Happy Valentine's Day!
This really will be a quick post - just long enough to listen to the great Sam Cooke with his 1961 hit Cupid on RCA Victor:
Have a great day!
Happy Valentine's Day!
This really will be a quick post - just long enough to listen to the great Sam Cooke with his 1961 hit Cupid on RCA Victor:
Have a great day!
We’re ready for another Sixties Saturday as we pick up on last Wednesday’s “Green Hornet” theme to visit the 1966-67 TV series!
Here’s the great Al Hirt with the theme from the series on RCA Victor:
Al Hirt could play as many notes as anybody since Harry James, so he was the perfect choice for this updated, Flight of the Bumblebee inspired theme. And with backing by the great Billy May, what could be better? Billy’s arrangements always have that extra "punch" that suits a superhero theme perfectly.
And I feel the need to listen to Al’s big hit recording of Java from 1964:
It’s got that catchy, finger-snapping rhythm that made it a massive hit.
Al's propensity for pumping out tons of notes while still keeping the rhythm and melody puts him on my list of idiosyncratic trumpet players of which I'm a fan, joining Bubber Miley, Clyde McCoy, Sonny Dunham, et al.
Between the Hornet and Java, you can hear why they said: He's the King!
The Sax-Section Side-Character
Butch Stone is a prime example of a big‑band side character
who fascinates me - the guy with a fun nickname who ambles over from the sax
section to deliver a novelty or rhythm vocal. Think:
Butch's Evolution
Even at this early point, he was a force to be reckoned with!
Butch then moved to Larry Clinton’s band in 1941 and sang on several Bluebird records, including this one, That Solid Old Man (Is Here Again):
That one has always fascinated me - now I'm not saying Butch is Louis Jordan, but he takes over and gives Louis a bit of a run for his money with personality to spare!
You know, this was originally just going to be a short and
simple post… but as we all know, that’s not how I work. One minute it’s Friday
the 13th, the next I’m ranking sax‑section novelty vocalists!
Butch is probably thinking: I don't care if Les Brown thinks my nose is big as long as I get to hang out with Doris Day!
The Chaos: The Jones Laughing Record (1946)
Spike used it as the basis for The Jones Laughing
Record, recorded for RCA Victor in 1946, and things get wacky fast.
Let’s give it a spin:
The laughter is absolutely contagious. And I love that the
label credits the side to Spike Jones and his City Snickers - one of his
best pun‑based band names.
The Technique: The Sneezin’ Bee (1957)
The yeoman work of ace studio trombonist Tommy Pederson
(brought in as a ringer) can get lost amid the chaos. Fortunately, Spike
revisited the concept in 1957 with “The Sneezin’ Bee,” included on his
Verve album Dinner Music for People Who Aren’t Really Hungry.
Let’s hear that one:
That’s essentially “The Jones Laughing Record” without
the laughing, giving us a chance to really appreciate Pederson’s dazzling
technique.
Here’s a fun clip from Spike’s TV show showing Tommy in action — though this time pianist Frank Leightner is the designated sneezer.
We can trace the whole “laughing record” concept back to 1922,
when Okeh released a German recording in the U.S. as The Okeh Laughing Record. It became a
sensation and spawned countless imitators.
More than 100 years later, it still gets you laughing
along.
That record later inspired (and was included on the soundtrack of) the 1955 Walter Lantz cartoon
“Sh‑h‑h‑h‑h,” directed by the legendary Tex Avery.
That was the final theatrical cartoon of Tex - my
favorite cartoon director.
So tell me: how do you like your Bumblebee - with laughing
or just the sneezing? Are you team giggles or team hay fever?
Yesterday, we rode along with the Green Hornet and Harry James. But as any fan of the "Detroit Connection" knows, the Hornet had a very famous uncle over at WXYZ: The Lone Ranger!
For those keeping score at home, both The Green Hornet and The Lone Ranger were brainchildren of the same production team of George W. Trendle and Fran Striker. According to WXYZ lore, Britt Reid (The Green Hornet) was the son of Dan Reid, who was the nephew of John Reid (The Lone Ranger). It’s an early example of a “shared universe,” which is beyond awesome!
Being an aficionado of both OTR and the great Western "B" movies, I couldn't let this week go by without a nod to the "King of the Cowboys" himself. In 1938, a young Roy Rogers recorded a tribute to the masked man’s legendary stallion – Hi Yo, Silver! Let’s spin that Vocalion record:
1938 was a big year for The Lone Ranger. In addition to this song and the continuing popularity of the radio show, he was also the subject of a 15-chapter serial from Republic Pictures! It’s a cool serial, but it’s more Republic than WXYZ; apparently, Mr. Trendle was not happy with the changes made in that serial and its 1939 sequel. The Green Hornet’s serials over at Universal in 1940 are way more faithful to the radio source.
In any event, Roy Rogers was also beginning his career at Republic at the time, having transitioned from Leonard Slye (with the Sons of the Pioneers) to Dick Weston (briefly) and finally to Roy Rogers. You can read more about Roy's early career here
It might seem funny to hear Roy Rogers singing the praises of a horse other than his famous Trigger, but I look at it as Roy "portraying" the Lone Ranger for the record.
As for the timeline, Trigger actually appeared as Maid Marian’s horse under his original name, Golden Cloud, in the 1938 Warner Bros. masterpiece The Adventures of Robin Hood! Roy did eventually record a beautiful tribute to his own horse in 1948. Let’s listen to Roy and The Sons of the Pioneers with That Palomino Pal o’ Mine on RCA Victor:
I can never get enough singing cowboy music!
These records represent a vital side of the 1930s and 40s musical landscape. While the big bands were "swinging the classics," Roy was perfecting the "Singing Cowboy" style that would dominate the Saturday matinees.
Which radio-inspired "ride" do you prefer: the high-speed chase of Harry James’s "Bumblebee" or the steady gallop of Roy Rogers’s "Hi Yo, Silver"?
Last Sunday, we were admiring Duke’s Black Beauty. Now, as far as word associations go, as a lifelong buff of Old-Time Radio (OTR), that name leads my brain straight to the sleek, supercharged, and heavily armed "Black Beauty" limousine belonging to The Green Hornet!
If you were huddled around the Philco in the late 30s or 40s, you knew that the Green Hornet’s arrival was always signaled by the frantic, buzzing strings of Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov’s The Flight of the Bumblebee. For us OTR fans, hearing those opening notes meant Britt Reid (portrayed by Al Hodge) was about to go hunting for criminals with his faithful valet, Kato, in the Black Beauty. It’s fascinating how a piece of 19th-century Russian classical music became the definitive sound of American urban vigilantism, thanks to the power of the airwaves.
While the classical world claims it, I always think of The Flight of the Bumblebee in the Big Band field due to the stellar adaptation of the piece by trumpet star Harry James! Harry first recorded his take on the piece for the small Varsity label in 1940:
By 1941, Harry was recording for Columbia, for which he waxed a ton of big hits. He recorded a somewhat streamlined version for them, and this is the more familiar version most people would know today:
It’s fascinating to compare the two records. The Varsity side has a sort of swingy section in the middle which doesn't appear on the Columbia version. I personally love catching those little evolutionary steps in a band's arrangement!
I find it interesting to compare this to Sonny Dunham’s treatment of Memories of You from earlier this week. While Sonny was reaching for the stratosphere with his high notes, Harry was showing off his incredible finger dexterity and speed.
Both are masterclasses in what a trumpet can do when pushed to the absolute limit. I had mentioned that I always liked trumpet stars with idiosyncratic styles, and I’d definitely throw Harry in there. He was extremely versatile and played great jazz, but he could also lean into his circus roots when needed!
Which display of brass brilliance impresses you more: Sonny Dunham’s soaring high notes or Harry James’s lightning-fast "Bumblebee"?
Also keeping “The Bumblebee” in the big band field was Jack Fina, the star pianist with Freddy Martin’s band, who adapted the piece into the snappy Bumble Boogie in 1946! Here are Jack and Freddy with their recording on RCA Victor:
It’s not known if Britt Reid had an opinion on that record!
Yesterday we listened to Duke’s elegant Black Beauty, his tribute to the legendary Florence Mills. But the "Queen of Happiness" inspired more than just one masterpiece. One of the most enduring standards in the American Songbook, Memories of You, was written by Eubie Blake and Andy Razaf for the 1930 Blackbirds revue as a direct nod to the vacancy Florence left behind.
Let’s start with Louis Armstrong’s definitive 1930 recording. Not only is Louis in top form here, but this track is historically significant for featuring a young Lionel Hampton. It is widely considered the very first time the vibraphone was recorded in a jazz setting!
I love how the shimmering sound of the vibes adds such a dreamy, nostalgic layer to Louis’s vocal.
Lionel Hampton returned to the song in 1939 with a studio pick-up group on Victor:
It sounds great, and a glance at the label explains why: it’s basically a Duke Ellington small unit! We have Harry Carney on sax, Rex Stewart on trumpet, Lawrence Brown on trombone, Billy Taylor on bass, and Sonny Greer on drums. The only "outsider" is Clyde Hart on piano (filling in for Duke), plus Hamp on vibes.
Hamp headed a number of these sessions with top-tier musicians for Victor while working with Benny Goodman, right before forming his own powerhouse band.
For a completely different vibe, we sneak back to 1938 to listen to trumpet star Sonny Dunham with Glen Gray and the Casa Loma Orchestra on Decca:
If Louis gave us the soul of the song, Sonny gives us the fireworks. His high-note trumpet work on this arrangement is legendary - a masterclass in brass virtuosity that had other trumpet players of the era shaking their heads in disbelief!
Back in the day when I was beginning my Big Band journey, this was the type of record that really caught my ear. I’ve always been drawn to trumpet stars with somewhat idiosyncratic techniques pushed to the limit!
Which do you prefer: the groundbreaking "vibes" and soul of Louis, the Ellingtonian feel of Hamp, or the high-flying pyrotechnics of Sonny?
Note: Since it’s Black History Month, let us remember the groundbreaking Florence Mills, the Original Blackbird and the true Black Beauty!