones; Maynard Ferguson, Conrad Gozzo, Ruban McFall, Don Dennis, trumpets; Lorraine Geller, piano; John Simmons, bass; Chuck Flores, drums

Selected compositions and arrangements

  • "Bobby's Mambo"
  • "Mambo the Most, Part 1"
  • "Mambo the Most, Part 2"
  • "Mambo the Utmost"
  • "Mambo a la Stockholm"

Education

McFall grew up in the Belvedere neighborhood of East Los Angeles, California, long established as a Mexican-American enclave. In the 1940 and 1942 Los Angeles Voter Registration directory, Ruben's father, Ernest VanSant McFall (1887–1957), was listed a musician.

McFall attended Westlake College of Music in Hollywood, California, one of the first institutions in the county to offer a diploma in jazz. The school was founded in 1945 and ran until 1961. In Los Angeles, during the early 1950s, his friends included trumpeter Donald Roy Fromknecht, Jr. (1928–2012).

References

{{Reflist|30em|refs=

The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, Barry Dean Kernfeld & Stanley Sadie (ed.)

{{space|4}}1st ed. (in 2 vols.) (1988); {{OCLC|16804283}}

{{space|4}}1st ed. (in 1 vol.) (1994); {{OCLC|30516743}}

{{space|4}}2nd ed. (in 3 vols.) (2002); {{OCLC|46956628}}

{{space|4}}Oxford Music Online; {{OCLC|5104918844}}

The Encyclopedia of Jazz, Leonard Geoffrey Feather (ed.), New York; Horizon Press

{{space|4}}1st ed. (1955); {{OCLC|521647793}}

{{space|4}}Rev. and enlarged (1960); {{OCLC|1351055}}

[https://www.questia.com/library/journal/1G1-347294246 "Jazz Education at the Westlake College of Music, 1945–61,"] by Michael T. Spencer, Journal of Historical Research in Music Education, Vol. 35, No. 1, October 2013

The Jazz Discography Online, Tom Lord (ed.), Lord Music, (retrieved February 20, 2015); {{OCLC|690104143}} (subscription fee required; accessible at subscribing libraries)

[https://archive.org/stream/artfarmercentral00farm#page/n213/mode/2up "Art Farmer"] (interview transcript), interviewed by Steven Louis Isoardi (born 1949), Central Avenue Sounds, Oral History Program UCLA (1994); {{OCLC|33229049}}

[http://wchsutah.org/documents/liston-musicians-book.php "Donald R. Fromknecht,"] [http://wchsutah.org/documents/liston-musicians-book.php Musicians of Southern Utah], by Douglas Ivins Liston (1920–2013), Publisher's Place (2005), pg. 203; {{OCLC|62149029}}

[http://www.vosbein.com/kenton/lagniappe/network/network_21/ "Compilation of Fitz's Curriculum Vitae and an Obituary,"] by Roy Joseph Wiegand, Jr. (born 1936), Overture (magazine of the Los Angeles Musicians Local 47, AFM), April 1995 (retrieved March 11, 2015, from the website of Terry F. Vosbein, born 1957, at {{URL|http://www.vosbein.com/}}); {{ISSN|0030-7556}}

[https://books.google.com/books?id=sFU-hbUOEJ0C&pg=PA80 Jazz: A Critic's Guide to the 100 Most Important Recordings], by Ben Ratliff, Times Books (2002), pg. 80; {{OCLC|49679630}}

Straight Ahead: The Story of Stan Kenton, by Carol Evelyn Easton (maiden; born 1933), New York: Morrow (1973), pg. 153; {{OCLC|721734}}

[http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8zc819g/entire_text/ Guide to the Lalo Guerrero Collection: 1939–2005] [http://www.library.ucsb.edu/sites/default/files/attachments/special-collections/cema/guerrero/guerrero_lalo.pdf (pdf transcript)], "Series 5: Photographs," Box 5, Folder 10, "Lalo Band on the Road" (photo 6 of 14), "January 1951, Lalo at restaurant, left to right: Bill Trujillo, Lennie Niehaus, Lalo, Frank Quijada, Ruben McFall, Al Leon," University of California, Santa Barbara (retrieved March 12, 2015)

[https://books.google.com/books?id=YmEfboRAyEUC&pg=PA115 Lalo: My Life and Music], by Lalo Guerrero, Sherilyn Mentes, University of Arizona Press (2002); {{OCLC|47644231}}

[https://books.google.com/books?id=lqHHgmB5l5AC&pg=PA153 There And Back: The Roy Porter Story], by Roy Porter (1923–1998) & David Keller, Bayou Press, Ltd. (1990), pps. 85, 120, 153, 178, 192; {{OCLC|23080163|20422559}}

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Category:Hard bop trumpeters

Category:Post-bop trumpeters

Category:American jazz trumpeters

Category:American male trumpeters

Category:Swing trumpeters

Category:American male jazz composers

Category:American music arrangers

Category:Jazz arrangers

Category:American jazz bandleaders

Category:1931 births

Category:Living people

Category:20th-century American trumpeters

Category:People from East Los Angeles, California

Category:21st-century American trumpeters

Category:20th-century American male musicians

Category:21st-century American male musicians

Category:20th-century American jazz composers

Category:Jazz musicians from California