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Phoenix Talent Agency, Inc. |
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In
Big Band history, Tommy Dorsey's Orchestra is recognized as one of the best
all-around dance bands. It could swing with the best of them, and no other
band could come close to Tommy's when it came to playing ballads. Tommy
Dorsey, “The Sentimental Gentleman of Swing,” was a master at creating
warm, sentimental, and always musical moods - at superb dancing and listening
tempos. Tommy sustained these moods through the arrangements of Paul Weston,
Axel Stordahl, and Sy Oliver, and showcased singers who could project them
brilliantly.
Frank Sinatra's career blossomed with Dorsey, and with Sinatra's vocals, the band became more successful than ever. Frank had often admitted that listening to Tommy helped him develop his phrasing and breathing, along with his musical taste and knowledge. Sy
Oliver infused the band with a new musical spirit. It was a gentler These original tunes included “Easy Does It”, “Quiet Please”, “Sing High”, “Yes, Indeed”, “Swingin' On Nothing”, “Well, Git It”, and “Opus No. 1”. Oliver also had a unique way of approaching a straight pop tune, injecting a soft, two-beat feeling into it. He did this with resounding success in such arrangements as “What Can I Say After I Say I'm Sorry?”, “For You”, “Swanee River”, “Mandy”, “Make Up Your Mind”, “Chicago”, and “On The Sunny Side Of The Street”. The vocalists worked both individually and together, turning out several hits of superior quality. There was Sinatra's “This Love Of Mine”, Jo Stafford's “Embraceable You”, the Pied Pipers and Sinatra's “There Are Such Things”, “Just As Though You Were Here”, “Street Of Dreams”, and “Oh, Look At Me Now”. Their biggest hit of all, the one that established vocal groups forever, was “I'll Never Smile Again”. The band was at its best in this decade. In the summer of 1941, it outranked every other band to finish first in one of the most indicative of all popularity polls, Martin Block's Make Believe Ballroom contest. By late 1946, it was becoming apparent that the band business was having problems. In December 1946, eight top bandleaders announced they were calling it quits - Woody Herman, Benny Goodman, Harry James, Les Brown, Jack Teagarden, Benny Carter, Ina Ray Hutton, and Tommy Dorsey. Essentially, this was the official end of the Big Band Era. However, it was Tommy Dorsey, who, in the years immediately following, fought the cause of the Big Bands with words and action. Less than two years later, he was fronting a formidable new group. “It's about time somebody got things going again”, Tommy said at the time. “You can't expect to have any real interest in dance bands if the bands don't go around the country and play for the kids.” And so it continues. The Tommy Dorsey Orchestra now led by Buddy Morrow is traveling throughout the country playing for the kids (of all ages). |