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・ Russell Foskett
・ Russell Foster (neuroscientist)
・ Russell Frantom
・ Russell Fraser
・ Russell Frederick Bretherton
・ Russell Freeburg
・ Russell Freedman
・ Russell Freeman
・ Russell Freeman (American football)
・ Russell Fry
・ Russell Fuller
・ Russell G. Dunmore
・ Russell G. Juriansz
・ Russell G. Lloyd, Sr.
・ Russell Garcia
Russell Garcia (composer)
・ Russell Garcia (field hockey)
・ Russell Gardens, New York
・ Russell Gary
・ Russell Gentry Clark
・ Russell George
・ Russell Gerry Crook
・ Russell Gewirtz
・ Russell Gibson
・ Russell Gilbert
・ Russell Gilbrook
・ Russell Ginns
・ Russell Glacier
・ Russell Glacier (Greenland)
・ Russell Glacier (Mount Rainier)


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Russell Garcia (composer) : ウィキペディア英語版
Russell Garcia (composer)

Russell Garcia, QSM (12 April 1916 – 19 November 2011) was a composer and arranger who wrote a wide variety of music for screen, stage and broadcast.
Garcia was born in Oakland, California, but was a longtime resident of New Zealand. Self-taught, his break came when he substituted for an ill colleague on a radio show. Subsequently, he went on to become a composer/arranger at NBC Studios for such television shows as ''Rawhide'' 1962 and ''Laredo'', 1965–67. He worked at Universal Studios and MGM, where at the latter he composed and conducted the original scores for such films as George Pal's ''The Time Machine'' (1960) and ''Atlantis, the Lost Continent'' (1961). He also orchestrated the music for ''Father Goose'' (1964) and ''The Benny Goodman Story'' (1956). Garcia collaborated with many Hollywood musicians and celebrities, including Ella Fitzgerald, Louis Armstrong, Anita O'Day, Mel Torme, Julie London, Oscar Peterson, Stan Kenton, Maynard Ferguson, Walt Disney, Orson Welles, Jane Wyman, Ronald Reagan, Andy Williams, Judy Garland, Henry Mancini, and Charlie Chaplin making arrangements and conducting orchestras as needed.〔(Charmed Life: Shaynee Rainbolt Sings Russell Garcia ) Liner Notes – This Bio Was approved by Russell Garcia and Gina Garcia in connection to their collaboration on Charmed Life: Shaynee Rainbolt SINGS Russell Garcia〕
Russ loved to ski so he would write on-site scores to ski-content films.
==Personal life==
One of five brothers, Garcia grew up in what he said was an “ordinary” household where music was something that came out of the radio.〔 When his family noticed the five-year-old Russ standing by the radio every Sunday morning waiting for the New York Philharmonic to come on, it was obvious the child had a special interest in music. One of his brothers presented him with an old cornet he bought for $5, which Russ taught himself to play. In school he started a jazz band to play his new horn, and ended up using the band as an outlet for his compositions and arrangements of standards, all of which were self-taught. "I've been able to read music since I was little," he said at the time. "I don't know how, because I had lessons only when I went to high school. Call it instinct, call it a gift, I've never questioned my musical ability. I'm thankful for it. If I take up a sheet of manuscript paper and a pen there's a whole orchestra playing in my head. At times I can't write quickly enough to keep up with what's flowing out of me.”
Garcia and his wife Gina Mauriello Garcia, a published author and singer-lyricist-writer in her own right, became members of the Bahá'í Faith in 1955.〔(Russell Garcia )〕 In 1966, at the height of his career they sold their home and possessions, bought a boat, and on 1 June set sail. The couple knew nothing about sailing and his wife did not know how to swim and the early arrival of Hurricane Alma forced them to return with damage after only two days at sea. It was December before the boat was finally repaired and they set forth once again. This time they reached Nassau without any further complications and spent several years as "travel-teachers" for the Bahá'ís as they went around the world to places like the Galapagos Islands, Haiti, Cuba, Jamaica, Tahiti and the Marquesas Islands.
When they reached Fiji in 1969, some musicians from Auckland, New Zealand invited Garcia to do some live concerts, radio and television shows and to lecture at the various universities around the country on behalf of the New Zealand Broadcasting Commission and Music Trades Association. Russell, finished with his lectures and concerts and on advice of friends, drove up to the Bay of Islands in the north of North Island. Garcia and his wife fell in love with the location and bought a house on the waters edge of Tangitu Bay in the Te Puna Inlet, east of the Purerua Peninsula near Kerikeri.〔
They spent many years there, but after they moved to Kerikeri, Garcia continued to compose and arrange, including projects in the United States and around the world. His most recent project prior to his death was his and Gina's first opera, ''The Unquenchable Flame''. Together, the Garcias further volunteered their services on a regular basis to teach primary school children in New Zealand about the virtues gained through the use of songs, stories, games and creative exercises.〔

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