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・ Fritz von Below
・ Fritz von Brodowski
・ Fritz Puempin
・ Fritz Pölking
・ Fritz Pütter
・ Fritz Quednow
・ Fritz R. Huitfeldt
・ Fritz Randow
・ Fritz Rasp
・ Fritz Rau
・ Fritz Rehn
・ Fritz Reiche
・ Fritz Reichl
・ Fritz Reiner
・ Fritz Reinhardt
Fritz Renold
・ Fritz Rentrop
・ Fritz Reuter
・ Fritz Reuter Literary Archive
・ Fritz Richard
・ Fritz Richmond
・ Fritz Rieger
・ Fritz Riemann
・ Fritz Riemann (psychologist)
・ Fritz Riess
・ Fritz Ritterbusch
・ Fritz Roeseler
・ Fritz Roethlisberger
・ Fritz Roth
・ Fritz Rudolf Fries


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Fritz Renold : ウィキペディア英語版
Fritz Renold

Fritz Renold (born February 27, 1960) is a saxophonist, composer, bandleader, teacher and festival director based in Aarau, Switzerland.
==Early years==
Fritz Renold was born in Wettingen, Switzerland. His father played accordion and introduced him to tango and Dixieland. As a boy clarinetist, Renold played Mozart's Concerto, "Saints," gospel, and Beatles songs. He joined the school band at 14 in order to get an alto sax, even though he hated marches. He heard Charlie Parker then, but remained unimpressed until, at 18, he joined a big band and played Sammy Nestico's Basie Book. When he discovered Miles Davis' ''Funny Valentine'' and ''Kinda Blue'' in the LP bins at Montreux, he was converted to jazz.
Renold flew to Boston and thrived in Berklee College of Music’s international music community. Three ‘audition’ big band scores—''Take The A Train, Thus Spoke Zarathustra'' and ''Blues For Susy''—earned him the Quincy Jones Award and a full scholarship with advanced placement. Since Berklee recommended that he compose, he took every composition course he could, including tuition by Herb Pomeroy, Bob Freedman, Greg Hopkins and Corey Allen.〔(Corey Allen, music educator ) 〕 He had Joe Viola and Bill Pierce as his saxophone teachers, and was taught improvisation by Gary Burton and John LaPorta among others. Renold graduated in 1987;〔(【引用サイトリンク】publisher=Berklee )〕 through 1990 he served as Berklee's first Swiss faculty member.
In Boston, Renold co-founded a band called Bostonian Friends with Christian Jacob, the world-class French pianist. They debuted at Berklee's Performance Center, featuring guest percussionist Greg McPherson, sax legend Jerry Bergonzi, bassist Bruce Gertz, and drummer Ian Froman. When manager Ed Keane sent a tape to WCNY-TV's ''All American Jazz'', it made their Top Ten.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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