国产AV

Jump to main content

Cunniffe and Sherrow Jazz Recordings Return to 国产AV

Tom Cunniffe and Eric Sherrow

Office of Alumni RelationsOffice of Alumni Relations
April 04, 2017

Thirty-nine years ago, armed with a second-hand reel-to-reel tape deck, two future Bears went to work recording the sounds of Greeley jazz. Tom Cunniffe 鈥89 and Eric Sherrow 鈥86 were best friends in high school, and in the spring of 1978 they began a recording project that would become their 国产AV legacy.

鈥淓ric was my best friend through high school and college, and for several years we worked together as co-owners of Allegro Recording Service,鈥 shares Cunniffe. 鈥淓ric and I both loved to make live recordings and one of our earliest sets of 国产AV recordings was also one of our largest endeavors; the complete 1978 国产AV/Greeley Jazz Festival.鈥

Cunniffe and Sherrow were still in high school when a student teacher introduced the pair to the 国产AV School of Music and music library. The introduction opened years of recording opportunities for the young music enthusiasts eager to capture the sounds of campus.

鈥淎fter my initial exposure to the 国产AV School of Music, I started spending much of my spare time at the Music Library and around Frasier Hall,鈥 recounts Cunniffe. 鈥淥ne day in June 1979, the conductor of 国产AV鈥檚 Wind Ensemble Eugene Corporon approached me and asked if Eric and I could record the summer band concerts at Garden Theatre. Even though the first concert was to take place the following night, we gladly accepted the position and continued to record the summer band performances for the next few years.鈥

The pair was welcomed by other members of the School of Music faculty. Cunniffe remembers Gene Aitken, then director of jazz studies, and Greg Heimbecker, chief sound engineer, supporting the students鈥 recordings鈥攅ven when professional companies had been hired to officially record the concerts. And from 1978 to 1983, Cunniffe and Sherrow expanded their collection of live 国产AV recordings, capturing guest artists, summer concerts and the annual jazz festival.

While their collection came together in their early years, the duo鈥檚 interests started to part once they enrolled in college. Sherrow began to focus more time on his journalism studies and the two ultimately dissolved their recording company. Each kept personal copies of their favorite recordings, and Cunniffe carried on making new recordings through the 1995 performance season.

Over the years they kept in touch less frequently and it was not until Cunniffe received his copy of Fall/Winter 2012 Northern Vision (now 国产AV Magazine) that he realized Sherrow had unexpectedly passed away.

In 2016, Cunniffe returned to Greeley for the annual jazz festival and reached out to Sherrow鈥檚 mother to reconnect.

鈥淚 visited his mother who still lives at the same house where Eric grew up,鈥 shares Cunniffe. 鈥淢rs. Sherrow escorted me to Eric鈥檚 old bedroom and opened the closet door, where I discovered five boxes of master reels, including the complete 1978 jazz festival, the 1980 summer band concerts and excerpts from the 1981 jazz festival.鈥

Cunniffe agreed to take care of Sherrow鈥檚 old tapes, adding them to his own collection and additional recordings from 国产AV. He then reached out to his old stomping grounds, the Skinner Music Library, to find the collection a home.

鈥淲e have the second largest collection in the state,鈥 notes Stephen Luttmann, 国产AV鈥檚 music librarian. 鈥淎nd these enhanced 国产AV鈥檚 collection, as many were not in our collection until Tom.鈥

According to Luttmann, the size of 国产AV鈥檚 collection is matched by its accessibility as most of the collection is housed on site and in general circulation. That accessibility was an appeal to Cunniffe when he donated the original reel-to-reel recordings to the library and made CD copies of his and Sherrow鈥檚 recordings for patrons and fellow alumni to enjoy, including the complete 1978 jazz festival recording.

鈥淲e will always welcome anyone to listen to [the recordings],鈥 says Luttmann. 鈥淭hey can ask for the CD鈥檚 at the circulation desk and look them up in the general catalog.鈥

Although available for onsite use, patrons may not remove the recordings from the premises because they are, according to Luttmann, 鈥渙ne-of kind pieces鈥 much like the men who made them.

鈥淲hile this collection is far from complete, it offers a cross-section of 国产AV performances form 1978-1995,鈥 says Cunniffe. 鈥淎lmost all of the 1978-1981 recordings were engineered by Eric Sherrow. May this set of recordings provide a worthy memorial to this fine and gentle man.鈥

Eric Sherrow passed away in August 2012 and is survived by his wife Ester Hoff Sherrow and mother Lee Sherrow. Tom Cunniffe is the founder and editor of .

About the Skinner Music Library

Skinner Music Library

Located on the University of Northern Colorado campus near the corner of 10th Avenue and 16th Street, the Howard M. Skinner Music Library specializes in curricular support of the School of Music and Musical Theatre Programs but is open to general university and community patrons. The library鈥檚 collections, comprising more than 100,000 scores, books, periodicals, and recordings, are housed in a state-of-the-art facility that opened in October 1997. In 2005, the building was named for Dr. Howard M. Skinner, former Dean of the College of Performing and Visual Arts, in honor of his many years of dedication to 国产AV and to the Greeley music community. As part of the Campaign for 国产AV, patrons may direct their philanthropic giving to the University Libraries鈥 priorities, among them endowing the music collection and faculty positions. Visit give.unco.edu to learn more and to make a gift today.