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The Duel of the Dance Bands
Tex Beneke, Ralph Flanagan, Tex Beneke & His Orchestra, Ralph Flanagan & His Orchestra
első megjelenés éve: 2009
(2009)

CD
3.950 Ft 

 

IMPORT!
Kosaramba teszem
1.  Moonlight Serenade
2.  St. Louis Blues March
3.  Bali Ha'i
4.  I Can Dream Can't I?
5.  Mother Prairie
6.  Always
7.  Cindy Lou
8.  It's Dark on Observatory Hill
9.  Tenderly
10.  Nevertheless
11.  Singin' in the Rain
12.  Too Young
13.  Charmaine
14.  Singing Winds
15.  St. Louis Blues
16.  Bali Ha'i
17.  You're Breaking My Heart
18.  Tell My Why
19.  Always
20.  Don't Cry, Joe
21.  It's Dark on Observatory Hill
22.  Tenderly
23.  Nevertheless
24.  Singin' in the Rain
25.  Too Young
26.  Charmaine
Jazz

Tex Beneke and Ralph Flanagan led two of the most significant bands of the swing era and on this CD you can hear them pitted against each other with contrasting performances of St. Louis Blues, Bali Hai, Too Young, Never The Less, Charmaine and others. These two fine orchestras feature talented vocalists Mary Mayo with an incredible vocal range, Glenn Douglas, The Moonlight Choristers, Gregg Lawrence, The Mood Four, Harry Prime and The Singing Winds and in the case of Tex Beneke arrangements by Billy May and Henry Mancini.



Tex Beneke

Active Decades: '30s, '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s and '90s
Born: Feb 12, 1914 in Fort Worth, TX
Died: May 30, 2000 in Costa Mesa, CA
Genre: Jazz
Styles: Big Band, Swing, Sweet Bands

The name Tex Beneke is inevitably linked to that of Glenn Miller, despite the fact that Beneke outlived Miller by over a half century. As the most popular member of Miller's pre-World War II orchestra, featured on songs such as "Chattanooga Choo Choo" and "Don't Sit Under The Apple Tree," Beneke became a major fixture in the popular culture of the period, and following Miller's death in December of 1944, and the reforming of the Glenn Miller Orchestra after World War II, he accepted the offer to lead the new band.
Beneke, however, had a lot to offer the music world beyond his vocals on some fondly remembered hit songs. He began playing the saxophone at age nine, first with the alto and then with the tenor, and played in local and regional bands in Oklahoma and Texas during the early and middle 1930's. A gig playing with a band led by Ben Young brought him to Detroit, where he was spotted by Sam Donahue, then a saxman in Gene Krupa's band--Krupa was unable to hire Beneke but informed a friend of his in New York of this promising new player. The friend was Glenn Miller, who'd recently begun forming a band of his own, and Beneke was hired, joining the orchestra in the spring of 1938--it was with Miller's band that Beneke picked up the nickname "Tex."
The Miller orchestra struggled until the summer of 1939, when an engagement at the Glen Island Casino and a series of radio broadcasts made it a national sensation. Beneke played and sang with the orchestra, and became a star in his own right. He stayed until 1942, when Miller broke up the band to join the U.S. Army Air Force as a band leader. Beneke was drafted into the navy and led a military dance outfit at a base in Oklahoma.
After the end of the war, when a new Glenn Miller Orchestra was formed, Beneke took on the leadership, debuting in January of 1946 at the Capitol Theater in New York City. The orchestra, formed under the auspices of Miller's widow and his estate, was intended to emulate the sounds of the pre-war Miller band and his Army Air Force band--this included the presence of 13 string players in the 31 piece outfit, making it, along with Harry James's orchestra, one of the few big bands to include strings.
They were an immediate success, compiling an enviable array of hits for five years. One gig, in particular, stood out--in December of 1947, a year after the near-collapse of the big-band business, at the Hollywood Palladium, Tex Beneke and the Glenn Miller Orchestra played to a record-breaking crowd of 6, 750 dancers. Despite this extraordinary popularity, however, Beneke wasn't entirely happy with the restrictions placed by the estate on the band's music--they were required to stick entirely to the familiar reed-centered sound that Glenn Miller had practically trademarked. Although a reed player himself, Beneke saw other possibilities, but was never allowed to experiment, despite his protests that Miller himself had always been open to the idea of experimentation, and had expressed his intention to move away from his familiar reed sound after the war, having gone as far with it as he felt he could.
Finally, at the end of 1950, Beneke left the band and parted company also with Miller's estate. He later organized his own band which, like similar reconstituted big-bands led by '40s music icons such as Harry James, managed to thrive amid the rock 'n roll, folk-rock, psychedelia, disco, and punk eras, right to the present day. More than 60 years after he became a professional musician, he continued to lead big bands, doing the music that he helped popularized two generations ago. Beneke died May 30, 2000 from respiratory failure at the age of 86.
---Bruce Eder, All Music Guide

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