Bob Thiele was a major voice in the music industry for nearly six decades. Something of a child prodigy,
Thiele started hosting a jazz radio show when he was 14. As a teenager, he learned clarinet and led a big band locally in the New York area. From 1939-1941, he was editor of Jazz Magazine, and at the age of 17 in 1939, he founded the Signature label. As the head of the label and its producer,
Thiele recorded
Art Hodes,
Yank Lawson,
Lester Young,
Errol Garner, various Chicago jazz-style groups, and, most notably in 1943, a classic session by
Coleman Hawkins. After Signature folded in 1948,
Thiele freelanced and then joined Decca in 1952, where he produced sessions for their Coral and Brunswick labels.
Although involved with some jazz,
Thiele also worked with
Teresa Brewer (his future wife),
the McGuire Sisters,
Lawrence Welk, and several notables whose careers he helped launch:
Buddy Holly (whom
Thiele largely discovered),
Henry Mancini,
Steve & Eydie, and
Jackie Wilson. He then switched to Dot for a period in 1959. With
Steve Allen,
Thiele headed the short-lived Hanover-Signature label (which had a big hit with
Ray Bryant's "Little Susie"), and he also freelanced for other labels. Probably his proudest accomplishment was teaming up
Duke Ellington and
Louis Armstrong for a classic set on Roulette.
From 1961-1969,
Thiele was the main producer at ABC/Impulse! He gave
John Coltrane permission to record as extensively as he wanted, and
Thiele also produced more than 100 other albums, including sets by
Charles Mingus,
Oliver Nelson,
Albert Ayler,
Archie Shepp,
Pharoah Sanders,
Charlie Haden's Liberation Music Orchestra,
Earl Hines,
Johnny Hodges,
Coleman Hawkins (including a date with
Duke Ellington),
Quincy Jones,
Count Basie, and many others. He started ABC's Bluesway subsidiary, which featured blues in the late '60s (highlighted by dates from
B.B. King,
T-Bone Walker,
Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson, and
Big Joe Turner) and produced a variety of pop singers for ABC. After leaving ABC/Impulse!,
Thiele founded a series of short-term labels, including Flying Dutchman, Blues Time, Dr. Jazz, and finally Red Baron.
Thiele wrote a lot of songs for his artists through the years, with "What a Wonderful World" being easily his biggest success. Among the many musicians he produced during his last two decades were such favorites as
Gato Barbieri,
David Murray,
Lonnie Liston Smith,
Clark Terry, and
Teresa Brewer, whom he teamed with
Count Basie,
Duke Ellington,
Stéphane Grappelli,
Earl Hines,
Ruby Braff, and even
Murray. As enthusiastic in his later years about music as he had been as a teenager,
Bob Thiele was active up until his death. His 1995 memoir, What a Wonderful World, is colorful, if much too brief. ~ Scott Yanow