• Source: Paul Severson
    • Paul Severson (August 18, 1928 – May 20, 2007 ) was an American music arranger and composer who wrote some of the most recognizable commercial music of our time. While he may be best known for the Doublemint gum jingle and compositions for Marlboro, Ford, McDonald's, Kellogg's, KFC & Chicken of the Sea, his jazz work in "The Cry of Jazz" is preserved in the Library of Congress' National Film Registry and his Hal Leonard arrangements of Dixieland titles are played by people worldwide. During his long career he received 15 Clio Awards. Severson has been called "one of the most famous arrangers/composers you've never heard of".


      Early life and career


      Severson, a 1946 graduate of Fargo Central High School, settled in Chicago after obtaining a master's degree in music from Northwestern University. He performed with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and composed for a number of top advertising agencies.
      Wherever he went Severson was involved in writing music. As a performer, he played trombone or keyboards with various bands and orchestras in the 1950s and 1960s, including the CBS Chicago Staff Orchestra, the Stan Kenton Orchestra and the Chicago Civic Symphony. Severson also performed with jazz musicians such as Dizzy Gillespie, Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald and Stan Getz as well as created film scores for director Madeline Tourtelot (The Poet's Return & Two Cats- One Chick 1962).
      Through the 1980s and 1990s Paul Severson was head of the Minnesota State University of Moorhead's music industry program .


      Later career


      Back in Fargo in later years Paul Severson helped found several local jazz groups, arranged compositions for the Red River Dance and Performing Co. and served as music director for Trollwood Performing Arts School. All along, he mentored, encouraged and enlightened.
      Severson composed music for a number of national commercials in the early 1990s.
      Bill Robinson, who headed the Mesa State Theater department from 1960 to 1988, also had an opportunity to work with Severson. Severson composed the music for the musical Princess, which Robinson produced. "He was quite a jazz man," Robinson said. "He was a very sweet man, truly a gentleman.".
      Severson was a moderator and lay minister of two Unitarian Universalist fellowships in Grand Junction and in Fargo, North Dakota. His spiritual search led him to study eastern religions, Native American spirituality, science, philosophy and mysticism. After four years of study, he became a Church of Religious Science practitioner.


      Death


      Paul Severson died on May 20, 2007, after a long struggle with prostate cancer.


      Discography



      As Sideman (trombone):
      With Ralph Marterie

      1949 Sweet and Lovely- With Strings
      1951 Dance Band in Town
      1952 Dancing on the Downbeat
      1953 Pennsylvania Turnpike
      1954 Alone Together Music for Smoochin
      1955 Salute to the Aragon Ballroom
      1955 Hits That Made Him Famous
      1959 Marvelous Marterie
      With Stan Kenton

      1953 By Request Vol. 5
      1953. The Creep/Tenderly
      With The Four Freshmen

      1953 Tenderly/I'll Be Seeing You
      With Hal Kartun

      1955 WBBM Live Showmanship
      With Bill Russo

      1956 The World of Alcina
      With David Carroll

      1960 Solo Encores
      1960 Latin Percussion
      With Tony Marterie

      1961 Jungle Drums/April & The Winds
      With Tony Martell

      1963 Folk Tunes Swingin Band Style


      References




      External links


      The Dixieland Jazz Recordings
      The Jazz disc recordings

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