Lincoln Mayorga (March 28, 1937 – July 3, 2023) was an American pianist, arranger, conductor and composer who worked in rock and roll, pop, jazz and classical music.
Life and career
Pop music in the 1950s and 1960s
Mayorga was born in Los Angeles, California, attended Hollywood High School, and trained as a classical pianist. He began working as arranger and accompanist to his high-school friends in the Four Preps, contributing one of the two piano parts on their 1958 hit "Big Man" and being known as "the fifth Prep".[1] The group's producer, Lou Busch, helped Mayorga get a ragtime album issued in 1958, which was released under the pseudonym "Brooke Pemberton".[2]
With Ed Cobb of the Four Preps, Mayorga also branched out into instrumental rock and roll, forming the Piltdown Men, a studio group whose "Brontosaurus Stomp" made the Billboard Hot 100 in 1960, and whose other records had greater success in the UK Singles Chart.[1][3] At the same time, he and Cobb formed the Link Eddy Combo (the name taken from their names Lincoln and Ed), with musicians Al Garcia, Fred Mendoza, Vince Bumatay and Art Rodriguez. Their instrumental, "Big Mr. C", was the first single released on Frank Sinatra's Reprise label in 1961,[4] and reached number 28 on the US BillboardR&B chart.
Mayorga and Cobb also arranged and produced the first recordings by singer Ketty Lester, including the 1962 international hit "Love Letters" which featured Mayorga's sparse piano arrangement, copied note-for-note 25 years later by Alison Moyet on her 1987 UK hit version.[1] He was also credited with arranging Gloria Jones' original 1965 recording of "Tainted Love", and the Standells' 1966 hit single, "Dirty Water", both of which were written by Cobb.[5]
Classical and ragtime concerts and recordings since the 1970s
In the 1970s, he helped establish the audiophilerecord company Sheffield Lab, and set up his own label, TownHall Records, which specializes in historical reissues and comprehensive collections of jazz and classical music[6] and is "dedicated to the concept that recordings should preserve permanently the important musical art of our time".[7] In the late 1970s he recorded an album with Lou Busch (aka Joe "Fingers" Carr) on the Sheffield label, The Brinkerhoff Piano Company Salutes the Sentimental Sixties.[2][8] Singer/songwriter Amanda McBroom teamed up with Mayorga to record two well-received albums on Sheffield, Growing Up in Hollywood Town and West of Oz. In addition he recorded the Irving Berlin Century with vocalist Margie Gibson under the Sheffield banner.
Mayorga also recorded a classical album with trumpeter Jimmy Valves. The album, The Virtuoso Trumpet , was recorded at Gold Star Studio in Hollywood. It is rare but was very well received.[citation needed]
Mayorga relocated to Columbia County in New York in the mid-1980s,[1] and has increasingly worked as a concert pianist. He has also continued to perform in concert in recent years with Bruce Belland, lead singer of the Four Preps,[9] and has released a series of classical and heritage albums on the TownHall label.[10]
The Missing Linc (Lincoln Mayorga and Distinguished Colleagues) (Sheffield S10, 1974)
Brahms: Variations and Fuge on a Theme by Handel. Handel: Air with Variations. Chopin: Mazurka in A Minor (Opus 17, No. 4) (Sheffield Lab, LAB-4, 1976)
The Virtuoso Trumpet as played by Jimmy Valves Pianist: Victor Mayorga