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Big Band Era

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Title: Big Band Era


1
Big Band Era
  • From Territory bands
  • to the big stage

2
Big Band
3
Big Band
  • Territory bands
  • Bands that toured in specific regions of the
    United States
  • top 40 bands of the era
  • Traveling got too expensive
  • Musicians found a home
  • Big bands started to become established in
    certain areas
  • Big cities following the Mississippi
  • Started different styles of jazz music pertaining
    to the regions they were in

4
Big Band
  • Dance craze of the 1930s and 1940s
  • Extremely popular during the war eras ( WWII)
  • Started after the Dixieland era, bigger band,
    bigger sound
  • Musicians started to become more popular, wanted
    the spotlight
  • Count Basie- Kansas City
  • Duke Ellington- New York/DC

5
Big Band
  • Big bands were divided into 2 groups those that
    inspired improvisation and those that did not
  • Solos became important to music
  • Improvisation- playing a made up solo over chord
    changes
  • Chord Changes- the outline of a song
  • Dixieland bands wanted a bigger sound so they
    added more musicians. More musicians meant bigger
    sound and the ability to play new and different
    music.
  • Big bands were able to play more music, faster
    music, used for dances and celebrations

6
Big Bands
  • New York (52nd street) became popular hang out
    for jazz musicians and big bands
  • Cotton Club was the most famous jazz club
  • In later years Birdland and Village Vanguard
  • With the ease of restrictions in racial
    segregation black and white musicians were able
    to perform together thus bands were able to be
    larger

7
Make up of Big Bands
  • 4 trumpets
  • 4 trombones
  • 5 saxophones ( 2 alto, 2 tenor, 1 bari)
  • Saxes doubled on flute and clarinet as well
  • rhythm section
  • drum kit,
  • bass, used double bass
  • guitar, accoustic
  • piano

8
Big Band
  • Big bands created swing a different way to play
    music that varied greatly to other styles of
    music.
  • This created a hot feel
  • Influential big bands Glenn Miller, Benny
    Goodman, Count Basie, Duke Ellington
  • Big bands also created the start of the jazz
    vocalist
  • Influential jazz vocalists Billie Holliday, Ella
    Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, Joe Williams, Frank
    Sinatra.

9
Big Bands
  • Scat Singing- singing syllables instead of words
  • Louis Armstrong
  • Ella Fitzgerald
  • Most jazz musicians of later years got their
    start during the big band era (made name for
    themselves)
  • Became famous and branched out on their own
  • Louis Armstrong, Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie,
    Miles Davis,
  • Jazz Vocalists
  • Frank Sinatra

10
Big Band Royalty
  • King of Swing- Benny Goodman
  • Duke Ellington
  • Count Basie
  • The Prez Lester Young
  • Lady Day Billie Holiday
  • The First Lady of Jazz- Ella Fitzgerald
  • The Divine One- Sarah Vaughn

11
Big Bands
  • Decline of the Big Band era started with the
    Great Depression of the 1930s
  • Was too expensive to keep a large band together.
  • Big bands began to fade due to economic reasons,
    ballrooms started to close, small clubs began to
    open, different types of media developed.
  • As big bands started to fold due to economic
    challenges the jazz combo evolved
  • Big band musicians went on to start their own
    groups and solo careers.
  • WWII created a renewed interest in the big band
    sound as well as the end of the depression
  • In the late 40s the creation of Be-Bop created a
    new style of jazz thus the influence of the big
    band was lessened

12
Big Bands
  • Glenn Miller Big Band was used for entertainment
    and morale for troops during WWII
  • Benny Goodman first jazz group to racially
    integrate their group
  • Lionel Hampton-vibes
  • Benny Goodman-created swing
  • Most musicians got their start with a big band
  • Once they got famous or wanted to branch out
    they left
  • Jazz singers went solo after making a name for
    themselves

13
Louis Armstrong
  • Most famous/popular jazz musician
  • Nicknamed Satchmo
  • Jazz musician, singer, trumpet player,
    entertainer
  • Most famous jazz musician of the 20th century
  • Fame as a trumpet player, band leader, scat
    singer, civil right supporter
  • Helped to create scat singing
  • Featured in several Hollywood movies (Hello Dolly)

14
Louis Armstrong
  • Born in New Orleans, first gained fame in the
    Dixieland era
  • Played with Joe King Oliver, Kid Ory
  • Started his hot and all-star bands in 1920s
  • 1922 left for Chicago with Oliver
  • 1924 wanted to branch out on his own so moved to
    New York
  • Joined Fletcher Henderson
  • 1925- Chicago- started recording under his own
    name using his hot bands
  • Started touring all over the State and Europe
  • 1943 Settled in Queens continued touring
  • Played an average of 300 gigs a year
  • 1950 cut his big band down to 6 members and went
    back to Dixieland style
  • 1964 biggest selling album and highest commercial
    success with Hello Dolly

15
Louis Armstrong
  • Toured Europe, Asia, and Africa as a US state
    Department Ambassador of Music
  • 1971 died of heart attack age 69
  • Major supporter of MLK and was supporter of the
    Civil Right movement
  • He was one of the first entertainers to speak up
    about political causes. He wanted to work behind
    the scenes not be in front of the cause
  • Was extremely generous with his money supporting
    different causes
  • First to popularize scat singing
  • Always played with most influential musicians
  • Recorded with Ella Fitzgerald for Verve records.
    Some of the most influential jazz recordings
  • Most famous songs are What a Wonderful World,
    Aint Misbehavin, and Stompin at the Savoy

16
Louis Armstrong
  • 1964 He knocked the Beatles off the billboard
    carts with Hello Dolly
  • 1968 reached number 1 with What a Wonderful World
  • Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame,
    star on the Hollywood walk of fame, Grammy
    awards, jazz hall of fame,
  • Airport in New Orleans is named after him
  • Influenced every musician to come after him.
  • Major influence on trumpet players
  • Major influence on African American musicians and
    politicians

17
Fletcher Henderson
  • Jazz pianist, arranger/composer
  • Led one of the first successful big bands
  • 1922 formed his own band in Georgia Best colored
    band in the South
  • Worked for Black Swan records
  • 1924 Louis Armstrong joined his band

18
Fletcher Henderson
  • 1930s- started arranging music for his band
  • 1934 started arranging music for Benny Goodman
  • 1939 joined Benny Goodman as player and arranger
    then just arranger
  • Famous for his big band arrangements still being
    performed today
  • Hired by Duke Ellington as an arranger when his
    band played at the cotton club
  • Charts are still being played today

19
Benny Goodman
  • 1909-1986
  • King of Swing
  • Band leader, clarinet player
  • Born in Chicago
  • Started playing professional at 16
  • 1926- His first recordings

20
Benny Goodman
  • Parents were blue collar working class citizens
  • Father urged him to quit playing and get an
    honest Job
  • Father never saw him play professionally
  • 1932 formed his own band in New York City

21
Benny Goodman
  • 1934- Lets Dance radio show
  • 1935- Palomar Ball room
  • Gene Krupa
  • 1937- movie Hollywood Hotel
  • 1938- January 16th Carnegie Hall (Sing, Sing,
    Sing)
  • 1950- LP recording of this concert became the
    first million selling lp
  • 1952 broke up big band due to economic reasons
  • Benny Goodman achieved the same success with jazz
    that Elvis did with rock and roll
  • 1936 Goodman added Lionel Hampton on vibes to
    form the Benny Goodman Quartet
  • first musicians to racially integrate their band.
    10 years before Jackie Robinson entered the
    Major Leagues.

22
Benny Goodman
  • On January 16, 1938, the Benny Goodman band
    played at Carnegie Hall.
  • First jazz band to play at Carnegie Hall
  • Carnegie Hall had been the nation's greatest
    temple of musical art, home of the New York
    Philharmonic and scene of every important
    artist's debut
  • Many of those who played with him as sidemen
    later achieved fame as leaders of their own
    bands, soloists, actors, actresses, musicians for
    movies and television
  • Huge impact on popular music and the importance
    of the clarinet in both jazz and classical music.
  • Thousands of youngsters throughout the world were
    influenced to play the clarinet through listening
    to Benny Goodman

23
Gene Krupa
  • considered to be the first drum "soloist."
  • father of the modern drumset
  • help with developing the modern hi-hat cymbals.
  • the first drummer to record with a bass drum

24
Gene Krupa
  • First real gig was with Benny Goodman and Glenn
    Miller, performed in the pit band of the new
    George Gershwin play "Strike Up the Band.
  • Benny Goodman urged Gene to join his band with
    the promise that it would be a real jazz band.
  • Gene's classic performance on "Sing Sing Sing"
    has been heralded as the first extended drum solo
    in jazz

25
Gene Krupa
  • Left Goodman on March 3, 1938
  • Started his own band
  • authored his own book titled "The Gene Krupa Drum
    Method"(1938)
  • began an annual Drum Contest(1941).
  • Louie Bellson was first winner
  • Bellson went on to become a famous jazz drummer
  • briefly joined up with Benny Goodman and Tommy
    Dorsey before re-forming his own band
  • big band was one of the first in the mid-forties
    to introduce Bop arrangements with the help of
    Gerry Mulligan and the playing of trumpeter Red
    Rodney.

26
Gene Krupa
  • The Gene Krupa Trio was one of the first acts
    recruited by Norman Granz for his "Jazz At The
    Philharmonic"
  • The JATP dates introduced the famous "Drum
    Battles" with Buddy Rich in October of 1952
  • In 1959, "The Gene Krupa Story." The film was
    very loose in the facts of Gene's career but did
    feature an excellent soundtrack recorded by Krupa
    himself.
  • Gene's last commercial recording was in November
    of 1972
  • Gene's final public performance was with a
    reunion of the old Goodman Quartet on August 18,
    1973.
  • Gene died October 16, 1973 of a heart attack

27
Glenn Miller
  • First gig was with Ben Pollacks band that
    included Benny Goodman
  • 1928 freelance musician in New York played with
    Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey, Benny Goodman, Gene
    Krupa, and young singer named Bing Crosby
  • April 1935, Glenn Miller recorded, for the first
    time, under his own name.

28
Glenn Miller
  • His band emphasized the clarinet playing the
    melodic line while the tenor sax plays the same
    note, and supported by three other saxophone
  • Tuxedo Junction, Moonlight Serenade, and
    Pennsylvania 6-5000 were some of his songs
  • In the Mood was his most famous song
  • 1941 left for Hollywood to record for and make
    movies
  • Chattanooga Choo Choo becomes first million
    selling album for Miller
  • Sun Valley Serenade and Orchestra Wives were
    movies the Glenn Miller Orchestra were in
  • On October 7, 1942, Alton Glenn Miller reported
    for induction into the Army
  • assigned to the Army Specialist Corps

29
Glenn Miller
  • appointment as a Captain to modernize the army
    band and ultimately improve the morale of the men
  • transferred into the Army Air Corps, where he
    ultimately organized the Glenn Miller Army Air
    Force Band
  • Glenn Miller Army Air Force Band engaged in over
    800 performances
  • 500 were broadcasts heard by millions
  • First professional musician inducted into the
    military to serve as military band leader and
    musicians for troop morale
  • 1944 Stationed in London
  • Six week tour of Europe, was to be stationed in
    Paris

30
Glenn Miller
  • Miller decided to go ahead, in order to make the
    proper arrangements for the groups arrival
  • December 15th, Glenn Miller boarded a transport
    plane to Paris
  • Bad weather made communication difficult
  • Plane crashes early morning of December 15th
  • Plane and body was never recovered
  • 1945 Last recording of The Glenn Miller orchestra
    was released
  • 1954- The Glenn Miller story starring Jimmy
    Stewart
  • 2003- Glenn Miller received Grammy Lifetime
    Achievement award posthumously

31
Duke Ellington
  • Band Leader, piano player, arranger
  • One of the most popular most successful big band
    leaders of all time
  • Famous for is arrangements and is personality

32
Duke Ellington
  • Born in Washington D.C.
  • Began performing when he was 17
  • 1923 moved to New York City
  • 1927- House band for the Cotton Club

33
Duke Ellington
  • One of two of the most famous big bands (Count
    Basie)
  • used the best musicians from around the country
  • One of the most famous African American musicians
    and celebrities
  • Arranged for the musician not the band which gave
    his band a distinct sound
  • 1940s was peak success
  • Arranged music for bands and movies
  • Was key figure in symphonic big band jazz
  • Composed jazz suites and not just simple charts
  • 1943-Black, Brown, and Beige
  • Most famous songs were Satin Doll and Take the A
    train, Mood Indigo
  • 1956- Newport Jazz Festival revived popularity
  • 1957- Such Sweet thunder- based on Shakespeare
    and dedicated to Queen Elizabeth II
  • 1965- Pulitzer prize winner

34
Duke Ellington
  • 1966- Sacred concert combination of jazz music
    with Christian readings
  • 1969-presidential Medal of Freedom
  • Multi Grammy award winner
  • 1973 Legion of Honor by the French government
  • Band still touring today
  • Major influence on jazz music and musicians
  • Created new forms of jazz music and jazz
    arrangements
  • One of the most influential musicians of the 20th
    century

35
Cotton Club
36
The Cotton Club
  • One of the greatest jazz clubs in New York
  • Operated during and after prohibition
  • Jack Johnson (heavy Weight champ) owned the club
  • Run by Mob in 1923
  • Helped to launch the careers of many of the big
    band era musicians
  • Ellington was the house band from 1927-1931
  • Recorded over 100 songs there
  • House band was required to perform every night,
    especially weekends
  • New songs performed every concert.
  • Cab Calloway took over as house band after
    Ellington
  • Minnie the Moocher
  • Closed in 1936- after race riots in Harlem
  • Re-opened on Broadway
  • Closed for good in 1940

37
Count Basie
  • Band leader, piano player
  • One of the best and most influential band leaders
    and musicians of all time
  • 1924 toured with the TOBA
  • 1928 moved to Kansas City joined the Blue Devils

38
Count Basie
  • Became piano player for Benny Moten jazz band
  • 1935- Became leader changed to Count Basie Big
    Band
  • Created the Kansas City style of jazz ( laid back
    jazz)
  • Always hired the best musicians available

39
Count Basie
  • Once you were a member of the Basie band you
    remained a member
  • Players went on to start own careers but always
    returned to Basie band to play with them
  • Launched careers of many famous musicians
  • Influential to the start of the jazz singers
  • Joe Williams, Frank Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald all
    got their start with the Basie Band
  • Quincy Jones was trumpet player and arranger for
    the Basie band
  • 1974 had cameo in Mel Brooks film Blazing Saddles
  • Sammy Nestico, famous jazz arranger for Count
    Basie
  • Freddie Green famous jazz guitarist
  • One Oclock Jump, All of Me, April in Paris, Lil
    Darlin- most famous songs

40
Count Basie
  • Created a new style of jazz called Kansas City
    Style.
  • Off shoot of swing music where players laid
    back
  • Famous for its rhythm section
  • Space was important
  • Horn players used riffs and motifs
  • New style of piano playing called the Basie Style
  • Stressed improvisation

41
Lester Young
  • The Prez
  • Famous Tenor Sax player
  • One of the most influential saxophone players
  • Started playing in vaudeville and territory bands

42
Lester Young
  • Got his start in his fathers territory bands
  • 1932 joined the Blue Devils
  • Landed in Kansas City
  • Played with King Oliver, Fletcher Henderson, and
    Count Basie
  • 1934 joined the Count Basie Band
  • This group would lead him to national attention
    and make him famous
  • Nick name was given to him by friend Billie
    Holliday
  • Was eccentric creating his own playing style and
    language for his friends
  • Used to hold the horn out to his right when he
    played (like a flute)
  • 1942 recorded with Nat King Cole
  • 1943 inducted into the Army
  • Black musicians were put into the regular army
    White musicians were put into military bands like
    Glenn Miller.

43
Lester Young
  • Court- martial for various offenses
  • 1945 dishonorably discharged
  • 1946 JATP- jazz at the Philharmonic with Norman
    Granz
  • Toured with them for 12 years
  • 1950- Lester leaps in solo at Carnegie Hall
  • 1952- Start of his drinking problem, started to
    affect his playing
  • 1955- Hospital stays due to drinking and nervous
    breakdown
  • By the late 50s drinking had taken a toll on him
    was unhealthy never ate, drank constantly could
    barely perform
  • December 8 1957- The Sound of Jazz-Billie
    Holliday, Ben Webster, Coleman Hawkins, Gerry
    Mulligan, Roy Eldrige
  • March 1959- final studio recording, European tour
  • March 15th New York died age 49

44
Billie Holliday
  • 1915-1959
  • Lady Day
  • One of the most influential jazz singers of all
    times
  • Major influence on modern day singers
  • Born in Philadelphia (mother was 13 at time of
    her birth) father was jazz guitarist
  • (Divorced early)
  • Began performing at an early age to provide money
    for the family

45
Billie Holliday
  • Early 1930 moved to New York
  • Father was absentee only showing up on rare
    occasions (shake down)
  • 1932 Discovered by John Hammond
  • 1933 first recording with Benny Goodman ( My
    Mothers Son-In-Law)
  • November 23, 1934 Apollo Theater
  • Regular performer on 52nd street clubs

46
Billie Holliday
  • Her music had impeccable timing, nuanced
    phrasing, and emotional immediacy
  • Worked with al the great artist became one of the
    greatest black singers of all time
  • Became addicted to drugs starting at 13years old
    and bad addiction to heroin
  • Cursed with bad abusive relationships most of her
    life
  • Sang about her relationships in her songs
  • Famous songs were God Bless the Child and Fine
    and Mellow
  • Major influence on female singers from Janis
    Joplin to Madonna to present day singers
  • May 1947 arrested for drug possession had cabaret
    card taken away for 12 years
  • 1954 European tour was a huge success revamped
    her career

47
Billie Holliday
  • March 1959- Final studio recording
  • May 31 1959 taken to hospital in New York for
    liver and heart problems
  • July 17 1959 died age 44 died from cirrhosis of
    the liver
  • When she died she had 70 cents in her bank account

48
Ella Fitzgerald
  • 1917-1996
  • Lady Ella- First Lady of Jazz
  • Won 13 Grammy awards
  • National Medal of Art, Presidential medal of
    freedom
  • Influential jazz singer and innovator of scat
    singing
  • Orphaned at age 14
  • Started singing career at age 16
  • November 21, 1934- Apollo Theater

49
Ella Fitzgerald
  • Started singing with Chick Webb big band in 1935
  • 1939- Took over after Webbs death became Ella
    Fitzgerald and her famous orchestra
  • Solo career 1941
  • Norman Granz created record company Verve records
    for her
  • Ella created Songbooks she recorded for the Verve
    Label
  • Toured all over the world promoting the songbook
    series

50
Ella Fitzgerald
  • Most famous collaborations are with Frank
    Sinatra, Louis Armstrong, and Count Basie.
  • June 1974 combined concert at Caesars Palace was
    the top grossing concerts in Vegas of all time
  • Went to Broadway and grossed 2 million in 2 weeks
  • Was cursed with bad romances
  • Suffered from Diabetes and died from
    complications due to diabetes in 1996
  • Major influence on female singers from all genres

51
Sarah Vaughn
  • 1924- 1990
  • one of the greatest female singers of all time
  • Began performing in 1940s
  • Went solo in 1945- Tenderly, Its Magic
  • Famous 1950- Misty

52
Sarah Vaughn
  • Huge vocal range, being able to sing baritone to
    soprano, think Mariah Carrey
  • Musically trained in theory and skills
  • Inspiration for Bosa Nova in the 1960s
  • Was huge influence on modern singers
  • Started singing pop style songs in 1950s as well
    as jazz, cross over artists
  • Continued to record and win awards well into the
    1980s

53
JATP
  • Jazz at the Philharmonic
  • Started by Norman Granz
  • He created Verve records
  • First all star setting
  • Toured around the country
  • Give exposure of jazz music to people who would
    not usually see a concert
  • World famous musicians in a jam session type
    concert so the audience could get closer to the
    musicians
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