When he was eleven years old, the Oakland Symphony Orchestra performed his arrangement of "Stardust". By the time Garcia was in high school, he was working five nights a week playing music and earning more than his father, who was a credit manager in a large department store. After one year at
San Francisco State University he dropped out because he felt he was not learning enough and instead went on the road with several big bands. But he remained unsatisfied because, he said, "I wasn't advancing fast enough." He recalled, "I quit and went to Hollywood and had lessons with the best teachers I could find." He studied composition, harmony, orchestration, counterpoint and form. He took lessons on every instrument so he could write for each with a deeper awareness, rather than just by ear as he had done in the past. He also conducted the West Hollywood Symphony Orchestra once a week for two years, a remarkable experience for a young man in his 20s; he said it primed him for what was to come. His first break came in 1939, when the composer/conductor of the radio show
This is Our America fell ill and Garcia was recommended to fill in. He so impressed the director,
Ronald Reagan, that he was kept on for two years. Reagan was then married to
Jane Wyman who recommended Garcia to NBC, where he was hired as a staff composer and arranger. As word got out, he said he never had to look for work: "It's always come to me. I do lead a charmed life." Soon after,
Henry Mancini called on Garcia and his extraordinary talent of transcribing note for note, instrument for instrument, to work on
The Glenn Miller Story. Universal Studios contracted Garcia to work as composer, arranger and conductor in the 1950s. He remained in the post for 15 years. According to Garcia's obituary in the
Los Angeles Times and his obituary by
Marc Myers in Jazzwax, a daily jazz blog for "the 65-piece studio symphony" In 1957, through his Universal Studios contract, he arranged and conducted
Louis Armstrong and
Ella Fitzgerald's record album
Porgy And Bess. with brass players
Frank Rosolino,
Tommy Pederson,
Maynard Ferguson and
Herbie Harper.
Marty Paich can even be heard on some of these sessions at the piano. He used this instrumentation and sound in collaborations with singers like Frances Faye and Anita O'Day, and brought it back in his most recent collaboration: a recording of all Garcia originals with New York vocalist Shaynee Rainbolt. Although he loved what he was doing, he decided to walk away from it all in 1966. "I fought in the
Battle of the Bulge during
World War II and vowed that if I ever got out of it alive, I was going to dedicate myself to world peace." The Garcias decided to sail the Pacific Ocean, carrying the message of peace and the
Baháʼí Faith to the remote islands of the South Pacific. Garcia said, "Not many people have the chance to follow their hearts with no financial worries. We had the "charm" working for us: we knew the royalties would see us through for some years." They spent the next six years on their 13-metre fiberglass trimaran the Dawn-Breaker, as "traveling teachers," anchoring in such exotic locations as Jamaica, the Galapagos Islands, the Marquesas and Tahiti. In Fiji, in 1969, the "charm" spun again when musicians visiting from Auckland invited Garcia, on behalf of the New Zealand Broadcasting Commission and the Music Trades Association, to do live concerts, radio and TV shows as well as lecture at universities around the country, a perfect fit seeing as Garcia is also known in music circles as the author of what are considered the definitive textbooks on composition:
The Professional Arranger Composer Books I and II. They have been translated into six languages and are used in universities and conservatories around the world. At the age of ninety-two, Garcia was still composing and touring internationally, and he conducted his own 95th birthday concert in Kerikeri. ==Discography==