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obit Myron Floren (July 2005)
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Subject: RE: obit Myron Floren (July 2005) From: mg Date: 16 Aug 08 - 11:14 PM OH my..he is one of my all time favorites. What a great guy and a great accordian player. Probably where I got my love of Scandinavian music. mg |
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Subject: RE: obit Myron Floren (July 2005) From: GUEST,Celeste Date: 16 Aug 08 - 10:48 PM Just catching an old '61 Welk Show featuring Myron. I met him once at his home -- a wedding for his daughter. I knew his brother Dewy Floren really well. Myron was very nice. Dewy is nice too. In fact, I'm wondering how Dewy is? Last time I saw him was in Orange California. I met his daughters, but I never met his son, Duane II. |
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Subject: RE: obit Myron Floren (July 2005) From: open mike Date: 27 Jul 05 - 06:24 PM i seem to recall a discussion here where Myron really liked to kick out the jams, and Lawrence Welk established a box that attempted to keep him inside, but left to his own decisions, he liked to play outside the box!! |
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Subject: RE: obit Myron Floren (July 2005) From: khandu Date: 27 Jul 05 - 05:58 PM I always liked Myron. I was at one time a regular viewer of the Lawrence Welk Show, and Lawrence & Myron were my favorites (& that jiggly pianist, Joanne Castle!). RIP, Myron & thanks for the music! Ken |
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Subject: obit: Myron Floren accordionist From: open mike Date: 27 Jul 05 - 05:14 PM Sioux Falls Argus Leader * South Dakota * July 26, 2005 Floren was down-to-earth, versatile player Accordionist remembered as one of state's most noted musicians Accordionist Myron Floren may be remembered most for his performances on "The Lawrence Welk Show." But many who knew him remember another side of the Roslyn native: He was "a heck of a nice guy." One of the most noteworthy musicians ever from South Dakota, Floren died of cancer Saturday at the age of 85. "Within the accordion community he was looked up to with great reverence, and as a person he was very delightful, just one of the nicest people we've ever had," said Faithe Deffner, board member for the American Accordionists' Association, in Mineola, N.Y. "He's been honored by the accordion industry many times." Floren joined Welk's band in 1950 and stayed on until the television show ended in 1982. More recently, he performed at music festivals around the country. He also returned home dozens of times to play the Sioux Falls Arena and the Corn Palace in Mitchell, and for many family reunions in the Roslyn and Sioux Falls areas. Friends from as far back as the 1930s say his down-to-earth personality and ever-present smile come from his Midwestern roots. "One day we stayed after school for some activity and missed the bus, and ended up walking home," said Milton S. Swenson, 83, now of Lake Preston. He attended Roslyn High School with Floren in the mid-1930s. "We were walking on a gravel road south of town, and he took off his shoes," Swenson said. "I said 'You're going to hurt your feet.' He said 'It's the only pair of shoes I've got, and I want to make them last longer.' " The two families' farms were within a mile of each other, three to four miles from school. Money was tight during the '30s, as people had to get along with very little during the dry, crop-failing drought years, he said. He was a good musician as a high school student, said Swenson. He remembers Floren playing "Flight of the Bumblebee" at breakneck speed, amazing listeners. Schoolmate Mathias Nyvold, 85, now of Aberdeen, says he remembers Floren as a "quiet kid" who was friendly and modest about his talent. "He was not a fellow that went out to show off," said Nyvold, who followed Floren's career through TV shows and area concerts. Fans loved to hear him play polkas, waltzes and popular music, but few realized he could play other styles, Deffner said Monday. "His musicianship was beyond reproach, and his abilities far exceeded what he demonstrated, because he usually just played what people wanted to hear," she said. "He was equally versed at playing classical pieces, very beautifully. He was such a clean and articulate player." Deffner said beyond being a fan, she was a business partner. Her interests with Floren date back to the 1950s, as owner of an accordion company that was the brand he played: Pancordion. "He came to us in 1950, and never changed to a different brand," said Deffner, now a manager with the company. "Lawrence Welk once came to New York City, where we were based then, and Myron was having trouble with his accordion. It was a holiday, maybe Christmas, and we helped him out, and developed a friendship that lasted 55 years." Floren tried to enlist in the Air Force but was turned down for medical reasons. Later he enlisted in the USO and entertained the troops overseas. After the war he moved back to Sioux Falls, where he had a radio show. But in 1946, he moved to St. Louis, where he joined a band. One night, dancing at the Casa Loma ballroom where Welk was playing, Floren was invited onstage to play a song, "Lady of Spain," which the crowd and Welk loved. Floren was offered a job with Welk that night. In 1950, he joined Welk's band and stayed until the show's end in 1982. Following his TV fame, he continued appearing throughout the country. The eldest of seven children, Floren has many relatives in the Sioux Falls area. "I'm a nephew, so through the years we would see Myron at many family events and reunions," said Duane Floren II, 52, of Sioux Falls. His father, "Dewy" Floren, is Myron Floren's brother. "We went to the Corn Palace concerts in Mitchell, and the Arena here in Sioux Falls. And he played at the last reunion we had out at Wall Lake, in 2000." He remembers that after one Sioux Falls performance, he and other relatives went out with Myron after the show. "We all piled into a limousine, with aunts, uncles, nieces and such, and we all went out to eat, although I can't remember where," he said. "Myron was fun, a happy guy who looked like he loved life." Guenter Neumann of Sioux Falls, organizer of the annual German Fest on Phillips Avenue, said that as an accordion player himself he always admired Floren. "He was absolutely an inspiration for a lot of people to buy the instrument and learn to play it," Neumann said. "He was such a good player, and fun to watch. He set the standard for playing, and we have yet to hear anyone else playing at that level." A May 2005 story in the Argus Leader quoted Floren, who was planning a centennial tribute concert to the late conductor Lawrence Welk this September in Mitchell. Floren, who still played 150 shows a year, said his professional relationship with Welk lasted 32 years, and the friendship lasted a lifetime. "I think fundamentally, both being from the farm, our values were pretty much the same, the way we treated our work and everything," Floren said. "It is like the old thing in the Bible where it says 'Go that extra mile.' That's what we tried to do. We tried to do something extra, give the audience something, leave them feeling a little better." - - - - - MYRON'S BIO BORN: 1919 near Roslyn, the eldest of seven children. ACCORDION: At 7 years old, he talked his father into ordering a $10 accordion from Sears and Roebuck. COLLEGE: Attended Augustana College and moonlighted teaching accordion for the Williams Music Company. One of his students was Berdyne Koerner, his future wife. TV: In 1950, he joined Lawrence Welk's band and stayed until the show's end in 1982. JAY KIRSCHENMANN jkirsch@argusleader.com |
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