Carl Charles Fontana (July 18 1928 - October 9 2003) was a jazz trombonist. His influence among jazz trombonists in the latter half of the 20th century is possibly second only to the great J.J. Johnson. But because Fontana rarely recorded under his own name and performed in public only occasionally after 1970, he is significantly less famous among mainstream jazz fans.
His first break into the professional jazz scene came the following year, when in 1951 he was hired to stand in for one of Woody Herman's regular trombonists, Urbie Green. Herman was so impressed with Fontana, particularly his improvizational skills, that when Green returned Herman kept Fontana on as a permanent member of the band.
After three years with Herman, Fontana joined Lionel Hampton's big band in 1954. In early 1955 he played briefly with Hal McIntyre before joining Stan Kenton's big band later in the year. He recorded three albums with Kenton and also worked with fellow trombonist Kai Winding during this period.
Recording and touring with these various bands, Fontana became known as a lyrical, inventive soloist. His fluid style was quite different from the be-bop staccato of his great contemporaries Johnson and Frank Rosolino. Fontana was also greatly admired for his mastery of the double-tonguing technique, particularly by fellow trombonists. This skill allowed Fontana to smoothly execute runs of notes at speeds many had not previously considered possible to achieve on a slide trombone.
In the 1970s, he continued performing in house orchestras in Las Vegas and recording with various other jazz artists. It was not until 1976 that Fontana recorded an album as an ensemble co-leader. He shared the billing for this record, The Hanna-Fontana Band: Live at Concord (on Concord Jazz) with drummer Jake Hanna. Uncharacteristically for the period, Fontana also toured in Japan with this ensemble.
In the 1980s, he appeared regularly on National Public Radio's Monday Night Jazz program. And although he recorded on more than 70 albums over his long career, his first true record as a headliner did not appear until 1985 when Uptown Jazz released The Great Fontana. He continued performing and recording sporadically throughout the 1990s.
It is fair to say that although Carl Fontana never earned great fame with general jazz audiences, he is on every great jazz tombonist's list of great jazz trombonists. Bill Watrous, for example, cites Fontana as his favorite trombonist, and the two recorded a record together near the end of Fontana's career, Bill Watrous & Carl Fontana (Atlas Records, 2001). Legendary jazz critic and historian Leonard Feather summed up Fontana's career as follows: "Fontana has long been regarded as the most fluid, innovative trombonist after J. J. Johnson--a modern trombonist with exceptional technique and ideas." Fontana died in Las Vegas, Nevada aged 75 after suffering from Alzheimer's disease.
1928 births | 2003 deaths | American jazz musicians | American trombonists | Jazz trombonists | Las Vegans | People from Louisiana
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