- Myron Floren
-
Myron Floren
Floren with Welk in 1969.Background information Born November 5, 1919 Died July 23, 2005 (aged 85)Notable instruments Accordion Myron Floren (November 5, 1919 – July 23, 2005) was an American musician best known as the accordionist on The Lawrence Welk Show between 1950 and 1982. Myron Floren came to prominence primarily from his regular appearances on the weekly Lawrence Welk Show, where Lawrence often referred to him as the happy Norwegian.[1]
He was highly regarded by bandleader Lawrence Welk, who was an accomplished accordion player in his own right. Floren functioned as Welk's principal assistant and second-in-command. In Floren's autobiography Accordion Man, written with his daughter Randee Floren, he recalled handling road manager duties when the band traveled, including hotel arrangements and other logistics. He has been seen in a hosting role of repeats of The Lawrence Welk Show on PBS.[2]
Contents
Early years
A first-generation American of Norwegian immigrant parentage, Floren grew up on a farm near Roslyn, South Dakota. Floren took up playing the accordion at age 6 when his father bought him a $10 mail-order squeezebox. He taught himself how to play the instrument, often spending several hours a day using his own methods of study. Soon he was performing solo around the community, often at fairs and social events.
He worked his way through Augustana College in Sioux Falls, South Dakota by working at radio station KSOO as The Melody Man and teaching accordion all over the area. He tried to enlist in the Army when the United States entered World War II, but was turned down for active duty due to a damaged heart caused by a bout of rheumatic fever he suffered as a child. However, he insisted on serving his country by joining the USO, performing in Europe with notable stars such as Lily Pons and Marlene Dietrich. After the war, he returned home to South Dakota, where he married Berdyne Koerner in 1945. The couple eventually had five daughters and gained three sons-in-law and seven grandchildren.
Years with the Musical Family
In 1950, Floren, who was performing with the music group known as the Buckeye Four, went to a dance at the Casa Loma Ballroom in St. Louis, Missouri, where the Lawrence Welk Orchestra was playing. When the maestro recognized the accordion virtuoso in the audience, he invited him to play a number with his band. The number turned out to be Lady of Spain, and from the overwhelming positive response from the audience, Lawrence hired Myron to be a permanent member of his band. Lady of Spain also became Floren's trademark song and he played it countless times on the Welk show.
Although Floren's musical technique made him a much better accordion player than Welk, the two men developed a close working relationship, and Welk never hesitated to allow Floren to display his virtuosity; occasionally the two would even play duets.
Over the next 32 years, Floren became one of the most popular members of the band and the organization itself. It began with the band's migration to California, along with concert dates on the road, and exposure to television, first on local broadcasts from the Aragon Ballroom in Santa Monica, California and later on the ABC network in 1955. During the time The Lawrence Welk Show was on television, Floren was a featured solo performer and an assistant conductor. He also took over some of the maestro's announcing duties.[3]
Later years
In the mid-1970s, Floren formed an orchestra of his own while still employed by the Welk organization. Headquartered in Fargo, North Dakota, the Myron Floren Orchestra played during the Welk show's off-season and during holiday breaks, becoming a regional favorite.
After the show went off the air in the early 1980s, Floren continued to perform on the road, as many as 200 days a year, either as a solo artist, with his orchestra, or with other members of the Welk Show cast. Among the annual events where he headlined were Wurstfest in New Braunfels, Texas; German Fest in Milwaukee, Wisconsin; Norsk Høstfest in Minot, North Dakota; the Strawberry Festival in Plant City, Florida and PolkaFest at the Welk Resort in Branson, Missouri.[4]
Recognition
Floren was inducted into the Norsk Høstfest Hall of Fame in 1986 and the International Polka Music Hall of Fame in 1990. In 1992 at a General Assembly in Trossingen, Germany, the Confédération International des Accordéonistes awarded Myron Floren their Merit Award in recognition of his outstanding contributions to the international accordion movement. In July 1996, the American Accordionists' Association honored Floren for his achievements.[5][6]
Selected compositions
- Skating Waltz in Swing
- Swingin' in Vienna
- Kavallo's Kapers
- Windy River
- Dakota Polka
- Long Long Ago in Swing
- Minute Waltz in Swing
- Accordion Man Polka
References
- ^ Myron Floren Passes Away at Age 85 (accordionusa)
- ^ Myron Floren Obituary (Los Angeles Times.published July 24, 2005)
- ^ Myron Floren Biography (CMT.com)
- ^ Myron Floren Biography (Rogue Digital, LLC.)
- ^ Myron Florin - 1986(Norsk Høstfest Hall of Fame)
- ^ Myron Floren - Inducted 1990 (Polka Music Hall of Fame)
Other sources
- Floren, Myron Accordion Man (Stephen Greene Pr; 1981)
External links
Categories:- 1919 births
- 2005 deaths
- American accordionists
- Musicians from South Dakota
- Augustana College (South Dakota) alumni
- American people of Norwegian descent
- Polka musicians
- Cancer deaths in California
- American musicians of Norwegian descent
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.