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Uan Rasey

A trumpet virtuoso to equal all rivals, Rasey has played with everyone from Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra to the Monkees, and on film scores from An American in Paris to Chinatown. His trumpet can be heard throughout Jerry Goldsmith's score for the latter film, one of the great, classic uses of the solo instrument in the history of cinema.

As a recording artist, he's played with the likes of Sinatra, Crosby, Nat "King" Cole, Mel Tormé, Anita O'Day, Doris Day, the Andrews Sisters, Benny Carter, Ray Anthony, Frankie Laine, Louis Prima, Judy Garland, Ella Mae Morse, and the Monkees.

Ask any trumpet player in town to recommend a teacher, and you will hear one name: Uan Rasey.

This is the man who knows, the man who played first trumpet on the great MGM soundtracks from the Golden Age of Hollywood: ''An American in Paris,'' ''Singing in the Rain,'' ''Gigi,'' ''West Side Story,'' ''My Fair Lady,'' ''Cleopatra'' -- the man who handled the big pictures right on down to ''Chinatown,'' ''Pennies from Heaven'' and ''High Anxiety.'' Here is what he told a pupil who went for a lesson not long ago: ''Play it lovely, thoughtful, reverent... play it nicely,'' he said. ''It's easy to blow loud and harsh. Play it reverently with a nice sound. Even when you play loud, make it reverent. Make it sound like somebody saying something nice to you.'' So on Nov 18, 1996, there came to be many people gathered at at the Ventura Club in the Valley, all saying something nice to Uan, who has been playing lovely, thoughtful and reverent for nearly 60 years. He learned to play in Glasgow, Mont., where he had to keep up with his two sisters, Jean and Adelle. They were all under the tutelege of their mother, Una, who transposed a couple of letters to give Uan his name. Soon he too was transposing, although he was at first unaware of this. ''I played 'Carnival of Venice' when I was 13 years of age,'' he remembered, looking back from the age of 75. ''I played it a half tone too low, in the key of B, because I just had a record to learn it from. We just had an old windup, and that's as high as the record would go.'' By the time he was 18, Rasey had polished his chops in Glasgow and L.A., where his family moved, and landed a job playing first trumpet in the big band of Sonny Dunham, a virtuoso trumpet player out of the Casa Loma Orchestra.

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Forget it, Jake, It's Chinatown

Forget it, Jake, It's Chinatown

Source: JazzWax by Marc Myers

Whenever temperatures soar into the high 90s, my thoughts turn to the Chinatown film score. My Pavlovian reaction dates back to the summer of 1974, when I worked as a ticker-ripper and usher at a General Cinema duplex movie theater before the start of college. Among the many great movies out that summer was the Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway classic, allowing me to see it some 40-odd times. The summer of 1974 was particularly hot in exurban New York, ...

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