Born in Los Angeles, California, his father was the noted banjoist Satchel McVea, and banjo was Jack McVea's first instrument. He played jazz in Los Angeles for several years, and joined Lionel Hampton's orchestra in 1940. From 1944 on he mostly worked as a leader. He performed at the first Jazz at the Philharmonic concert in 1944.
McVea was leader of the Black & White Records studio band and was responsible for coming up with the musical riff for the words "Open the Door, Richard".[4]Ralph Bass persuaded him to record it in 1946 and it became immensely popular, entering the national charts the following year, and was recorded by many other artists.[4][5]
From 1966 until his retirement in 1992, he led the Royal Street Bachelors, a group that played Dixieland jazz in New Orleans Square at Disneyland. The trio consisted of McVea on clarinet, Herb Gordy on string bass, Harold Grant and later Ernie McLean on guitar and banjo. According to McVea, he was not much of a clarinetist but learned overnight to play three songs to secure the job.[6]
Most of Jack McVea's recordings are available on Blue Moon Records in Barcelona, Spain; Ace Records in London, England; and Delmark Records in Chicago. All are available in the U.S. Blue Moon covers the Black & White years (including "Open the Door, Richard"), Delmark covers his sessions on Apollo Records, and Ace covers his four years with Combo Records. Ace's Fortissimo! CD contains several alternate takes.
LP compilations
Open The Door, Richard [rec. 1945–1947] (Jukebox Lil #607, 1984)
Two Timin' Baby [rec. 1944–1947] (Jukebox Lil #612, 1986)
New Deal [rec. 1944–1948] (Jukebox Lil #625, 1988)
CD compilations
The Complete Recordings, Vol. 1 (1944–1945) (Blue Moon #6031, 2002)
The Complete Recordings, Vol. 2 (1945–1946) (Blue Moon #6032, 2002)
The Complete Recordings, Vol. 3 (1946–1947) (Blue Moon #6033, 2002)
The Complete Recordings, Vol. 4 (1947–1952) (Blue Moon #6034, 2002)
McVoutie's Central Avenue Blues [McVea's 1945 Apollo recordings] (Delmark #756, 2002)
Honk! Honk! Honk! [contains 9 of McVea's Combo recordings from 1954 to 1957] (Ace #781, 2000)
Fortissimo! The Combo Recordings (1954-1957) (Ace #1246, 2010)
Rarely Was Honkin' Sax So Much Fun: Jack McVea with Alton Redd and George Vann (JSP #77159, 2012) 4-CD set