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For the American football coach, see Glen Gray (football coach).
Glen Gray Knoblauch, better known as Glen Gray, (June 7, 1900 – August 23, 1963, Plymouth, Massachusetts) was a jazz saxophonist and leader of the Casa Loma Orchestra.1 Gray was born to Lurdie P. and Agnes (Gray) Knoblauch in Metamora, Illinois. His father was a lifelong railroad worker who died when Glen was two years of age.1 His widowed mother married George H. DeWilde, who was a few years younger than she was. When he was 13 years old, Gray organized a group known as Spike's Jazz Band. Gray graduated from Roanoke High School. He is said to have joined the army at seventeen and two years later he was living at home with his family. He was employed as a bill clerk for the railroad. He attended Illinois Wesleyan University but left to work for the Santa Fe Railroad. In 1927, his Orange Blossoms Band was renamed as the Casa Loma Orchestra, after Casa Loma in Toronto, where the band played for eight months. He collaborated with the jazz musician Jean Goldkette and with trumpeter/arranger Salvador Camarata. Ill health forced Glen to retire from touring in 1950. In 1956, he went back into the studio to record some LPs for Capitol Records which recreated the sounds of the big band era in stereo. Listen toReferences
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