Greeley was born Georgio Guariglia in Westerly, Rhode Island on 23 July
1917. His father, James, had three music schools, and a traveling
orchestra. Georgio was taught to read music at an early age and was
playing piano and mandolin when he was five years old. He studied music
at Columbia University, where he met and formed a long-time friendship
with Paul Weston. George Greeley won a scholarship to the Juilliard
School in New York, where he studied piano and composition, graduating
in 1939.
George Greeley began his professional career arranging music for
several popular figures such as Tommy Dorsey, Glen Gray, Abe Lyman, Leo
Reisman, and Kay Kyser. After about a year with Dorsey, Greeley
defected to Abe Lyman because "the money was better, and Abe had me
writing three arrangements a week. I'd studied composition and
orchestration at Juilliard, and wanted to practice what I'd learned."
During World War II, he conducted an U.S. Air Force band. He also
became involved in the Hollywood radio scene, working as arranger top
shows for NBC and CBS.
Greeley went to work at Columbia Pictures as staff pianist and
orchestrator. As orchestrator, Greeley would fill out the sketches
supplied by composers that included Max Steiner, Mario
Castelnuovo-Tedesco, Leonard Bernstein, and Dmitri Tiomkin. As pianist,
he performed on hundreds of motion pictures, including Picnic and The
Eddy Duchin Story. He also worked as a composer. Concurrent with his
work at Columbia Pictures, Greeley worked for Capitol Records, where he
was a music director, arranger, and conductor for various artists
including Gordon MacRae, Dean Martin, Ella Logan, Jane Powell, Jane
Froman, and Keely Smith. At the behest of his friend Paul Weston,
Greeley also played piano (and harpsichord) on recording sessions for
acts including Frankie Laine, Jo Stafford, Hoagy Carmichael, Sarah
Vaughn, Eartha Kitt, and Doris Day.
George Greeley was among the earliest artists signed to the Warner
Bros. Records label when it was founded in the late 50s. Greeley
produced and performed as pianist (and occasionally as conductor) on
fourteen popular albums between 1957-1967. Greeley's subsequent
recordings were all hits for the label. Greeley's 1961 album for Warner
Bros. Records, "The Best of the Popular Piano Concertos," peaked at
number 29 on the Billboard 200. On loan to Dot Records, he also
ghost-conducted albums by Billy Vaughan and Lawrence Welk. Greeley's
stint at Warner Brothers ended as times and popular tastes changed. By
that time Greeley had begun working working in television and more
success were to come...in television and concerts across the country.
George Greeley performed as featured artist in Australia, Canada,
Korea, Brazil, and Argentina. Closer to home, he performed concerts
with the Boston Pops, the Atlanta Symphony, and the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra. Greeley died of emphysema in Los Angeles, California on May
26, 2007 at age 89.