User:Peterowe/Sandbox

Oliver E. Mitchell was born April 8, 1927. His father, Harold (Pappy) Mitchell played first trumpet in the Jazz Singer, (the first sound movie) all the old Republic westerns, the original King Kong, Gone with the Wind, and all of the MGM musicals until he retired in 1948. Harold started his son Ollie on the trumpet at age five to prove some of his trumpistic theories. Ollie survived, and because of the strict training his dad put him through, he had all the skills needed to be one of the top recording trumpet players in the ‘60’s and ‘70’s.

He turned professional while still in high school, playing in the Teenagers Band on the Hoagy Carmichael radio show and in other bands around Southern California. He joined the Navy at 18, and found his way into the band aboard the aircraft carrier U.S.S Lexington. After his discharge he staked out his ground as first trumpet player with a number of name bands including Stan Kenton, Buddy Rich, Horace Heidt, Charlie Barnet, Alvino Rey, Perez Prado, Harry James, Les Brown, Shorty Rogers, David Rose, Gerald Wilson, Sonny Burke, Gerry Gray and the Glenn Miller Band with Tex Beneke. In 1960 Ollie left the Harry James Band to play lead trumpet with David Rose for the Fred Astaire Special at NBC and a full-time studio schedule became a reality.

Ollie did a lot a private teaching, but, in 1961, he and trombonist Bob Edmondson established Swing Inc., a school devoted to developing young big band musicians. The school came to an end in 1964 when the Tijuana Brass became famous. Ollie and Bob were part of the original group.

Ollie became a top Hollywood studio musician during the ‘60’s and continued on into the ‘70’s and early ‘80’s. He became part of the sound of pop music on thousands of records, TV shows, jingles, cartoons, and movies during those years. The list of artists he has played with and for is several pages long and includes the Concert for Bangladesh held in Madison Square Garden in New York in 1971.

In 1978, because of the fun involvement with younger players during Swing Inc., he put together an experimental stereo big band. He named his 20-piece group the Sunday Band. This exciting band played gigs around the LA area for several years and produced three albums. In 1982, Ollie took his Musicians Union pension and eased out of the mainstream of the Hollywood recording scene. In ‘85 Ollie and his wife, Nancy, packed up the Sunday Band music and moved to the island of Oahu and the Island Sunday Band was born and soon gigging around Honolulu. Late in 1991, the Mitchells moved back to the mainland to be near Ollie’s ailing mother and the music went with them. Soon Endangered Species (a big band) was launched Tuesday nights at That Pizza Place in Carlsbad, California, using the Sunday Band music as well as new charts written by local band members. Ollie also put together a ‘40’s type swing band for the “Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame” headquarters in Vista, California. Both of these bands are still going strong in the North San Diego Area.