| Although the Magnolia Jazz Band regularly performs with up to
six musicians, the nucleus of the band is Robbie Schlosser, cornet
& string bass; Gary Milliken, clarinet; and Andy Norblin,
guitar & banjo.
Robbie Schlosser formed the Magnolia Jazz Band in 1975, as music was his main hobby up to then. He began learning violin in the third grade, cornet the next year, and string bass 27 years later. During high school and college, Robbie's musical interests focused on playing cornet in marching bands and French horn in concert bands and orchestras. After college he lived in New York state and worked as a scientist and a science teacher. He also played occasionally with several informal dixieland bands, including one named "The South Happiness Street Society Skiffle Band". Moving to northern California in the early '70s, he joined the South Bay Traditional Jazz Society, where he met many musicians he would work with over the next 30-plus years. Robbie performs nearly every day with the Magnolia Jazz Band, and he manages the band's business. The Bay Area traditionally boasts plenty of wonderful musicians and lots of parties, and Robbie learned early that he preferred local work to life "on the road". Still, when time permits, he enjoys an occasional out-of-town performance with a few well-known musicians across the country. In the early 1980's, the Magnolia Jazz Band made seven recordings, toured through the west coast, the midwest and the east coast, and was a popular favorite at many jazz festivals. During those years, Robbie performed occasionally with
the Preservation Hall Jazz Band in New Orleans. A few years later, he worked
as a regular member of the Royal Society Jazz Orchestra, performing on a
PBS TV special, several international cruises and jazz festivals, and numerous
special concerts across the country. From 1991-1997, he appeared regularly
with the Butch Thompson Trio, which received national fame on Garrison Keillor's
PBS radio program, "A Prairie Home Companion". Robbie also free-lanced occasionally
with other local bands, including Clint Baker's New Orleans Jazz Band, The
Hot Club of San Francisco, Hal Smith's California Rhythm Cats, and Big Mama
Sue, and he still keeps in touch with dozens of musicians each month. He
continually learns from all his fellow jazzmen, and every day brings something
new. Gary Milliken began playing clarinet at the age of eight,
and has played in countless musical settings since then. As a music
major at San Jose State University, he worked in every type of ensemble, from
medieval consorts to experimental electronics — but jazz was always his first
love. He played in the saxophone sections of many big bands, but he now devotes
himself solely to his first instrument, the clarinet.
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