Jerry Grcevich (Croatian: Grčević; born 1951) is a Croatian American folk musician, tamburitza virtuoso and composer. He is a frontman of the Penn Sembles.[1]

Grcevic was born in Turtle Creek in Pittsburgh, in the family of Croatian emigrants from Ozalj, Karlovac and Podravina.[2] He was introduced to tamburica by his father and uncle, both tamburica players (at Sloboda Tamburitza Orchestra),[3] and started playing in his father's orchestra as a ten-year-old.[2] At the age of 21, he traveled to Croatia and Vojvodina, where he was studying with Janika Balaž in Novi Sad. He also met Zvonko Bogdan, with whom he toured in the US and Canada.[2][4] Since 1980 he composes and records his own music. As a player of more tamburica instruments (bisernica, brač, bugarija, berda i čelo), he usually played and recorded whole albums on its own.[3] During 1980s, Grcevich took multiple ethnomusicological researches throuought Croatia.[2][4]

At the end of the 1980s he started collaboration with Miroslav Škoro, for whom he arranged and recorded his first album Ne dirajte mi ravnicu. He is co-author and arranger of Škoro's hits Moja Juliška nad Ne dirajte mi ravnicu.[1] Since 1993, Grcevich has had his own group, The Jerry Grcevich Tamburitza Orchestra, which has performed extensively throughout the United States and Canada.[3][4]

In 2005 he was awarded by National Endowment for the Arts National Heritage Fellowship for his musical work, especially for performances and cultural cooperation with Irish, Romanian and Hungarian Americans in Pittsburgh.[2] He also became the first Western Pennsylvania artist to receive the award.[3]

Discography

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  • New Traditions (1992), Novi Odlazak Productions
  • Croatian Dances Vol.III (1997), self-released
  • Mila Moja (2008), self-released
  • Sonya i Jerry, Kao Nekad (2011), self-released
  • Tamburitza Dance Tonight (2013), self-released

References

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  1. ^ a b Mirjana Piskulić. Škorina Ravnica rođena je u dubokim rudnicima i vrućim čeličanama Pennsylvanije, među našom dijasporom Večernji list. Published June 20, 2019. Access date September 11, 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e Jerry Grcevich virtuoz iz Pennsylvanije [Jerry Grcevich, virtuoso from Pennsylvania] Biography at the selo.hr. Access date September 11, 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d Bill O'Driscoll. A Conversation with Jerry Grcevich Pittsburgh City Paper. Published January 5, 2006. Access date September 11, 2021.
  4. ^ a b c Jerry Grcevich Masters of Traditional Arts. Access date September 11, 2021.
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