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Velzoe has been teaching at PSGW since 1993. Raised in Nebraska, Velzoe
was one of five children born to a mother and father who played piano
and trumpet, respectively. Velzoe's first instrument was the piano,
which she says she learned without lessons--"I gathered it in with my
mother's milk I think." At 13, Velzoe started playing trombone, teaching
herself from an instruction book. She worked her way up to first chair
in the girls' marching band at Omaha Tech High, and at 16, in 1926,
became a full-time musician with the all-women group, The Pollyanna's
Syncopators. This traveling orchestra was organized in 1923 by Ruth
Randall in Lincoln, Nebraska. This group played ballrooms and theaters
from the east coast to California. After The Pollyannas broke up under
pressures of the Depression, Velzoe moved to California, where she spent
many more successful years playing with top-notch bands. She still
plays regular gigs with her quintet, Velzoe Brown and The Upbeats.
When asked what she thinks of living a musical life, Velzoe says,
"I'm for it, honey!"
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