Gallodoro was born to a
Chicago steelworker, but moved with his family to
Birmingham, Alabama when he was five years old. About the same time his father began teaching him clarinet on the "Albert Method". Devoting himself to practice, Gallodoro earned a spot with Romeo and His Juliets and made his first stage appearance at Birmingham's Lyric Theatre in 1926. The next summer he toured the
Gulf Coast with Birmingham banjo player George Evans and decided to settle in
New Orleans, Louisiana, where his family joined him. After six years of playing nightclubs, speakeasies and vaudeville shows at the
Orpheum Theater, Gallodoro moved to
New York City and worked in radio bands. In 1933 he briefly joined
Isham Jones' big band, making one record session with it. In 1936 he was hired to play lead alto saxophone in
Paul Whiteman's orchestra, among the most popular performing groups of the era. After that group disbanded in 1940 he was hired to play bass clarinet in the
NBC Symphony Orchestra under
Arturo Toscanini. Among his credits is the famed opening clarinet glissando from the 1945
Warner Brothers film
Rhapsody in Blue. He claimed to have performed that particular piece over 10,000 times in his career, more than any other person. ==Radio and Television==