Artist's albums
Butterscotch Rum
1971 · album
Today
1970 · album
Lena & Gabor
1970 · album
Get Back / Because
1970 · single
Simpatico
1966 · album
Soft Samba Strings
1967 · album
Kpm International: Jazz Convention Volume I
1968 · album
Kpm International: Jazz Convention Volume II
1968 · album
Kpm International: Jazz Convention Volume III
1968 · album
Scorpio And Other Signs
1968 · album
Soft Samba
1964 · album
Flea Market / By the Time I Get to Phoenix
1965 · single
The In Sound
1965 · album
The October Suite
1966 · album
America the Beautiful
1969 · album
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Biography
Largely forgotten now, Gary McFarland was one of the more significant contributors to orchestral jazz during the early '60s. An "adult prodigy," as Gene Lees accurately noted, McFarland was an ingenious composer whose music could reveal shades of complex emotional subtlety and clever childlike simplicity. While in the Army, he became interested in jazz and attempted to play trumpet, trombone, and piano. In 1955, he took up playing the vibes. Displaying a quick ability for interesting writing, he obtained a scholarship to the Berklee School of Music. He spent one semester there and with the encouragement of pianist John Lewis, concentrated on large-band arrangements of his own compositions. He attained early notoriety and success working with Gerry Mulligan, Johnny Hodges, John Lewis, Stan Getz, Bob Brookmeyer, and Anita O'Day. McFarland began devoting more attention to his own career by 1963 when he released what is often regarded as his most significant recording, The Gary McFarland Orchestra/Special Guest Soloist: Bill Evans. He also recorded in small-group settings, which featured his clever vibes playing. The success of his instrumental pop collection, Soft Samba, allowed McFarland to form his first performing group. But his recordings thereafter, more often than not, featured an easy listening instrumental pop bent. McFarland went on to excellent work with Gabor Szabo, Shirley Scott, Zoot Sims, and Steve Kuhn, but only rarely featured his outstanding compositional talents (as in 1968's America the Beautiful). He formed the short-lived Skye Records label with Szabo and vibist Cal Tjader in the late 60s and continued to record prolifically. By the late 60s, though, he was forgotten by his initial jazz followers and he died in 1971 after being poisoned in a New York City bar. ~ Douglas Payne, Rovi