
Lavallette, New Jersey c.1962. Charlie Francesconi on left (bass player) and Paul Goldfinger (ie Gary) on right in front of the Red Rail Restaurant. Re-post.

Bunny, I, Charlie (bass) and Frank (drums) warming up in Frank’s basement in Rutherford. We were college kids. Bunny and I were from FDU while Frank went to Seton Hall. Charlie was a precocious high school senior whose girlfriend was our groupie. Bunny rarely sang, but when she did, it was “Willow Weep for Me.” (We weeped for her singing.) Bunny was so slim that she could play between the white keys. Wallpaper compliments of Frank’s Mom. There are no recordings of our group.
The Paul Gary Quartet performed at college parties, bar mitzvahs, dances, bars and even a boat ride. I played alto sax in the FDU jazz band, but it was tenor in the photo above.
Frank Cancellieri and I, from Rutherford, have been friends since 4th grade. Bunny Celmer was from Passaic, while Charlie was from Paterson.
We have stories from our one summer working in Lavallette. The Red Rail no longer exists. It is now condominiums. We were the only band at the Shore that summer which could play a cha-cha or a fox trot and which did not feature rock and roll. Since it was a restaurant, we played a lot of dinner music in addition to dance music. (The had a dance floor behind the band.). In front of us was the bar which was more entertaining than we were.
The three guys shared an apartment above a garage in Seaside Heights. As you can imagine, that was something!
Our music was mostly jazz-tinged standards. Our theme song was “Almost Like Being in Love” from Brigadoon by Lerner and Loewe. The Johnny Hartman version (below) is about the same tempo that we used, although ours was a bit faster—more suitable for the jitterbug.
At the start of the evening we would play a chorus, and then I would speak into the mic while the music got softer, and I would say, “Good evening ladies and gentlemen. (or “ladies and germs.”) You are listening to the Paul Gary Quartet. We hope you have a wonderful time tonight, so step onto the dance floor and join the fun.”
Then the volume would increase, and I would play the melody on my Selmer tenor sax into the microphone. I loved to play into a mic–the sound would just float all over the place.
We were too young to drink, so we all got “cabaret licenses.” Customers at the bar wanted to buy us drinks, but if they were female, we were able to make some other arrangements.
Thanks Paul for great memories
Reblogged this on Blogfinger and commented:
Who doesn’t like to reminisce once in a while? We last posted this tribute to fine music in 2015.
We did joke around a lot, but we mostly loved the music. We had a “fake book” to help us out; it had about five hundred songs in it, so if you requested “Sam, You Made the Pants Too Long” we could take a shot. Click on Blogfinger below.
The guys had matching yellow jackets from Robert Hall. They were always wrinkled, and there was always a wise guy in the crowd, one of which danced by behind Frank the drummer and asked, “Who’s your tailor?”
There was a mobster at the bar who demanded that we play “Sweet Georgia Brown” over and over until he and his girl were ready to stop dancing. Of course, we obliged.
Nope
Did your group ever play with the Bernie Wyte Orchestra from Hillside NJ ??
Holy time machine Batman!