Phil DiRe, Influential Founder of Buffalo Jazz Ensemble, Dies at 80

Phil DiRe, founder of the Buffalo Jazz Ensemble, died on May 26 at the age of 80. Influencing the lives of many, the years 1972 to 1980 represent some of the most momentous years in Phil’s life, as well as the lives of others during that timeframe. Tony Zambito from JazzBuffalo shares the following remembrance of Phil.

Phil DiRe

It is not to say other years did not matter and did not become pillars in Phil’s life.  But it to say that Phil, as a musician, influenced the lives of many musicians and the history of jazz in Buffalo during this time.

Phil DiRe
Sabu Adeyola and Phil DiRe

In November of 1972, Phil led the first edition of the Buffalo Jazz Ensemble in a concert at the Buffalo Central Public Library to a standing-room-only audience.  The ensemble went on to perform concerts at such venues as Artpark, Studio Arena, Keenan Center, and others.  Including gig dates at the old Bona Vista Lounge on Hertel Avenue as well as the Student Union Social Hall at Buffalo State College. 

A poster used in 1976 for the funded city-wide program

The Buffalo Jazz Ensemble, led by Phil, helped launch a journey of performing for several prominent musicians with Buffalo heritage.  Notable performers included pianist Al Tinney, bassist Sabu Adeyola, saxophonist Joe Ford, drummer Lou Marino, pianist Jimmy Calire, drummer Tommy Walsh, drummer Naser Abeday, guitarist James Clark, keyboardist Jeremy Wahl, and saxophonist Jay Beckenstein.  Beckenstein, who was a private student of Phil, along with Wahl formed the nucleus of what became one of the most famous jazz fusion bands in history – Spyro Gyra.

Albright-Knox Art Gallery Outdoor Concert – Buffalo Jazz Ensemble is center right

In 1975, Buffalo was the center of a pioneering concept in the country.  It was one of the firsts to receive city, state, and federal funding for jazz performances.  Phil negotiated a unique arrangement with the City of Buffalo under Mayor Makowski, the NY State Council on the Arts, the National Endowment for the Arts, the local Musician’s Union, and the newly formed non-profit created by Phil – Association for Jazz Performance, which would launch an ambitious program to fund an ongoing series of concerts in every park, cultural center, and school in the city. 

The Buffalo Jazz Ensemble performed in these concerts and exposed many youths to the music of jazz.  Their very first event took place at the steps of the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, becoming a weekly event in summer, and continuing with sponsorship from the Buffalo News and Editor Stan Lipsey post-1980 starting with the Buffalo Jazz Workshop, led by Sam Falzone.

The funded program at Buffalo Public Schools

Prior to these pivotal years, Phil was assigned, while serving in the Marines, to the White House, where he led the White House Jazz Quartet during the overlapping Johnson and Nixon administration years.  This put Phil next to the likes of Duke Ellington, Stan Getz, Gerry Mulligan, Dizzy Gillespie, and Billy Taylor and enabled him to perform with one of his best friends in life, the legendary drummer, composer, and arranger Justin DiCioccio. 

Phil DiRe
At the steps of the AKG. Left to right: Tommy Walsh, Al Tinney, Phil DiRe, Joe Ford, Sabu Adeyola, James Clark, Jay Beckenstein, Naser Abeday, and Jeremy Wahl

At the end of the 1970s, Phil accepted an invitation to move out to Las Angeles to make a living as a studio musician.  Before leaving, he turned the jazz ensemble over to Sam Falzone, where it eventually became known as the Buffalo Jazz Workshop, and operating on a smaller budget and scale.

Phil DiRe to the left in military style jacket playing saxophone

Feeling unfulfilled in his role as a studio musician, Phil took up a friend’s request to join him at a recently opened club in Palm Springs.  The club was owned by the famous singer Keely Smith. Phil quickly made an impression on Smith and became her music director, arranger, and conductor. This Keely Smith ensemble, which also featured noted saxophonist Sam Butera, went on to become one of the most popular bands to ever tour the Las Vegas and Atlantic City circuit. The band was the follow-up act to the great Louis Prima band of the 1950s, which featured Keely Smith as their singer. As the music director of the band, Phil found himself performing with greats such as Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis, Jr., Billy Eckstine, Tony Bennett, and other legends in jazz as well as American popular music.

Singer Keely Smith

By 1982, the constant touring, time away from family, and the tragic loss of his son Michael at an early age, brought Phil back home to the Buffalo region.  In 1994, Phil founded the company SuccessWare as a way to help run his family’s HVAC business that his father began, Sunbeam Heating and Cooling. Phil persevered and wrote the core of the computer program for SuccessWare without any formal training. 

Phil DiRe
At Jazz at Chandlerville in 2019 with Joe Calabrese, Chuck Buffamonte, Jack Kulp, and Gary Sterlace

The calling for jazz and blues music never left Phil.  In his later years, he took up performing with fervor again locally as well as in Florida, playing alongside friends and in special reunions.  He relished the roles of serving as an advisor and mentor, taking a strong interest in seeing the revival of jazz locally and offering support. 

His later years served as a bookend, in many ways, to the first stone that caused a ripple effect in November of 1972.  The circling waves of the ripple effect continue to expand, touching and influencing the lives of jazz fans and musicians in the Buffalo region and beyond. 

Phil DiRe
At Giancarlos 2019 with Preston Brown, Chuck Buffamonte, Jerry Livingston, George Caldwell, and Brendan Lanighan

Phil is survived by his beloved wife of 57 years Geraldine “Gerri” DiRe.  He was a devoted father of Maria, Michelle, Deanne, and the late Michael J. DiRe.  He was affectionately known as “Papa” to his many grandchildren and great-grandchildren.  To Phil, the love of family rose above all in life. 

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