
Jimmy Joseph Vivino was born on January 10, 1955 in Paterson, New
Jersey. When he was young, the family moved to Point Pleasant and
then back to Paterson before settling in Glen Rock, New Jersey in
the mid sixties. He started out in the entertainment business as a
young boy performing at the New York World's Fair in 1964 with his
brothers Jerry and Floyd as a tap dancing act.
J
immy was brought up in a musical household. Jimmy's father, Jerry
and mother, Emily were very influential in helping Jimmy pursue a
career in music; and did much to encourage him that that direction.
His earliest memories of music being played in his house were of his
dad playing Louis Armstrong and Roy Eldridge records. Jimmy's father
was a jazz trumpeter and all his brothers were already playing
musical instruments by the age of five. His brother Floyd took up
the piano; Jerry began playing clarinet; and Jimmy took up the
trumpet. Jimmy enjoyed playing the trumpet very much and proved to
be quite talented.
When he was a boy, Jimmy and his family loved to spend time together
gathered around their television set to watch the Ed Sullivan Show.
Amazingly, at a very early age Jimmy could easily commit a song to
memory after hearing it only once! And so although young Jimmy was
only in the second grade when The Beatles appeared on The Ed
Sullivan Show, he was able to memorize the few songs they sang! They
were a huge influence on him.
At the age of 10 Jimmy became interested in The Butterfield Blues
Band and The Blues Project. In fact, Jimmy says one of his earliest
concert disappointments happened in the 7th grade when he went to
The Fillmore. He was eagerly looking forward to seeing Al Kooper,
only to find out that Al Kooper wouldn't be performing!
Other artists Jimmy admired around this time (1966-1967) were:
Electric Flag (Michael Bloomfield), Muddy Waters, B.B. King and all
Motown, including the Temptations, Four Tops, and Junior Walker,
just to mention a few.
In 1968-1969 Jimmy became interested in Mountain. He loved Lesley
West and The Doors. Interestingly enough, Jimmy plays often with
Lesley West these days.
Jimmy continued playing the trumpet, and at age 13 he was already
forming bands and playing high school dances; at the late age of 15
he took up the guitar and he studied with Joe Cinderella and Jazz
Guitarist Jack Wilkins.
The Band was one of Jimmy's favorites while in high school. He also
loved Cream, Jimi Hendrix, The Righteous Brothers, Creedence
Clearwater Revival, and John Lennon, just to mention a few.
In 1970 Jimmy became fascinated with the music of Stevie Wonder and
Ray Charles. It was around this time that Jimmy took up keyboards
and became good enough to do studio work in a very short period of
time.
By the mid-seventies, The Uncle Floyd Show was very popular, and
Floyd Vivino was selling out the Bottom Line in New York City. At
this time Jimmy's band provided the music. On sax was Jerry Vivino;
on guitar, Jimmy Vivino; on keyboards the fabulous Ed Alstrom; and
on drums, Frank Pagano.
Uncle Floyd poses with Jimmy and Jerry
Interestingly, all of the band were Glen Rock High School graduates,
and they all went on to be successful musicians.
During this time Jimmy was putting together his own bands and doing
a lot of studio work. His career was developing nicely. He played a
lot with Phoebe Snow, Dion, and Frankie Valli among others.
By 1980 Jimmy's many talents were really becoming recognized, and
Jimmy expressed an interest in moving to NYC. By then Jimmy was very
much in demand as a studio musician.
In 1984 he directed an Off-Broadway show entitled "Leader of the
Pack" at The Bottom Line. There he met Paul Shaffer who was unable
to be the show's full time musical director due to his "Late Night
With David Letterman" gig. He soon became a big fan of Jimmy's and
helped on the project. Three months later the show got picked up by
Broadway producers and Jimmy got his shot.
He reached the goal of becoming a Broadway musical director before
the age of 30! It was there on Broadway that Jimmy met his future
wife, Geneva. She was the assistant to Choreographer Michael Peters.
Unfortunately the show closed after several months, and Jimmy was
devastated. Maybe he was too devastated to actually hear the
reviews. Although every review said the show lacked a storyline,
they also noted that the music was outstanding thanks to Jimmy
Vivino! Phil Spector himself said that Jimmy had successfully
duplicated his now famous "wall of sound." (Instead of the simple
drums, guitar, horns, and piano typical of most recordings of the
time, Phil Spector used large orchestras, lots of echo and reverb
and built up layer upon layer of sound to the point where individual
instruments were not definable. It was just that...a wall of sound!
And Jimmy Vivino was able to duplicate it.) In a way, the fact that
"Leader of the Pack" had closed now allowed more doors to open for
Jimmy.
Jimmy now started playing more and more with Darlene Love (Danny
Glover's wife in Lethal Weapon) , Ronnie Spector, Dion and various
other artists. He and Paul Shaffer would play a few times a week at
local NYC clubs such as Hades and JP's. Jimmy began performing with
Al Kooper and met John Sebastian. John had a TV show called "DejaVu",
and Jimmy became the leader of the house band.
He began doing more high profile work. HBO, Cinemax and motion
pictures now came into view including working in Hollywood on such
movies as "Sister Act", "Sister Act 2", "The First Wives Club",
"Heart & Soul", "Night In The City" and "George of the Jungle".
Interestingly, Jimmy was the musical director for "Sister Act" and
even coached Whoopi on her singing!
During the mid 80's, Jimmy spent a lot of time at the NY blues club,
Tramps, where the Johnny Copeland Band performed. There he met Mike
Merritt and James Wormworth who played in Copeland's group. Both
quickly became friends with Jimmy; and in 1989 Mike Merritt left
Copeland to work with pianist Johnnie Johnson, asking Jimmy and
James to join him in putting a band together for Johnnie.
Jimmy, Michael Merritt, James Wormworth
and Johnnie Johnson at the keys.
Back in 1982 Jimmy first met Eddie Brigati of The Rascals, and they
became good friends. Eddie loved performing with Jimmy. (Eddie
immediately recognized Jimmy's enormous talent and predicted he
would be very successful in the music business before anyone else
did!) It was in 1986 that Jimmy began touring with Felix Cavilieri
of the Rascals and was working for Wilson Pickett while still
playing in bands. One of those band s in 1988 was the New York group
"Reckless Sleepers" with songwriter Jules Shear (MTV Unplugged), and
Steve Holly (Ex-Wings drummer). Jimmy took part on a project by a
New Jersey musician known as "Killer Joe" Dilea, and it was through
Joe Delia that he met Max Weinberg, who played with Jimmy on that
project. (Jimmy had already played with Bruce Springsteen and
Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes by this time.)
When Al Kooper asked Jimmy to put together a band for his New York
shows at The Bottom Line, Jimmy started to accompany him there and
later recorded with him on his albums "Soul Of A Man" and "Rekooperation".
He also played with Johnnie Johnson (Chuck Berry's pianist) in 1990
and John Sebastian's J-Band.
In 1993 Max Weinberg literally ran into Conan O'Brien on the corner
of 7th Ave. and 5th street in NYC and asked for an audition for his
new show Late Night With Conan O'Brien on NBC. (Max technically
didn't have a band when "Killer Joe, Scene of the Crime" was
released). Conan was a huge Bruce Springsteen and E-Street fan so he
felt obligated to audition Max. However, he was convinced Max would
never fit into his show's format. Max went home and called Jimmy,
who was in San Francisco at the time..... and like a scene out of
The Blues Brothers, they put the band together! Jimmy called Jerry.
At the time of the audition, Jerry Vivino was doing a lot of private
studio functions and jingle work. He told Jimmy he had an
unbelievable keyboard player that had been working on and off with
him. So Jerry brought in Scott Healy!
Keep in mind these guys had never really played together as a band,
but Max Weinberg was a true friend and gave the guys their shot! And
of course they didn't disappoint. However, Conan thought the band
would probably have a big beat, rock sound and he was already
rehearsing how to tell Max they wouldn't get the gig! What a
surprise when Conan walked in a little after the band began
auditioning!! He took one look at the guys, heard the music, and
turned to Jeff Ross, the producer. They had the same exact look on
their faces!! They just listened in amazement and Conan said, "Give
these guys what they want and sign them up!" It was that
easy.........and the Max Weinberg 7 was born on September 13, 1993!
Jimmy is the gifted guitarist/arranger and many times lead singer
for the Max Weinberg 7 and is the associate music director for the
show. He has played, produced, arranged and/or orchestrated the
music for artists as diverse as: Laura Nyro, Phoebe Snow, Cissy
Houston, Al Kooper, The New York Rock and Soul Revue with Donald
Fagen and Michael McDonald, Johnnie Johnson, Hubert Sumlin, Shemekia
Copeland, Joe Pesce, and Painted Blue (A blues tribute to the
Rolling Stones.) For the last 14 years he has been Al Kooper's
guitarist and music director.
Some of Jimmy's bands are known as: The Vivino Brothers, The J-Band,
The Black Italians, the Jimmy Vivino Band, and Jimmy Vivino and the
Rekooperators.
As a music director Jimmy's credits range from "Leader Of the Pack"
to "Senator Joe", "Beehive", "Just Once" and "One Hot Minute"
(Off-Broadway).
On the small screen his credits include: "Deja View" The Cinemax
Session With James Brown, Aretha Franklin and Wilson Pickett,
"Legendary Ladies of Rock and Roll" and "The Uncle Floyd Show."
Jimmy at a Fab Faux gig
As if that wasn't enough, Jimmy's artistic talents are not limited
to music! Jimmy is a talented artist and loves to draw, paint and
sculpt. He lives in Greenwich Village with his wife Geneva and plays
at New York nightspots like The Bottom Line, Chicago Blues and The
Bowery Ballroom. Jimmy and Will Lee from The Late Show with David
Letterman have formed a band called The Fab Faux and perform at the
China Club in NYC once a month, having recently been featured on
CNN.
Jimmy with Will Lee
Since the formation of the Fab Faux in 1998, there has been a real
buzz about them in NYC, with audiences packing out the Bowery
Ballroom, The Bottom Line and the China Club. Their shows are always
high energy and if you sneak a peak at the audiences, you'll see
fellow musicians, celebrities and fans alike!
The full-length profile that was featured on CNN in October of 2001
was broadcast throughout the world, and the Fab Faux have also
participated in a CD of original material by Beatles tribute bands
recorded in London at where else but Abbey Road Studios!
In August of 2000 and 2001, the Fab Faux traveled to Liverpool,
England where they played three shows each year for that city's
annual Beatle week festivities, and that included an outdoor concert
for over 35,000 people on the Apple-sponsored Yellow Submarine
Stage.
But undoubtedly we are sure that Jimmy's proudest moment came this
past May when he welcomed his son, Marcello Gino Vivino, all 7 lbs 8
oz of him, into the world! We wish both Geneva and Jimmy much
happiness on the birth of their new baby son!
Whether it's at The Bottom Line, The China Club, Chicago Blues or on
Late Night With Conan O'Brien, Jimmy Vivino continues to make new
fans wherever he goes!