Still a huge favorite in Europe!
"In the Mood" is generally thought to be the best jitterbug tune ever-- good rhythm, not too fast.Still a huge favorite in Europe!
Red Kelly tearin' up those bass strings. Wow!Here's a marvelous recording at break neck speed of Stan Kenton's "Random Riff", recorded live in 1959 at the Blue Room at the Las Vegas Tropicana Hotel. Hold onto your hat and enjoy some fine solo work by trumpeter Jack Sheldon and tenor saxophonist Richie Kamuca!
Yeah, he must have had a right hand like a vice grip!Red Kelly tearin' up those bass strings. Wow!
Arguable, I can think of a few others of that era and genre that always fill a dance floor, but I'm not going to argue the point."In the Mood" is generally thought to be the best jitterbug tune ever-- good rhythm, not too fast.
That's peculiar. The music is way out of sync with the video (or vice-versa).Pre or Post 1950, this fella was brilliant.
Frenesi by Artie Shaw & His Orchestra (1940)
Man! Popular music sure had class then. What style and grace!9 minutes of sheer pleasure.
Symphony of Swing - Artie Shaw - Vitaphone - 1939 - Colorized
Absolutely agree! I suppose it's debatable, but Artie Shaw's clarinet playing surpassed Benny Goodman and that of Woody Herman. Eddie Daniels' playing of more recent vintage is also spot-on.Man! Popular music sure had class then. What style and grace!
I agree.Man! Popular music sure had class then. What style and grace!
There have been many opinions over Benny and Arty.Absolutely agree! I suppose it's debatable, but Artie Shaw's clarinet playing surpassed Benny Goodman and that of Woody Herman. Eddie Daniels' playing of more recent vintage is also spot-on.
One aspect of early (30s and 40s) swing music that just isn't around much any more is that of the use of mutes with brass players. Trumpets and trombones used several varieties of mutes back in the day. These included straight and cup mutes (still used today), and Harmon mutes (a favorite of Miles Davis back in the 50s, but also still used today). A couple mutes not at all used today AFAIK include hats, which were mounted on stands in front of the player and cut down some of the more strident playing from those trumpets and trombones. And plunger and bucket mutes were also used in big bands in that early era, but not so much today.
More info here on mutes:
Big Band Arranging | 6 | Mutes — Evan Rogers | Orchestrator | Arranger | Conductor