Rich Matteson
Appearance
Rich A. Matteson, (born Richmond Albert Matteson, January 12, 1929, Forest Lake, Minnesota – June 24, 1993, Jacksonville, Florida) was an American jazz artist and collegiate music educator who specialized in the euphonium. He played the tuba in a walking bass style with Bob Scobey (1958), and worked with the Dukes of Dixieland for two years (1959–61).[1] In the 1970s Matteson taught Jazz Improvisation at North Texas State University in Denton, Texas and was Director of NTSU's 3 O'Clock Lab Band.
Selected discography
[edit]- Uniquely Rich, The Rich Matteson Foundation
- The Sound of the Wasp, Phil Wilson & Rich Matteson
- The Riverboat Five on a Swinging Date, Rich Matteson, Helicon
- Balls, Matteson-Phillips Tubajazz Consort, Harvey Phillips Foundation and Richmond A. Matteson Legacy Productions
- Pardon Our Dust, We're Making Changes, Rich Matteson Sextet - John Allred (musician), Shelly Berg, Jack Petersen, Lou Fischer, Louie Bellson; Four Leaf Clover (FLC CD 131) (1990)
See also
[edit]Audio & video samples of Matteson performing
[edit]- Al Hirt, Rich Matteson – St. John's River City Band on YouTube
- Don't Get Around Much Anymore on YouTube
- Matteson-Phillips TubaJazz Consort – Spoofy on YouTube
References
[edit]- ^ Winnie Hu, Jazz educator Rich Matteson dies in Florida Musician helped build U of North Texas program, The Dallas Morning News, June 29, 1993
Categories:
- 1929 births
- 1993 deaths
- People from Forest Lake, Minnesota
- American male jazz composers
- American music arrangers
- Jazz arrangers
- American jazz bandleaders
- University of Iowa alumni
- University of North Texas College of Music faculty
- Musicians from Florida
- American jazz educators
- Jazz musicians from Minnesota
- Jazz musicians from Texas
- 20th-century American male musicians
- Matteson-Phillips Tubajazz Consort members
- 20th-century American jazz composers