Where it All Started...by
John Stork
It was the fall of 1980. I had just
completed a 6 year hitch with the Air Force Band, followed by
a cross country tour with the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra. I found
myself in New York, alone and without work. I walked into the
Giardinelli Band Instrument
Company, located at 46th street just off Broadway.
I was looking for a job that day. What I found was a career.
Giardinelli’s
in the 1980’s was not just a band instrument company it was an
International Brass Center. There was nothing like it anywhere
else in the world. Mr. Giardinelli
didn’t rely on high speed computerized machines. In fact, the
machines he had were antiquated even for their time.
Instead, he relied on craftsmanship, skill and experience. He
was a firm believer in the old saw, “It’s not the gun,
it’s the gunner!” Bob Giardinelli
had gathered a team of the finest craftsmen in the field of
instrument repair and fabrication, to work with the finest
musicians in the world…who just happened to be his everyday
clientele.
Mr.
Giardinelli was himself the quintessential artisan.
There was not one job in that shop that he couldn’t do. He had
learned the art of instrument manufacturing from his father in
Sicily, who had been taught by his father and so on for many
generations. The instinct didn’t just run in his family, it
galloped! From repairing a horn to repairing a lathe, from
scratch building a clarinet, to making the tools to do it
with, his skills set the standard.
I began working in this fertile
environment learning the basic skills of mouthpiece
manufacturing by hand, one skill at a time. After two years of
back boring, polishing, hand stamping and buffing the
unexpected happened; the man doing the custom work was
suddenly let go. Within minutes Mr.
Giardinelli called me into his office and told me, “You
are now my custom mouthpiece maker. Come with me, young
fellow!” He left his office and traded his sport coat for a
shop apron and I became his apprentice.

For the next year, I watched over his
shoulder. Then he slowly began to watch over mine as he
carefully eased me into the position of custom mouthpiece
maker. He introduced me to his elite client base and showed
his confidence in me by giving them his personal endorsement
of my skills.
Being the “custom man” at
Giardinelli’s Pro Shop insured
daily challenges. The job description required not just
knocking out accurate duplications of trumpet mouthpieces, but
to be equally familiar with all mouthpieces for all
instruments, as well as the various demands in equipment that
different styles of music making engender. From lead trumpet
to historic baroque duplications, from tuba to
cornetto, from alto horn up to and
including mouthpieces for garden hose and funnel (as I once
made for Professor Peter Schickele
of PDQ Bach fame), everything was demanded by the
world’s greatest players.
You never knew who would walk through the
door on a given day. One morning could bring the Leningrad
Symphony while the afternoon would be taken over by the Count
Basie Band. Most every major
symphony player, world wide, would stop by the shop on tour as
did top jazz players like Dizzy Gillespie, John
Faddis, Marvin
Stamm, Herbie
Green, Randy Brecker, J. J.
Johnson, Steve Turre,
Wynton Marsalis and so many more.
We were even privy to a private concert by Maurice Andre on
one afternoon, just for the guys in the shop!
It was a great honor and privilege to be
a part of this great moment in time. What an extraordinary
place to learn your craft. All of us who worked there took a
great deal away from the experience. When it was my time to
move on, I took something that no one else who worked there
ever did…a diploma from the master.

"To John Stork, The pupil who
surpassed the Master, Best wishes,
Robert Giardinelli."
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enlargement