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Bunk Gardner

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Bunk Gardner
Bunk Gardner in Amsterdam Airport Schiphol, The Netherlands, c. October 1968
Born
John Leon Guarnera

(1933-05-02) May 2, 1933 (age 91)
Occupations

Bunk Gardner (born John Leon Guarnera; May 2, 1933 in Cleveland, Ohio) is an American musician who most notably played for the original version of Frank Zappa's Mothers of Invention until the group disbanded in 1969. He plays woodwinds and tenor sax.

Career

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Gardner started playing music at the age of seven by taking piano lessons. When he was a teenager he started playing the tenor sax. In 1959 he played with Bud Wattles & his Orchestra's album Themes from the Hip. Later he played with Joanna & the Playboys in 1962. By late 1966 Gardner had joined Frank Zappa & the Mothers of Invention, playing tenor sax and other woodwinds. The Mothers found success, with Absolutely Free and We're Only in It for the Money entering the charts. In late 1968 his brother Buzz Gardner joined the Mothers, staying until the group disbanded a year later. Gardner played with Menage A Trois with Buzz and John Balkin. Later he recorded with Geronimo Black and the Grandmothers.

In 1980 Gardner and other members from the Mothers of Invention reunited to form the Grandmothers, recording a few albums and reuniting again in 2002. Gardner has done a few projects with Don Preston, a member of the Mothers, making a few albums and touring with him.

Gardner also plays flute, piccolo, clarinet, bass clarinet, bassoon, and bass and soprano saxes.

Don Preston remains Gardner's close friend. In 2010 he recorded Gardner's autobiography (audiobook) "The Bunk Gardner Story" (featuring Don Preston), in Arthur Barrow's lotek studio, produced by Jon Larsen for Zonic Entertainment.

From 2003 to 2009, Gardner was a member of the Los Feliz Woodwind Ensemble with founder Kalman Bloch and Michele Zukovsky.[1][2]

Personal life

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Gardner married his wife Bonnie in 1977; the couple have two daughters.

Discography

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With Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention

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With The Grandmothers

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  • The Grandmothers (1981)
  • Fan Club Talk (1981)
  • Lookin Up Granny's Dress (1983)
  • A Mother of Anthology (1993)
  • Who Could Imagine? (1994)
  • Eating The Astoria (2000)

With Geronimo Black

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Bunk Gardner solo releases

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References

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  1. ^ "Kalman Bloch".
  2. ^ "Skylight Books Celebrates Eight Years (Like the Number of Legs on a Spider)". October 29, 2004.