Jerry
Darlak
Living Category - Inducted 1997
Musician, Arranger, Composer, Promoter
Jerry M. Darlak
has devoted his whole life to the promotion of polka music. In his
thirty-four years as a working musician, he has performed and recorded
with the nation's most prestigious polka orchestras. His love of polka
music is indisputable. Today he continues this tradition with his own
band and work as a promoter.
All too often,
musicians like Jerry Darlak are overlooked for honors that are bestowed
upon the industry's most identifiable names. However, Jerry has been
much more than a professional sideman; for over twenty-five years his
sole occupation was that of a polka musician, an achievement that
warrants the attention of both his peers and those who have enjoyed the
contributions. Jerry has made a contribution to the polka industry.
Jerry Dada was
born in Chicago on September 22, 1946. At the age of seven, he began
drum lessons, and at the age of 12 began his career as a polka musician.
Within two
years, at the age of 14, he was playing polka music three nights a week
with his own band, The Lucky Stars. He led this five-piece polka band
throughout high school.
When asked by
his guidance counselor at Thornton Fractional South High School in
Lansing, IL what path he wished to follow, Jerry replied, "All I want to
do is be a Polka Musician."
Inspired by the
great polka legend Li’l Wally Jagiello, Jerry took interest in the
concertina and began lessons on that instrument at age 11. The charisma
generated by Li'l Wally had a profound effect on Jerry, as like his
hero, he soon made playing drums and concertina the center of his life.
In 1962, at the
age of 16, Jerry was asked to join Li'l Richard Towalski's band as a
concertina player. Disbanding the Lucky Stars, he was soon immersed in
the life style of a full-time, professional polka musician. He spent
over a year and a half with Chicago's 'Polka General," learning the ins
and outs of the Windy City's polka circuit.
Shortly after,
at the famous Caldwell Woods on Chicago's North Side, he was introduced
to the international polka star, Marion Lush. Learning that Lush's
Musical Stars would soon be in need of a full-time drummer, jerry asked
Lush for an audition. While it is hard to believe today, Lush auditioned
over 300 drummers who sought to play with the country's most famous
polka star.
Impressed with
both the talent and enthusiasm that Jerry had to offer, Lush chose the
high school junior to be the back beat of the Musical Stars. His first
job with that band was in August of 1963 at a polka weekend in Omaha,
Nebraska. This was quite an achievement for someone not yet 18 years
old!
Jerry played
drums with Lush's band until 1965, when he was drafted into the U.S.
Army. While stationed at Fort Hood, Texas, he flew back to Chicago every
weekend to pe0orm with the Lush orchestra. He also played drums with the
5th Army Band, which was assigned to Fort Hood.
In July of that
year, Jerry received orders that he would be stationed in Germany. This,
however, would not keep him away from his beloved polka music: with his
duffel bag and mess kit came his concertina.
Now a member of
the 7th U.S. Army, he auditioned for drummer with that division's band.
He won the position and performed throughout Germany and parts of
Europe. However, when it was learned that he was a full-time polka
musician, and had brought his concertina with him, he soon was a
featured artist with the group, playing Polish, German and other polkas
at the Band's numerous shows.
Jerry returned
to the United States in February 1967, and was again a member of Lush's
Musical Stars. In addition to working as the band's concertina player,
he also served as Lush's booking agent and handled all the band's
business arrangements. The number of jobs contracted through Jerry were
more than some polka bands play in their entire existence, as it was not
uncommon to play seven days a week for six-weeks at a time.
It was also
during this tenure with Lush that his influence on the polka music
industry would become evident. Looking to capture the essence of the
music's Polish folk roots, Jerry developed what is today a standard
blueprint foremost polka bands. Unheard of at the time (as most bands
used either a solo concertina or solo accordion in their arrangements,,
Jerry devised his new sound by adding Richie Tokarz on accordion to
compliment his concertina. The sound was an overnight success and raised
Lush's orchestra to higher levels of popularity.
After nearly a
decade as Marion Lush's drummer and concertina player, Jerry became a
member of the award v4nning Eddie Blazonczyk's Versatones, joining that
group in 1972.
For the next 15
plus years, Jerry played concertina with the Versatones, performing as a
full4ime polka musician forty-two to forty-four weeks of the year.
During this period, both the Versatones and Jerry chalked up countless
awards, citations and other commendations for their sound and their
dedication to the preservation and continuance of polka music.
Jerry retired
from the Versatones in 1987, and moved to Cheektowaga, N.Y., a suburb of
yet another polka capital, Buffalo. The move marked the first time in
twenty-five years that his livelihood was not that of a full-time
musician. But not for long.
Employed by the
Town of Cheektowaga, the administration of the Town's Annual Polish
American Arts Festival soon learned of Jerry's move, and asked him to be
a member of the committee. He also joined the Bellaires, one of
Buffalo's most respected polka groups, led by 'Big Steve" Krzeminski.
Big Steve was responsible for introducing Chicago-style polkas to
Western New York in the early 1960s.
Jerry has
recorded over 600 songs on nearly 60 albums in his career and has among
his numerous citations two Grammy awards. He has performed across the
continental United States and Hawaii, Canada, Poland, Germany, and
Austria.
In 1995, when
Big Steve Krzeminski decided to retire from playing and devote his
career to his daily polka radio show, Jerry again proved his love for
polka music by forming his own band, Jerry Darlak and The Touch. The
band has quickly become one of Buffalo's most popular orchestras, and it
concentrates on providing the solid "pod nogi" type of polka
music that Jerry was raised on.