By Don
Heckman, Special to the Los Angeles Times
March
6, 2012
Frank Marocco, a rare
jazz accordionist, a first-call studio musician and one of the most
recorded accordion
players in the world, has died. He was 81.
Marocco died Saturday at
his home in the San Fernando Valley, after having been hospitalized at
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles for complications following hip
replacement surgery, according to his daughter Cynthia.
Marocco's wide-ranging
career embraced every genre of music. His accordion can be heard on hundreds of
movie soundtracks, recordings, musical theater, television series and specials,
commercials, video games and theme park music. The film, television and
recording composers he's worked with include Henry Mancini, John Williams,
Quincy Jones, Elmer Bernstein, Michel Legrand and dozens of others.
But Marocco was always
quick to describe jazz as his passion.
The accordion has almost
never been viewed as a principal jazz instrument and was often reviled by jazz
musicians as something appropriate only for German beer gardens and Argentine
nightclubs. But Marocco spent a lifetime disputing the limitations of that
view, bringing jazz authenticity to the many groups he began leading while
still a teenager.
"Since I grew up
listening to people like Zoot Sims and Charlie Parker, I play accordion like a
jazz horn player, with horn-like lines," Marocco told The Times in 2000.
He also applied his rich
compositional skills to the sounds, the timbres and the harmonic textures he
drew out of the accordion, banishing such dismissive labels as "squeeze
box" and "organ grinder."
As many critics and
musicians observed, Marocco was a gifted musical artist who simply happened to
play an unusual instrument.
"Frank's
playing," said guitarist Larry Koonse, who worked frequently with Marocco,
most recently on his latest CD, "was always so lyrical, warm and full of
the kind of harmonic richness that just invited you to step in and participate
in the beauty of the moment. There were no equals on his instrument. And the
warmth he exhibited in his playing was mirrored by the kindness he exhibited as
a human being."
Frank L. Marocco was born
Jan. 2, 1931, in Joliet, Ill., the eldest of six children, with a sister and
four brothers. Growing up in the town of Waukegan, he began to take accordion
lessons at age 7. He later added piano, clarinet, music theory and composition
to his interests.
At 17 he was awarded a
first-place prize in a Chicago music contest, winning a guest appearance at
Soldiers Field with the Chicago Pops Orchestra, performing Chopin's Fantasie
Impromptu on the accordion. For the next few years, he worked with a trio in
the Midwest, where he met his future wife, Anne, in South Bend, Ind.
In 1959, the couple moved
to Los Angeles, where Marocco formed another band, concentrating on appearances
in nightclubs and hotels in Las Vegas and Palm Springs.
By the mid-'60s, he had
become well established as a studio player, valued for his technique as well as
his versatility. The range of his hundreds of film score appearances reaches
from such assignments as playing one of the two accordion parts in Maurice
Jarre's 1965 orchestral score for "Dr. Zhivago" to the more recent
"Pirates of the Caribbean" pictures, for which he played accordion,
bass accordion and musette.
His pop-oriented
highlights included participation in the Beach Boys' "Pet Sounds" album
and Tracy Chapman's "Crossroads."
Marocco was also a busy
composer, publishing study books for the accordion, as well as collections of
his own diverse songs and compositions. Gifted with a wry sense of humor ,he
often gave whimsical titles to his own works, among them "Bossame
Mucho," "Road to Marocco," "I Got Rh-Rh-Rhythm" and
"Samba de Van Nuys."
The Frank Marocco
Accordion Event, directed by Marocco, was held annually in Mesa, Ariz.,
bringing together accordionists from across the U.S. and Canada for three days
of accordion-related seminars, rehearsals and performance.
Marocco received a
Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Accordionists' Assn. in 2006. He
was nominated eight years in a row for the Recording Academy's Most Valuable
Player Award, receiving the Award in 1985 and 1986. And he was inducted into
the Accordion Hall of Fame in Vicenza, Italy, in 2000.
Marocco is survived by
his wife of 60 years, Anne; his daughters Cynthia, Venetia and Lisa; and eight
grandchildren.
http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-frank-marocco-20120306,0,4520946.story?track=rss
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