Preston Love

"Preston Love Memorial Site."

Band Members Just a few of the artists PRESTON LOVE has played with (between 1941-2004): Nat Towles, Lloyd Hunter, Snub Mosely, Fats Waller, Horace Henderson, Lucky Millinder, Lena Horne, Bull Moose Jackson, Billie Holiday, Count Basie, Johnny Otis, Shuggie Otis, Marvin Gaye, The Temptations, Aretha Franklin, Ray Charles, Gladys Knight, The Four Tops, Smokey Robinson, Sugar Pie De Santo, Frank Zappa, Janis Joplin, Nichelle Nichols, Buck Clayton, Buddy Tate, Lucky Thompson, Paul Gonsalves, Shadow Wilson, C.Q. Price, Melvin Moore, Plas Johnson, Illinois Jacquet, Alvin "Junior" Raglin, Andre Lewis, Timmy Renfro, Big Joe Turner, Little Esther Phillips, Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson, Big Jay McNeely, T-Bone Walker, Jimmy Rushing, Sonny & Cher, Eli Wolinsky, Harry Lee Lewis, James Von Streeter, Devonia Williams, Pete Lewis, Roy Gaines, Hampton Hawes, Billy Hadnott, Fats Theus, Red Callender, Jackie Kellso, Clifford Solomon, Wilton Felder, Stix Hooper, George Washington, John "Streamline" Ewing, Lloyd Glenn, Mel Brown, Paul Humphrey, Orville Johnson, Nate Mickells, Norman Love, Richie Love, Portia Love, George Miles, Buddy Miles, Calvin Keys, Stemsy Hunter, Mason Prince, Gayland Prince, Jean Rogers, Richetta Wilson, Gary Foster, Mitch Towne, George Laughery, John Foley, Bobby Griffo, Red Mitchell, Michel Pastre, Charles Brown, Ruth Brown, Roy Milton, Charles Mingus, Ben Webster, Freddie Green, Jo Jones, Harry "Sweets" Edison, Buddy Rich, Cab Calloway, and can be seen with the Johnny Otis Show in the Clint Eastwood film, "Play Misty For Me."

Influences Earle Warren, Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Buddy Tate, Jimmy Rushing, Freddie Green, Walter Page, Jo Jones, Nat Towles, Lloyd Hunter, Tommy Douglas, John Jackson, Johnny Hodges, Jimmy Mundy, Eddie Durham, Johnny Otis, Pete Johnson, Don Byas, Dickie Wells, Buck Clayton, Harry "Sweets" Edison, Buster Smith, Milt Yaner, Jack Washington, Barney Bigard, Charlie Parker, Lester Young, and many others.
Sounds Like To purchase a full-length CD of either PRESTON LOVE-OMAHA BLUES or PRESTON LOVE-PRESTON LOVE containing songs featured on this Myspace page, send a postal money order for $15.00 (per CD) to Sound & Image, P.O. Box 34069, Omaha, NE 68134-0069. (Checks not accepted, cash not advisable). The price includes postage & handling.

About Preston Love

This is a site dedicated to the memory of PRESTON LOVE: Internationally Renowned Band Leader, Musician and Author. The following biography is Copyright © 2005 by Jean Sanders. PRESTON LOVE played lead alto saxophone with the best in the business, including Count Basie, Ray Charles and Stevie Wonder. An African American, Preston led his own integrated orchestra when that was a rarity. He managed the west coast operation of Motown Records for several years. He taught classes in black music history and was an artist-in-residence who conducted numerous jazz clinics. He wrote a well received book and was a columnist for the Omaha World Herald. This gifted man embodied "the whole musical package." Preston was born April 21, 1921, the youngest of Mexie and Thomas Love's nine children. His mother was by then a widow who raised the children on her own. Their home in Omaha, Nebraska, often referred to as the "Love Mansion," was described by Preston as "dilapidated," but its nickname aptly described the closely knit family within. Preston and his brother Norman listened to musical radio programs, and one night in 1935, for the first time, they heard Count Basie and His Orchestra. From then on, their fascination with Basie grew. In 1937, Norman bought a new recording of COUNT BASIE. Preston listened intently and wanted to produce a sound just like the unidentified lead alto saxophone player. Preston graduated from Omaha North High School in June 1938. He worked as a bellhop in a local men's club and saved money to buy an alto saxophone. He had lost interest in tenor saxophone, although he continued to practice it. Then he learned two wonderful things: Count Basie and His Orchestra would appear at Omaha's Dreamland Ballroom in August and the alto saxophone player he idolized was EARLE WARREN. In June 1941, Preston joined the LLOYD HUNTER band which left for four weeks to play at the College Inn in Boulder, Colorado. Benny Hooper's Bar in Boulder was a popular hangout for musicians and there were nightly jam sessions. Preston met JOHNNY OTIS, who usually either sat in on drums or vibraphones. A lasting friendship developed. Johnny was another Basie and Earle Warren devotee. When the Boulder job ended, the Hunter band toured several Midwestern states, playing one night stands. On August 11, 1941, Preston and Betty Riggs were married. In April 1942, Preston left Lloyd Hunter and joined the NAT TOWLES band. In July, Preston and Betty became parents for the first time when Preston Jr. (a.k.a. "Sandy") was born. In June 1943, Preston began playing at the Barrel House in Omaha, the first place in Omaha that integrated races and musical styles. In August that year, COUNT BASIE and his band performed for a week at the Orpheum Theater. Shortly thereafter, Preston began working at Sloppy Joe's Tavern. On September 6th, Basie appeared at the Dreamland Ballroom and Preston went to listen. Earle Warren was soon to undergo surgery and he asked Preston to replace him temporarily. Preston toured with Basie to St. Louis, Chicago and the Apollo Theater in New York City. When Earle Warren returned, Preston went back to Omaha. On January 4, 1944, Preston went to New York to join the LUCKY MILLINDER band and made his first recordings with Millinder and WYNONIE HARRIS. However, dissatisfied with working conditions, he soon after rejoined the Nat Towles band after playing short stints with SNUB MOSELY and FATS WALLER. That, too, was short lived. Preston returned to Millinder and toured throughout New York and California. In April 1945, he went home to Omaha. In late May 1945, COUNT BASIE contacted Preston. Earle Warren intended to form his own band, and Basie offered Preston the first alto saxophone position permanently. Preston later wrote, "Nineteen forty-six . . . was really the last glory year for the Basie band." Musical tastes were changing and crowds dwindled. In 1947, they spent the summer at the Club Paradise in Atlantic City, New Jersey. After that, Preston decided to form his own group, so in January 1948, he went back to Omaha where, for a couple of years, he played with local orchestras. In the spring of 1950, Preston finally started his orchestra, contacted the Howard White Booking Agency of Omaha, had brochures and posters printed, and scheduled a gig for the night before Easter at the Glovera Ballroom in Grand Island, Nebraska. Life as a traveling musician is expensive and the financial burden was daunting. Making payroll, which included the booking agent and union dues, was difficult. Added to that, motoring long distances in an old unreliable band bus and playing in "actual barns and dilapidated, makeshift ballrooms" was exhausting. JOHNNY OTIS called from Los Angeles to remind Preston that King Records owed him some work. While there, Preston was able to play a few extra jobs before returning to Omaha. When his fortunes did not get better, Preston moved the family to Los Angeles in June 1952. Since his union dues were still unpaid, Preston took a job at Douglas Aircraft in Santa Monica as an assembler, and Betty worked at a clerical job. Finances improved significantly. Although Preston was able to play two Christmas parties, he seldom practiced for a year. In the spring of 1962, Johnny Otis convinced Preston that he should move to Los Angeles, where work was plentiful. The big band era was over, replaced by small combos, lead singers and instrumentalists who needed backup musicians, and a burgeoning TV industry that required much background music. Work was steady and, during his years there, Preston was finally able to become debt free. When Preston played backup to MARVIN GAYE one night in 1962, he was unaware of Gaye's connection to Motown and its musical significance. Nevertheless, Preston had been noticed. Four years later he was called to provide backup for THE TEMPTATIONS, another group whose work he didn't know, but as he said, by the end of the evening he was a "Temptations addict." A few days later he played flute during a paid rehearsal for FRANK ZAPPA and appeared on Zappa's first album FREAK OUT. Then he toured as first alto saxophone player for RAY CHARLES. Preston left Charles and returned to Los Angeles in July. Preston became the west coast bandleader/contractor who handled all of the backup music for Motown artists when they played in that area. He asserted that "The recordings of Motown artists during those years are probably the last important pure and unspoiled or undiluted black music that will occur in the history of this country." In August 1971, the Loves moved back to Omaha, which they had always considered home. In the ensuing years, Preston maintained a rigorous schedule of performing, teaching and writing. In 1975, he became the first jazz artist-in-residence for the Iowa Arts Council. In October 1983, Preston joined BUCK CLAYTON and many of the original and early members of the COUNT BASIE orchestra for a three-week European tour, where they enjoyed great success. On December 7, 1983, Preston's mother died at the age of 103. For seventeen years Preston taught courses at the University of Nebraska-Omaha that included "Black Music in Social Perspective" and "The History of Jazz." He also continued doing jazz clinics and residencies in Nebraska and Iowa. He expounded definite ideas about the current state of jazz instruction. He felt that jazz couldn't be taught properly in an academic setting because it requires an innate ability to improvise. He said that jazz is best learned during jam sessions where players are not constrained by written scores. They must be innovative and creative. As well as performing regularly with his small combo, lecturing and doing musical residency programs, Preston was featured on a weekly radio program, he worked as advertising manager for the African American-owned Omaha Star, and he wrote a semi-regular column for the Omaha World-Herald called "Love Notes." His writing also appeared in European publications. In 1992, he received an honorary doctorate from Creighton University. In 2003, at age 82, he was recognized by the Omaha Press Club as part of their "Face on the Barroom Floor" series that honors notable newsmakers, although he was unable to attend the ceremony due to his fight with lung cancer. He succumbed to that on February 12, 2004. Preston felt that we must never forget the black roots of jazz and blues and should honor its best performers. As he explained, "I once lectured to a class of approximately thirty young black children in a Waterloo, Iowa, high school, and not one of them had ever heard of Count Basie, Earl Hines, Charlie Parker, Jimmy Smith, Sarah Vaughan, or Billy Eckstine. This was a black history class!" Therefore, it is fitting that the non-profit Loves Jazz and Arts Center (LJAC) in Omaha now exists. Located less than a block from the old Dreamland Ballroom, it is "dedicated to showcasing, collection, documentation, preservation, study and the dissemination of the history and culture of African Americans in the arts." Its mission is "To preserve and promote the unique history and cultural talents of local and national African American artists." Preston Love left a legacy of important recordings including OMAHA BLUES (2001) and PRESTON LOVE (2003) produced by his friend & drummer Gary Foster, and writings. His book A Thousand Honey Creeks Later: My Life in Music From Basie to Motown, simultaneously an autobiography and historical perspective of African American music, received national critical acclaim. The quotes herein, except the LJAC descriptions, are from that book. A music scholarship has been established in Preston's name at Creighton University. At Omaha North High School, he is honored in the school's Hall of Fame. And he is among the charter inductees into the Omaha Black Music Hall of Fame, which opened in 2005. Preston's daughter LAURA LOVE is also a highly respected musician/singer/songwriter/author with a book and many recordings to her credit. For reliable sources, read Preston Love, A Thousand Honey Creeks Later: My Life in Music from Basie to Motown, (Hanover, NH: Wesleyan University Press, 1997) and the Omaha Sunday World Herald, July 15, 1990, pp. F-1, F-3 and December 14, 1997, pp. E-1, E-8 and New York Times, April 5, 1998, Sec. 2, p. 28 and The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd ed, Vol 2 (2002) 628.

Musical Samples

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Preston Love

Preston Love was one of the most respected alto saxophonists of his time. The Preston Love Orchestra was the top orchestra in the Midwest for several years before Preston moved to California in 1962. While in California, he became a top studio woodwind player and made countless recordings and television shows with nearly every big name artist.

As a leader of the West Coast Motown Orchestra, Preston was the regular bandleader for the following when they were on the west coast; The Supremes, The Temptations, Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, The Four Tops, Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, Aretha Franklin and others too numerous to mention. Prompted by his love for Omaha and the Midwest, Preston returned to live in Omaha where he made national tours with many name artists as their back-up bandleader.

Omaha’s most notable jazz musician passed away recently at age 82. More

LJAC

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