By David "Chet" Williamson Sneade
In
the bio notes on his web page, guitarist Jim Skinger says, “It seems there was
never a time when I wasn’t strumming a guitar, playing the piano or practicing
the accordion, but it was the guitar that held the most fascination for me.”
Sixty
years later, the guitar continues to captivate him and the music that he has
both composed and performed on the instrument is heard around the world. Born
in the Middlesex-area on April 20, 1940, Skinger was adopted by a Worcester
family and brought to town as a child of two years-old. He went to Ward Street
Elementary School and Commerce High School before enrolling in Clark
University. Skinger grew up around Millbury Street and, as mentioned, music was
there from the beginning.
“When
I was very young I used to spend a lot of my weekends up at my aunt Helen’s
house,” he recalls. “She had a piano in her living room and I would sit there
for hours and learned to play – right by ear, little tunes. Then I began
accordion studies. I took lessons with Guido Forticcelli for a while. There was
a fellow before him.”
Skinger
gravitated to the guitar at the age of 9. He says practicing was never a
problem. In fact, his parents would actually ask him to stop once in a while to
do other things. “I taught myself how to play. I think I sent off for one of
those home-study courses. I could read and play. It was just a very natural
thing. I began studies at Arthur Pruneau’s studios. They were in Worcester at
the time.”
Speaking
of his fascination he says, “It was an instrument that you could create all
kinds of sounds on the strings. It didn’t have the visual thing like the piano
or accordion where you could see all the keys. There was a mystery about it –
how you put all those notes together on the strings.”
Being
a teenager in the ’50s and a guitar player, rock n’ roll of course grabbed his
ear. At the same time, Skinger says he listened to everything. “I was into old
time music because I used to listen to a radio show out in Wheeling West
Virginia, WWVA. There was an extraordinary deejay out there, Lee Moore, whom I
got to know years later. He’s passed on now. He brought out all kinds of
bluegrass and old time music. I loved all that music as well as early rock ‘n’
roll. We had a band and singing group growing up. We had a good time.”
His
band was called the Melotones. “It sounds corny these days,” he says, “but we
were a well-known group in our high school years. We used to play for all the
high schools and college fraternities and dances. There was a place in Westboro
called the Red Barn on Rte. 9. We did a variety of things, Presley and a lot
jazz. That was an era when there was still a lot of the American Standards in
play. People would ask us to play ‘Misty’ or ‘Moonlight in Vermont’ and jazz
tunes.”
Skinger
says he learned to play jazz by listening. One of his early favorite guitarists
was Johnny Smith. “He was a huge influence on me. I was in 7th or 8th grade and
I would run home from school and listen to his albums for hours. He was just
extraordinary. I remember saying to myself, ‘Gee, if I go out and buy the sheet
music maybe I can play just like that, only to realize there was something more
going on. I began to realize there was another whole element to playing jazz.
In those days it was really bebop.”
Johnny Rines |
Skinger
also mentions local guitarist Johnny Rines. “I knew his son who played drums
with us. Johnny was a really nice guy and there was a piano player Bill
Clemmer. I did some jobs with him. This is the way it worked in those days.
There weren’t instruction books. He would say, ‘Look, this is what I’m going to
do.’ And he would do all these wonderful things. He was very advanced for the
time. These guys were way ahead of the curve. He would modulate and do
different things with the chords and you’d say, ‘My god where is he going?’
There was no sheet music.
“Bill
Clemmer was a tremendous player. His wife was Pat Goodwin, the jazz singer.
They would play at this little coffeehouse that was downtown behind Front
Street. It was started up by some very artsy people. It didn’t stay around
long. They weren’t business people. Patty and Bill would go there and perform.
I remember that very well. She was a great artist. I would say Johnny Rines and
Bill Clemmer were tremendous influences.”
Back
in the 1950s and into the ’60s, Worcester offered Skinger a showroom full of
commercial work and mentoring was still a big part of the scene.
“There
were people like Perry Conte,” he says. “I was still a kid. He would call me up
and say would I come and play with this and that group. I have to tell you that
hardly exists anymore. That’s where you got your training. He would send you
out with these guys with big reputations and you’d be scared as hell going to
the job, wondering were you going to be able to handle it. They were all older
and more experienced. That’s how you learned.
“It’s
not like that today. A lot of the students I’m working with have to do a
tremendous amount of preparation. They may not have the experience that we
received but they have to really pass auditions. We started making money, right
way, while we were kids still in high school. We were working constantly. It
seemed like the most natural thing in the world.”
Bill Leavitt |
Sometime
after high school, Skinger headed to Berklee College of Music to further his
jazz studies.
“I’ll
never forget that interview,” he says, “I told the registrar the kinds of
things that I was picking up out on the street. I just thought everybody
thought this way and understood things like this. They really didn’t come to
find out until later.”
Evidently,
the promising young guitarist was much further along in his playing than the
average incoming freshman at the time. Right then and there the school was
willing to take him on as a student. They also offered him a position as an
instructor.
“This
pre-dates Bill Leavitt,” Skinger says. “This is when it was a single little
brownstone. All the big names were there, Herb Pomeroy and people like that.
They were just in the infancy.”
Though
the offer was tempting, Skinger went to Clark University instead. It was a
chance, he says, to study in a formal way. “By this time I was becoming more
involved with classical guitar. The influence was pretty strong. At the time we
were newly married. I was an older student. It was difficult to think of
traveling around too far. I made the decision to stay in Worcester,” he says.
Jazz banjoist Walter Kaye-Bauer |
While
at Clark, Skinger initiated a guitar program, which he directed for four years.
At the same time, he continued classical guitar studies with such notable
teachers as Walter Kaye-Bauer in Hartford, Sophocles Pappas in Washington, DC
and with Alexander Bellows in Manhattan.
Skinger
was in the department with Relly Raffman. “He was another huge influence. We
had to stay pretty much down the middle of the road as far as sticking strictly
to a classical curriculum. Although, on the side we would often go and play
jazz gigs together.”
Skinger
also was one of those who got involved in the creation of the Worcester School
for the Performing Arts, later known as Performing Arts School of Worcester
(PASOW). He also taught privately. Carl Kamp was one of his students.
Carl Kamp |
“He
was my first classical guitar teacher. I couldn’t use a pick anymore. I had to
grow my nails. It was a life changing experience,” Kamp says laughing. “I
studied at his house. He had a lot of students. He lived on Germain Street. I’m
still playing classical guitar. This was around 1968. I switched to classical
when I got out of college. I knew him from the store [Union Music, owned by the Kamp family]. He was a customer too. He’s
a good man.”
Skinger
left Worcester in the early ’70s. By this time he became heavily involved with
things going on in Europe. His studies took him to Santiago de Compostella,
Spain and to London where he studied with English composer John Duarte and the
lutenist Diana Poulton.
John Duarte |
“It
just felt right for us to spend time there,” Skinger says of his family’s move
to England. “It was a fascinating area that I wanted to pursue. I got the
opportunity to study manuscripts at the British museum. So I spent a year there
working with musicians in England.”
In
the mid-’80s, Skinger turned to composing and arranging in both classical and
jazz idioms. Several of his compositions have been published in the U.S. and
the U.K. In 1990 he formed a jazz trio, which led to many successful
performances throughout the New York area.
When
asked about how jazz and classical music coexists in his world, Skinger says,
“Here’s my spin on it. Today everything is on the table. Those kinds of
restrictive stylistic pedagogical techniques are almost becoming a thing of the
past. In certain conservatories I see a more conservative approach and in some
of the more Eastern European programs, but having said that, if you see what
has happened with the guitar in the last 20 years, you will find that there has
been tremendous … the Latin American composers have done a phenomenal job of
taking folk music from their country and indigenous music and incorporating
jazz and European music and coming up with phenomenal music that has been
extremely popular.
“Certainly
the English have done this with composers like John Duarte and others who have
used English folk songs as a basis for composing contemporary works for the
guitar. He was one of the most prolific composers for guitar. (He was also a
jazz guy. That’s why we got along so well.) It seems to me that the one area
that was lacking was our own country, where there was a division between
classical and jazz. People did breach it like Charlie Byrd. He was an artist
who did both.
“Jazz
has a language and a tradition that is approached differently from the
classical position, but I always felt that if you could combine both in a way
that wasn’t a pastiche of styles – which is where the corruption thing got in
there – but actually if you can create a unifying wholeness to the composition,
you have something. That’s pretty much where I am with my composing right now.”
1997
was a banner year for Skinger. He made his debut with the Chappaqua Chamber
orchestra, performing Joaquin Rodrigo’s Concierto de Aranjuez. He also appeared
in a solo concert at the Royal Festival Hall in London for the Latin American
and Caribbean Cultural Society of London.
In
May 1999, Skinger was invited to perform in the Central Library of Moscow. The
solo concert was sponsored by the Music Lover’s Club of Moscow. He also
performed for the guitar classes at the A. Schnitke Music Institute and for the
Primary School music classes for young musicians in Moscow.
In
July 2000, Skinger performed in a series of performances throughout Italy
celebrating Italian/Anglo Culture. The new millennium continues to offer
Skinger new challenges and opportunities.
Skinger |
“It’s
amazing how life can take different turns when you least expect it,” he says.
“I met a fellow in Mexico who is a publisher. He is German, Norbert Dahms. He
asked me to send him some compositions and I just got busy and never did. We
met again the following year in Montreal. He said, ‘You were supposed to send
me some music. So then I realized he was serious about taking on some of my
music. So I sent him some scores and things. He’s published seven or eight
compositions of mine.
“Then
I was invited over to do some concerts in Germany. From there it led to some
invitation to Austria where I’ve been going for the last three years to jury a
competition and festival. Last year they premiered one of my compositions,
which was written for, of all things, jazz quartet and classical guitar. That
came out of the blue. I had spoken to the director who said, ‘I want you to
write some music.’ He’s a great Venezuelan guitarist and I had assumed that he
wanted something along the lines of solo or chamber music for classical guitar.
He said no I want a jazz piece. So they brought in a jazz group from Vienna to
perform. It was written for piano, percussion, bass, saxophone and classical
guitar.”
Skinger
has a new CD coming out in the coming months, his third. “There are two bonus
tracks. One is a chamber piece for oboe, bass, flute and guitar. The other is
the jazz piece that was premiered in Austria. This is the first that is all my
own music. I thought well it’s time to fly,” he says.
Now
residing in New York State, when not recording, arranging, composing,
performing or traveling, Skinger still finds time to teach. He says he plays
both nylon and steel string guitars.
“For
some of my teaching I do the steel, but for myself, I prefer the nylon string,
but I play all the guitars. I got them all. I’m still working locally. I do all
kinds of things. When I have a jazz gig with my bass player, I play electric
guitar on that.”
When
asked if Worcester was a good place to grow and develop, Skinger says without
hesitation, “Very definitely. There were players that took you under their
wing.”
This
piece was originally published in Jazzsphere on March 29, 2008.
Note: This
is a work in progress. Comments, corrections, and suggestions are always
welcome at: walnutharmonicas@gmail.com. Also see:
www.worcestersongs.blogspot.com Thank
you.
This was really an interesting topic and I kinda agree with what you have mentioned here!
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I loved this article. My grandfather was Arthur Pruneau. Its great seeing that one of his students made it big <3
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