- Grandfather of award-winning filmmaker, Marc Clebanoff.
- He was an American concert violinist and conductor.
- Clebanoff was known for his love of creating and producing new music as well.
- By the mid-1960s Clebanoff's music had shifted from strict film and classic pop music to more modern popular music (pop) with limited success.
- When he left Mercury he recorded only one album for Decca... the superb "Once Upon a Summertime.".
- In 1939, Clebanoff joined the Illinois Works Progress Administration, or WPA, Symphony. Clebanoff took this opportunity to play to a wide and varied group of audiences.
- Herman Clebanoff was born in Chicago, Illinois to his Russian immigrant parents.
- Clebanoff's music inspired a global following due to his unique style and superb musicianship.
- In 1958 he issued his first LP with Mercury "Moods in Music" featuring musette and his "echoing" violin to great success.
- Clebanoff met Helen Margolyne while he was part of the Illinois Symphony. She was a soprano with the Chicago Civic Opera. Clebanoff and Margolyne married in 1940, just before the United States would enter the Second World War.
- Clebanoff gave violin lessons to his granddaughter, Jennifer, who attended Boston University for medical school. Because of the distance and business, Jennifer would call Clebanoff and play violin over the phone. He would critique her and offer advice.
- Clebanoff also worked with other a musicians including fellow Chicagoan Caesar Giovannini, a superb pianist, and Wayne Robinson as arrangers.
- He recorded several marvelous film themes LPs with songs such as: Secret Love (featured in "Calamity Jane"), "Song from "Raintree County", "Wild Is the Wind", "A Certain Smile", and "The High and The Mighty.".
- Clebanoff's musical talents expanded throughout high school, when he acted as first chair violinist in a plethora of string quartets.
- Clebanoff was also an accomplished concertmaster. By the young age of 20, Clebanoff had already achieved the status of Concert Master for the Chicago Civic Orchestra's, as well as being the Chicago Symphony's youngest member.
- Herman Clebanoff has been described as a passionate musician. His son, Jerry, stated, "He was a driven person. He didn't play to making a living. He played because he was passionate about it".
- Clebanoff led Mercury Records' answer to Mantovani and the other string groups that were a mandatory element of any self-respecting space age pop label's repertoire.
- He took a leave of absence in 1943 to work for the New Orleans Orchestra. Clebanoff returned to Chicago in 1945, where he produced a string orchestra of his own: The Clebanoff Strings.
- Clebanoff was known for his interest in creating new pieces. He frequently made time to create these pieces despite the chaos going on around him. "Two weeks after we moved, he recorded a record in Paris. He loved the opportunity to go other places" Jerry Clebanoff said.
- Starting violin lessons at the budding age of five, Clebanoff was seen as a child prodigy. Two years after receiving musical lessons, he had his first recital.
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