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Big band

A big band or jazz orchestra is a type of musical ensemble of jazz music that usually consists of ten or more musicians with four sections: saxophones, trumpets, trombones, and a rhythm section. Big bands originated during the early 1910s and dominated jazz in the early 1940s when swing was most popular. The term "big band" is also used to describe a genre of music, although this was not the only style of music played by big bands. An orchestra is a group of instrumentalists, especially one combining string, woodwind, brass, and percussion sections and playing classical music.

Big band
Paul Whiteman and his orchestra in 1921
Stylistic origins
Cultural origins1910s
Derivative forms
The United States Navy Band Northwest Big Band plays at a concert held in Oak Harbor High School.

Big bands started as accompaniment for dancing the Lindy Hop. In contrast to the typical jazz emphasis on improvisation, big bands relied on written compositions and arrangements. They gave a greater role to bandleaders, arrangers, and sections of instruments rather than soloists.

Instruments edit

 
Most common seating arrangement for a 17-piece big band

Big bands generally have four sections: trumpets, trombones, saxophones, and a rhythm section of guitar, piano, double bass, drums and sometimes vibraphone.[1][2][3] The division in early big bands, from the 1920s to 1930s, was typically two or three trumpets, one or two trombones, three or four saxophones, and a rhythm section of four instruments.[4] In the 1940s, Stan Kenton's band used up to five trumpets, five trombones (three tenor and two bass trombones), five saxophones (two alto saxophones, two tenor saxophones, one baritone saxophone), and a rhythm section. Duke Ellington at one time used six trumpets.[5] While most big bands dropped the previously common jazz clarinet from their arrangements (other than the clarinet-led orchestras of Artie Shaw and Benny Goodman), many Duke Ellington songs had clarinet parts,[6] often replacing or doubling one of the tenor saxophone parts; more rarely, Ellington would substitute baritone sax for bass clarinet, such as in "Ase's Death" from Swinging Suites. Boyd Raeburn drew from symphony orchestras by adding flute, French horn, strings, and timpani to his band.[4] In the late 1930s, Shep Fields incorporated a solo accordion, temple blocks, piccolo, violins and a viola into his Rippling Rhythm Orchestra.[7][8] Paul Whiteman also featured a solo accordion in his ensemble.[9][10]

Jazz ensembles numbering eight (octet), nine (nonet) or ten (tentet) voices are sometimes called "little big bands".[11] During the 1940s, somewhat smaller configurations of the big band emerged in the form of the "rhythm sextet". These ensembles typically featured three or more accordions accompanied by piano, guitar, bass, cello, percussion, and marimba with vibes and were popularized by recording artists such as Charles Magnante,[12][13] Joe Biviano[14][15] and John Serry.[16][14][15][17][18][19][20]

Twenty-first century big bands can be considerably larger than their predecessors, exceeding 20 players, with some European bands using 29 instruments and some reaching 50.[21]

Seating and arrangements edit

In the most common seating for a 17-piece big band, each section is carefully set-up in a way to optimize the bands sound. For the wind players, there are 3 different types of parts: lead parts (including first trumpet, first trombone, and first alto sax), solo parts (including second or fourth trumpet, second trombone, and the first tenor sax), and section members (which include the rest of the band). The band is generally configured so lead parts are seated in the middle of their sections and solo parts are seated closest to the rhythm section. The fourth trombone part is generally played by a bass trombone, and many of the saxophone players double on other woodwinds such as soprano clarinet, bass clarinet, flute, or soprano saxophone.

It is useful to distinguish between the roles of composer, arranger and leader. The composer writes original music that will be performed by individuals or groups of various sizes, while the arranger adapts the work of composers in a creative way for a performance or recording.[22] Arrangers frequently notate all or most of the score of a given number, usually referred to as a "chart".[23] Bandleaders are typically performers who assemble musicians to form an ensemble of various sizes, select or create material for them, shape the music's dynamics, phrasing, and expression in rehearsals, and lead the group in performance often while playing alongside them.[24] One of the first prominent big band arrangers was Ferde Grofé, who was hired by Paul Whiteman to write for his “symphonic jazz orchestra”.[3] A number of bandleaders established long-term relationships with certain arrangers, such as the collaboration between leader Count Basie and arranger Neil Hefti.[25] Some bandleaders, such as Guy Lombardo, performed works composed by others (in Lombardo's case, often by his brother Carmen),[26] while others, such as Maria Schneider, take on all three roles.[27] In many cases, however, the distinction between these roles can become blurred.[28] Billy Strayhorn, for example, was a prolific composer and arranger, frequently collaborating with Duke Ellington, but rarely took on the role of bandleader, which was assumed by Ellington, who himself was a composer and arranger.[29]

 
Ockbrook Big Band at Pride Park Stadium

Typical big band arrangements from the swing era were written in strophic form with the same phrase and chord structure repeated several times.[30] Each iteration, or chorus, commonly follows twelve bar blues form or thirty-two-bar (AABA) song form. The first chorus of an arrangement introduces the melody and is followed by choruses of development.[31] This development may take the form of improvised solos, written solo sections, and "shout choruses".[32]

An arrangement's first chorus is sometimes preceded by an introduction, which may be as short as a few measures or may extend to a chorus of its own. Many arrangements contain an interlude, often similar in content to the introduction, inserted between some or all choruses. Other methods of embellishing the form include modulations and cadential extensions.[33]

Some big ensembles, like King Oliver's, played music that was half-arranged, half-improvised, often relying on head arrangements.[34] A head arrangement is a piece of music that is formed by band members during rehearsal.[35] They experiment, often with one player coming up with a simple musical figure leading to development within the same section and then further expansion by other sections, with the entire band then memorizing the way they are going to perform the piece, without writing it on sheet music.[36] During the 1930s, Count Basie's band often used head arrangements, as Basie said, "we just sort of start it off and the others fall in."[37][38] Head arrangements were more common during the period of the 1930s because there was less turnover in personnel, giving the band members more time to rehearse.[39]: p.31 

History edit

Dance music edit

Before 1910, social dance in America was dominated by steps such as the waltz and polka.[40] As jazz migrated from its New Orleans origin to Chicago and New York City, energetic, suggestive dances traveled with it. During the next decades, ballrooms filled with people doing the jitterbug and Lindy Hop. The dance duo Vernon and Irene Castle popularized the foxtrot while accompanied by the Europe Society Orchestra led by James Reese Europe.[1]

One of the first bands to accompany the new rhythms was led by a drummer, Art Hickman, in San Francisco in 1916. Hickman's arranger, Ferde Grofé, wrote arrangements in which he divided the jazz orchestra into sections that combined in various ways. This intermingling of sections became a defining characteristic of big bands. In 1919, Paul Whiteman hired Grofé to use similar techniques for his band. Whiteman was educated in classical music, and he called his new band's music symphonic jazz. The methods of dance bands marked a step away from New Orleans jazz. With the exception of Jelly Roll Morton, who continued playing in the New Orleans style, bandleaders paid attention to the demand for dance music and created their own big bands.[4] They incorporated elements of Broadway, Tin Pan Alley, ragtime, and vaudeville.[1]

Duke Ellington led his band at the Cotton Club in Harlem. Fletcher Henderson's career started when he was persuaded to audition for a job at Club Alabam in New York City, which eventually turned into a job as bandleader at the Roseland Ballroom. At these venues, which themselves gained notoriety, bandleaders and arrangers played a greater role than they had before. Hickman relied on Ferde Grofé, Whiteman on Bill Challis. Henderson and arranger Don Redman followed the template of King Oliver, but as the 1920s progressed they moved away from the New Orleans format and transformed jazz. They were assisted by a band full of talent: Coleman Hawkins on tenor saxophone, Louis Armstrong on cornet, and multi-instrumentalist Benny Carter, whose career lasted into the 1990s.[1]

The swing era edit

 
Benny Goodman and Peggy Lee

Swing music began appearing in the early 1930s and was distinguished by a more supple feel than the more literal 4
4
of early jazz. Walter Page is often credited with developing the walking bass,[41] though earlier examples exist, such as Wellman Braud on Ellington's Washington Wabble from 1927.

This type of music flourished through the early 1930s, although there was little mass audience for it until around 1936. Up until that time, it was viewed with ridicule and sometimes looked upon as a menace.[42] After 1935, big bands rose to prominence playing swing music and held a major role in defining swing as a distinctive style. Western swing musicians also formed popular big bands during the same period.

There was a considerable range of styles among the hundreds of popular bands. Many of the better known bands reflected the individuality of the bandleader, the lead arranger, and the personnel. Count Basie played a relaxed, propulsive swing, Bob Crosby (brother of Bing), more of a dixieland style,[43] Benny Goodman a hard driving swing, and Duke Ellington's compositions were varied and sophisticated. Many bands featured strong instrumentalists whose sounds dominated, such as the clarinets of Benny Goodman and Artie Shaw, the trombone of Jack Teagarden, the trumpet of Harry James, the drums of Gene Krupa, and the vibes of Lionel Hampton.

The popularity of many of the major bands was amplified by star vocalists, such as Frank Sinatra and Connie Haines with Tommy Dorsey, Helen O'Connell and Bob Eberly with Jimmy Dorsey, Ella Fitzgerald with Chick Webb, Billie Holiday and Jimmy Rushing with Count Basie, Kay Starr with Charlie Barnet, Bea Wain with Larry Clinton, Dick Haymes, Kitty Kallen and Helen Forrest with Harry James, Fran Warren with Claude Thornhill, Doris Day with Les Brown,[44] and Peggy Lee and Martha Tilton with Benny Goodman. Some bands were "society bands" which relied on strong ensembles but little on soloists or vocalists, such as the bands of Guy Lombardo and Paul Whiteman.

A distinction is often made between so-called "hard bands", such as those of Count Basie and Tommy Dorsey, which emphasized quick hard-driving jump tunes, and "sweet bands", such as the Glenn Miller Orchestra and the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra[45][46] who specialized in less improvised tunes with more emphasis on sentimentality, featuring somewhat slower-paced, often heart-felt songs.[47]

By this time the big band was such a dominant force in jazz that the older generation found they either had to adapt to it or simply retire. With no market for small-group recordings (made worse by a Depression-era industry reluctant to take risks), musicians such as Louis Armstrong and Earl Hines led their own bands, while others, like Jelly Roll Morton and King Oliver, lapsed into obscurity.[48] Even so, many of the most popular big bands of the swing era cultivated small groups within the larger ensemble: e.g. Benny Goodman developed both a trio and a quartet, Artie Shaw formed the Gramercy Five, Count Basie developed the Kansas City Six and Tommy Dorsey the Clambake Seven.[49]

The major "black" bands of the 1930s included, apart from Ellington's, Hines's and Calloway's, those of Jimmie Lunceford, Chick Webb, and Count Basie. The "white" bands of Benny Goodman, Artie Shaw, Tommy Dorsey, Shep Fields and, later, Glenn Miller were more popular than their "black" counterparts from the middle of the decade. Bridging the gap to white audiences in the mid-1930s was the Casa Loma Orchestra and Benny Goodman's early band. The contrast in commercial popularity between "black" and "white" bands was striking: between 1935 and 1945 the top four "white" bands had 292 top ten records, of which 65 were number one hits, while the top four "black" bands had only 32 top ten hits, with only three reaching number one.[50]

 
Glenn Miller, a major in the U.S. Army Air Forces during World War II, led a 50-piece military band that specialized in swing music

White teenagers and young adults were the principal fans of the big bands in the late 1930s and early 1940s.[42] They danced to recordings and the radio and attended live concerts. They were knowledgeable and often biased toward their favorite bands and songs, and sometimes worshipful of famous soloists and vocalists. Many bands toured the country in grueling one-night stands. Traveling conditions and lodging were difficult, in part due to segregation in most parts of the United States, and the personnel often had to perform having had little sleep and food. Apart from the star soloists, many musicians received low wages and would abandon the tour if bookings disappeared. Sometimes bandstands were too small, public address systems inadequate, pianos out of tune. Bandleaders dealt with these obstacles through rigid discipline (Glenn Miller) and canny psychology (Duke Ellington).

 
The Grand Central Big Band.

Big bands uplifted morale during World War II.[51] Many musicians served in the military and toured with USO troupes at the front, with Glenn Miller losing his life while traveling between shows. Many bands suffered from loss of personnel during the war years, and, as a result, women replaced men who had been inducted, while all-female bands began to appear.[51] The 1942–44 musicians' strike worsened the situation. Vocalists began to strike out on their own. By the end of the war, swing was giving way to less danceable music, such as bebop. Many of the great swing bands broke up, as the times and tastes changed.

Many bands from the swing era continued for decades after the death or departure of their founders and namesakes, and some are still active in the 21st century, often referred to as "ghost bands", a term attributed to Woody Herman, referring to orchestras that persist in the absence of their original leaders.[52]

Modern big bands edit

Although big bands are identified with the swing era, they continued to exist after those decades, though the music they played was often different from swing. Bandleader Charlie Barnet's recording of "Cherokee" in 1942 and "The Moose" in 1943 have been called the beginning of the bop era. Woody Herman's first band, nicknamed the First Herd, borrowed from progressive jazz, while the Second Herd emphasized the saxophone section of three tenors and one baritone. In the 1950s, Stan Kenton referred to his band's music as "progressive jazz", "modern", and "new music".[53] He created his band as a vehicle for his compositions. Kenton pushed the boundaries of big bands by combining clashing elements and by hiring arrangers whose ideas about music conflicted. This expansive eclecticism characterized much of jazz after World War II. During the 1960s and '70s, Sun Ra and his Arketstra took big bands further out. Ra's eclectic music was played by a roster of musicians from ten to thirty and was presented as theater, with costumes, dancers, and special effects.[1]

As jazz was expanded during the 1950s through the 1970s, the Basie and Ellington bands were still around, as were bands led by Buddy Rich, Gene Krupa, Lionel Hampton, Earl Hines, Les Brown, Clark Terry, and Doc Severinsen. Progressive bands were led by Dizzy Gillespie, Gil Evans, Carla Bley, Toshiko Akiyoshi and Lew Tabackin, Don Ellis, and Anthony Braxton.[54]

In the 1960s and 1970s, big band rock became popular by integrating such musical ingredients as progressive rock experimentation, jazz fusion, and the horn choirs often used in blues and soul music, with some of the most prominent groups including Chicago; Blood, Sweat and Tears; Tower of Power; and, from Canada, Lighthouse. The genre was gradually absorbed into mainstream pop rock and the jazz rock sector.[55]

Other bandleaders used Brazilian and Afro-Cuban music with big band instrumentation, and big bands led by arranger Gil Evans, saxophonist John Coltrane (on the album Ascension from 1965) and bass guitarist Jaco Pastorius introduced cool jazz, free jazz and jazz fusion, respectively, to the big band domain. Modern big bands can be found playing all styles of jazz music. Some large contemporary European jazz ensembles play mostly avant-garde jazz using the instrumentation of the big bands. Examples include the Vienna Art Orchestra, founded in 1977, and the Italian Instabile Orchestra, active in the 1990s.

 
HONK! 2022 performers in Somerville, Massachusetts, U.S.

In the late 1990s, there was a swing revival in the U.S. The Lindy Hop became popular again and young people took an interest in big band styles again.

Big bands maintained a presence on American television, particularly through the late-night talk show, which has historically used big bands as house accompaniment. Typically the most prominent shows with the earliest time slots and largest audiences have bigger bands with horn sections while those in later time slots go with smaller, leaner ensembles.

Many college and university music departments offer jazz programs and feature big band courses in improvisation, composition, arranging, and studio recording, featuring performances by 18 to 20 piece big bands.[56]

Radio edit

During the 1930s, Earl Hines and his band broadcast from the Grand Terrace in Chicago every night across America.[57] In Kansas City and across the Southwest, an earthier, bluesier style was developed by such bandleaders as Bennie Moten and, later, by Jay McShann and Jesse Stone. By 1937, the "sweet jazz band" saxophonist Shep Fields was also featured over the airways on the NBC radio network in his Rippling Rhythm Revue, which also showcased a young Bob Hope as the announcer.[58][59][60]

Big band remotes on the major radio networks spread the music from ballrooms and clubs across the country during the 1930s and 1940s, with remote broadcasts from jazz clubs continuing into the 1950s on NBC's Monitor. Radio increased the fame of Benny Goodman, the "Pied Piper of Swing". Others challenged him, and battle of the bands became a regular feature of theater performances.

Similarly, Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians Orchestra also achieved widespread notoriety for nearly half a century as a result of their broadcasts on the NBC and CBS networks of the annual New Year's Eve celebrations from the Roosevelt Grill at New York's Roosevelt Hotel (1929-1959) and the Ballroom at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel (1959-1976) .[61]

Gloria Parker had a radio program on which she conducted the largest all-girl orchestra led by a female. She led her Swingphony while playing marimba. Phil Spitalny, a native of Ukraine, led a 22-piece female orchestra known as Phil Spitalny and His Hour of Charm Orchestra, named for his radio show, The Hour of Charm, during the 1930s and 1940s. Other female bands were led by trumpeter B. A. Rolfe, Anna Mae Winburn, and Ina Ray Hutton.[38]

Movies edit

Big Bands began to appear in movies in the 1930s through the 1960s, though cameos by bandleaders were often stiff and incidental to the plot.Shep Fields appeared with his Rippling Rhythm Orchestra in a playful and integrated animated performance of "This Little Ripple Had Rhythm" in the musical extravaganza The Big Broadcast of 1938.[62] Fictionalized biographical films of Glenn Miller, Gene Krupa, and Benny Goodman were made in the 1950s.

The bands led by Helen Lewis, Ben Bernie, and Roger Wolfe Kahn's band were filmed by Lee de Forest in his Phonofilm sound-on-film process in 1925, in three short films which are in the Library of Congress film collection.[63]

See also edit

References edit

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  61. ^ Crump, William D. (2008). Encyclopedia of New Year's Holidays Worldwide. London: McFarland & Co. p. 101. ISBN 978-0-7864-3393-3.
  62. ^ Stanley Green and Elaine Schmidt (2000). Hollywood musicals year by year. ISBN 0-634-00765-3. Shep Fields and His Rippling Rhythm Orchestra in The Big Broadcaste of 1938
  63. ^ Geduld, Harry M. (1975). The Birth of the Talkies: From Edison to Jolson. Indiana University Press. p. 97. ISBN 978-0-253-10743-5. Retrieved July 12, 2022.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • International Big Band Directory
  • Christopher Popa's Big Band Library
  • Big Bands After The Big Band Era – Bill Kirchner, faculty at Manhattan School of Music.
  • 6 Steps to Big Band Writing with Steven Feifke. – YouTube video.

band, albums, band, henderson, album, band, charlie, parker, album, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, . For the albums see Big Band Joe Henderson album and Big Band Charlie Parker album This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Big band news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message A big band or jazz orchestra is a type of musical ensemble of jazz music that usually consists of ten or more musicians with four sections saxophones trumpets trombones and a rhythm section Big bands originated during the early 1910s and dominated jazz in the early 1940s when swing was most popular The term big band is also used to describe a genre of music although this was not the only style of music played by big bands An orchestra is a group of instrumentalists especially one combining string woodwind brass and percussion sections and playing classical music Big bandPaul Whiteman and his orchestra in 1921Stylistic originsJazz blues American marches classical various rhythmic social dancesCultural origins1910sDerivative formsSwing progressive jazz Kansas City jazz easy listening space age pop loungeThe United States Navy Band Northwest Big Band plays at a concert held in Oak Harbor High School Big bands started as accompaniment for dancing the Lindy Hop In contrast to the typical jazz emphasis on improvisation big bands relied on written compositions and arrangements They gave a greater role to bandleaders arrangers and sections of instruments rather than soloists Contents 1 Instruments 2 Seating and arrangements 3 History 3 1 Dance music 3 2 The swing era 3 3 Modern big bands 4 Radio 5 Movies 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksInstruments edit nbsp Most common seating arrangement for a 17 piece big bandBig bands generally have four sections trumpets trombones saxophones and a rhythm section of guitar piano double bass drums and sometimes vibraphone 1 2 3 The division in early big bands from the 1920s to 1930s was typically two or three trumpets one or two trombones three or four saxophones and a rhythm section of four instruments 4 In the 1940s Stan Kenton s band used up to five trumpets five trombones three tenor and two bass trombones five saxophones two alto saxophones two tenor saxophones one baritone saxophone and a rhythm section Duke Ellington at one time used six trumpets 5 While most big bands dropped the previously common jazz clarinet from their arrangements other than the clarinet led orchestras of Artie Shaw and Benny Goodman many Duke Ellington songs had clarinet parts 6 often replacing or doubling one of the tenor saxophone parts more rarely Ellington would substitute baritone sax for bass clarinet such as in Ase s Death from Swinging Suites Boyd Raeburn drew from symphony orchestras by adding flute French horn strings and timpani to his band 4 In the late 1930s Shep Fields incorporated a solo accordion temple blocks piccolo violins and a viola into his Rippling Rhythm Orchestra 7 8 Paul Whiteman also featured a solo accordion in his ensemble 9 10 Jazz ensembles numbering eight octet nine nonet or ten tentet voices are sometimes called little big bands 11 During the 1940s somewhat smaller configurations of the big band emerged in the form of the rhythm sextet These ensembles typically featured three or more accordions accompanied by piano guitar bass cello percussion and marimba with vibes and were popularized by recording artists such as Charles Magnante 12 13 Joe Biviano 14 15 and John Serry 16 14 15 17 18 19 20 Twenty first century big bands can be considerably larger than their predecessors exceeding 20 players with some European bands using 29 instruments and some reaching 50 21 Seating and arrangements editIn the most common seating for a 17 piece big band each section is carefully set up in a way to optimize the bands sound For the wind players there are 3 different types of parts lead parts including first trumpet first trombone and first alto sax solo parts including second or fourth trumpet second trombone and the first tenor sax and section members which include the rest of the band The band is generally configured so lead parts are seated in the middle of their sections and solo parts are seated closest to the rhythm section The fourth trombone part is generally played by a bass trombone and many of the saxophone players double on other woodwinds such as soprano clarinet bass clarinet flute or soprano saxophone It is useful to distinguish between the roles of composer arranger and leader The composer writes original music that will be performed by individuals or groups of various sizes while the arranger adapts the work of composers in a creative way for a performance or recording 22 Arrangers frequently notate all or most of the score of a given number usually referred to as a chart 23 Bandleaders are typically performers who assemble musicians to form an ensemble of various sizes select or create material for them shape the music s dynamics phrasing and expression in rehearsals and lead the group in performance often while playing alongside them 24 One of the first prominent big band arrangers was Ferde Grofe who was hired by Paul Whiteman to write for his symphonic jazz orchestra 3 A number of bandleaders established long term relationships with certain arrangers such as the collaboration between leader Count Basie and arranger Neil Hefti 25 Some bandleaders such as Guy Lombardo performed works composed by others in Lombardo s case often by his brother Carmen 26 while others such as Maria Schneider take on all three roles 27 In many cases however the distinction between these roles can become blurred 28 Billy Strayhorn for example was a prolific composer and arranger frequently collaborating with Duke Ellington but rarely took on the role of bandleader which was assumed by Ellington who himself was a composer and arranger 29 nbsp Ockbrook Big Band at Pride Park StadiumTypical big band arrangements from the swing era were written in strophic form with the same phrase and chord structure repeated several times 30 Each iteration or chorus commonly follows twelve bar blues form or thirty two bar AABA song form The first chorus of an arrangement introduces the melody and is followed by choruses of development 31 This development may take the form of improvised solos written solo sections and shout choruses 32 An arrangement s first chorus is sometimes preceded by an introduction which may be as short as a few measures or may extend to a chorus of its own Many arrangements contain an interlude often similar in content to the introduction inserted between some or all choruses Other methods of embellishing the form include modulations and cadential extensions 33 Some big ensembles like King Oliver s played music that was half arranged half improvised often relying on head arrangements 34 A head arrangement is a piece of music that is formed by band members during rehearsal 35 They experiment often with one player coming up with a simple musical figure leading to development within the same section and then further expansion by other sections with the entire band then memorizing the way they are going to perform the piece without writing it on sheet music 36 During the 1930s Count Basie s band often used head arrangements as Basie said we just sort of start it off and the others fall in 37 38 Head arrangements were more common during the period of the 1930s because there was less turnover in personnel giving the band members more time to rehearse 39 p 31 History editDance music edit Before 1910 social dance in America was dominated by steps such as the waltz and polka 40 As jazz migrated from its New Orleans origin to Chicago and New York City energetic suggestive dances traveled with it During the next decades ballrooms filled with people doing the jitterbug and Lindy Hop The dance duo Vernon and Irene Castle popularized the foxtrot while accompanied by the Europe Society Orchestra led by James Reese Europe 1 One of the first bands to accompany the new rhythms was led by a drummer Art Hickman in San Francisco in 1916 Hickman s arranger Ferde Grofe wrote arrangements in which he divided the jazz orchestra into sections that combined in various ways This intermingling of sections became a defining characteristic of big bands In 1919 Paul Whiteman hired Grofe to use similar techniques for his band Whiteman was educated in classical music and he called his new band s music symphonic jazz The methods of dance bands marked a step away from New Orleans jazz With the exception of Jelly Roll Morton who continued playing in the New Orleans style bandleaders paid attention to the demand for dance music and created their own big bands 4 They incorporated elements of Broadway Tin Pan Alley ragtime and vaudeville 1 Duke Ellington led his band at the Cotton Club in Harlem Fletcher Henderson s career started when he was persuaded to audition for a job at Club Alabam in New York City which eventually turned into a job as bandleader at the Roseland Ballroom At these venues which themselves gained notoriety bandleaders and arrangers played a greater role than they had before Hickman relied on Ferde Grofe Whiteman on Bill Challis Henderson and arranger Don Redman followed the template of King Oliver but as the 1920s progressed they moved away from the New Orleans format and transformed jazz They were assisted by a band full of talent Coleman Hawkins on tenor saxophone Louis Armstrong on cornet and multi instrumentalist Benny Carter whose career lasted into the 1990s 1 The swing era edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Swing music nbsp Benny Goodman and Peggy LeeSwing music began appearing in the early 1930s and was distinguished by a more supple feel than the more literal 44 of early jazz Walter Page is often credited with developing the walking bass 41 though earlier examples exist such as Wellman Braud on Ellington s Washington Wabble from 1927 This type of music flourished through the early 1930s although there was little mass audience for it until around 1936 Up until that time it was viewed with ridicule and sometimes looked upon as a menace 42 After 1935 big bands rose to prominence playing swing music and held a major role in defining swing as a distinctive style Western swing musicians also formed popular big bands during the same period There was a considerable range of styles among the hundreds of popular bands Many of the better known bands reflected the individuality of the bandleader the lead arranger and the personnel Count Basie played a relaxed propulsive swing Bob Crosby brother of Bing more of a dixieland style 43 Benny Goodman a hard driving swing and Duke Ellington s compositions were varied and sophisticated Many bands featured strong instrumentalists whose sounds dominated such as the clarinets of Benny Goodman and Artie Shaw the trombone of Jack Teagarden the trumpet of Harry James the drums of Gene Krupa and the vibes of Lionel Hampton The popularity of many of the major bands was amplified by star vocalists such as Frank Sinatra and Connie Haines with Tommy Dorsey Helen O Connell and Bob Eberly with Jimmy Dorsey Ella Fitzgerald with Chick Webb Billie Holiday and Jimmy Rushing with Count Basie Kay Starr with Charlie Barnet Bea Wain with Larry Clinton Dick Haymes Kitty Kallen and Helen Forrest with Harry James Fran Warren with Claude Thornhill Doris Day with Les Brown 44 and Peggy Lee and Martha Tilton with Benny Goodman Some bands were society bands which relied on strong ensembles but little on soloists or vocalists such as the bands of Guy Lombardo and Paul Whiteman A distinction is often made between so called hard bands such as those of Count Basie and Tommy Dorsey which emphasized quick hard driving jump tunes and sweet bands such as the Glenn Miller Orchestra and the Shep Fields Rippling Rhythm Orchestra 45 46 who specialized in less improvised tunes with more emphasis on sentimentality featuring somewhat slower paced often heart felt songs 47 By this time the big band was such a dominant force in jazz that the older generation found they either had to adapt to it or simply retire With no market for small group recordings made worse by a Depression era industry reluctant to take risks musicians such as Louis Armstrong and Earl Hines led their own bands while others like Jelly Roll Morton and King Oliver lapsed into obscurity 48 Even so many of the most popular big bands of the swing era cultivated small groups within the larger ensemble e g Benny Goodman developed both a trio and a quartet Artie Shaw formed the Gramercy Five Count Basie developed the Kansas City Six and Tommy Dorsey the Clambake Seven 49 The major black bands of the 1930s included apart from Ellington s Hines s and Calloway s those of Jimmie Lunceford Chick Webb and Count Basie The white bands of Benny Goodman Artie Shaw Tommy Dorsey Shep Fields and later Glenn Miller were more popular than their black counterparts from the middle of the decade Bridging the gap to white audiences in the mid 1930s was the Casa Loma Orchestra and Benny Goodman s early band The contrast in commercial popularity between black and white bands was striking between 1935 and 1945 the top four white bands had 292 top ten records of which 65 were number one hits while the top four black bands had only 32 top ten hits with only three reaching number one 50 nbsp Glenn Miller a major in the U S Army Air Forces during World War II led a 50 piece military band that specialized in swing musicWhite teenagers and young adults were the principal fans of the big bands in the late 1930s and early 1940s 42 They danced to recordings and the radio and attended live concerts They were knowledgeable and often biased toward their favorite bands and songs and sometimes worshipful of famous soloists and vocalists Many bands toured the country in grueling one night stands Traveling conditions and lodging were difficult in part due to segregation in most parts of the United States and the personnel often had to perform having had little sleep and food Apart from the star soloists many musicians received low wages and would abandon the tour if bookings disappeared Sometimes bandstands were too small public address systems inadequate pianos out of tune Bandleaders dealt with these obstacles through rigid discipline Glenn Miller and canny psychology Duke Ellington nbsp The Grand Central Big Band Big bands uplifted morale during World War II 51 Many musicians served in the military and toured with USO troupes at the front with Glenn Miller losing his life while traveling between shows Many bands suffered from loss of personnel during the war years and as a result women replaced men who had been inducted while all female bands began to appear 51 The 1942 44 musicians strike worsened the situation Vocalists began to strike out on their own By the end of the war swing was giving way to less danceable music such as bebop Many of the great swing bands broke up as the times and tastes changed Many bands from the swing era continued for decades after the death or departure of their founders and namesakes and some are still active in the 21st century often referred to as ghost bands a term attributed to Woody Herman referring to orchestras that persist in the absence of their original leaders 52 Modern big bands edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Although big bands are identified with the swing era they continued to exist after those decades though the music they played was often different from swing Bandleader Charlie Barnet s recording of Cherokee in 1942 and The Moose in 1943 have been called the beginning of the bop era Woody Herman s first band nicknamed the First Herd borrowed from progressive jazz while the Second Herd emphasized the saxophone section of three tenors and one baritone In the 1950s Stan Kenton referred to his band s music as progressive jazz modern and new music 53 He created his band as a vehicle for his compositions Kenton pushed the boundaries of big bands by combining clashing elements and by hiring arrangers whose ideas about music conflicted This expansive eclecticism characterized much of jazz after World War II During the 1960s and 70s Sun Ra and his Arketstra took big bands further out Ra s eclectic music was played by a roster of musicians from ten to thirty and was presented as theater with costumes dancers and special effects 1 As jazz was expanded during the 1950s through the 1970s the Basie and Ellington bands were still around as were bands led by Buddy Rich Gene Krupa Lionel Hampton Earl Hines Les Brown Clark Terry and Doc Severinsen Progressive bands were led by Dizzy Gillespie Gil Evans Carla Bley Toshiko Akiyoshi and Lew Tabackin Don Ellis and Anthony Braxton 54 In the 1960s and 1970s big band rock became popular by integrating such musical ingredients as progressive rock experimentation jazz fusion and the horn choirs often used in blues and soul music with some of the most prominent groups including Chicago Blood Sweat and Tears Tower of Power and from Canada Lighthouse The genre was gradually absorbed into mainstream pop rock and the jazz rock sector 55 Other bandleaders used Brazilian and Afro Cuban music with big band instrumentation and big bands led by arranger Gil Evans saxophonist John Coltrane on the album Ascension from 1965 and bass guitarist Jaco Pastorius introduced cool jazz free jazz and jazz fusion respectively to the big band domain Modern big bands can be found playing all styles of jazz music Some large contemporary European jazz ensembles play mostly avant garde jazz using the instrumentation of the big bands Examples include the Vienna Art Orchestra founded in 1977 and the Italian Instabile Orchestra active in the 1990s nbsp HONK 2022 performers in Somerville Massachusetts U S In the late 1990s there was a swing revival in the U S The Lindy Hop became popular again and young people took an interest in big band styles again Big bands maintained a presence on American television particularly through the late night talk show which has historically used big bands as house accompaniment Typically the most prominent shows with the earliest time slots and largest audiences have bigger bands with horn sections while those in later time slots go with smaller leaner ensembles Many college and university music departments offer jazz programs and feature big band courses in improvisation composition arranging and studio recording featuring performances by 18 to 20 piece big bands 56 Radio editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message During the 1930s Earl Hines and his band broadcast from the Grand Terrace in Chicago every night across America 57 In Kansas City and across the Southwest an earthier bluesier style was developed by such bandleaders as Bennie Moten and later by Jay McShann and Jesse Stone By 1937 the sweet jazz band saxophonist Shep Fields was also featured over the airways on the NBC radio network in his Rippling Rhythm Revue which also showcased a young Bob Hope as the announcer 58 59 60 Big band remotes on the major radio networks spread the music from ballrooms and clubs across the country during the 1930s and 1940s with remote broadcasts from jazz clubs continuing into the 1950s on NBC s Monitor Radio increased the fame of Benny Goodman the Pied Piper of Swing Others challenged him and battle of the bands became a regular feature of theater performances Similarly Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians Orchestra also achieved widespread notoriety for nearly half a century as a result of their broadcasts on the NBC and CBS networks of the annual New Year s Eve celebrations from the Roosevelt Grill at New York s Roosevelt Hotel 1929 1959 and the Ballroom at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel 1959 1976 61 Gloria Parker had a radio program on which she conducted the largest all girl orchestra led by a female She led her Swingphony while playing marimba Phil Spitalny a native of Ukraine led a 22 piece female orchestra known as Phil Spitalny and His Hour of Charm Orchestra named for his radio show The Hour of Charm during the 1930s and 1940s Other female bands were led by trumpeter B A Rolfe Anna Mae Winburn and Ina Ray Hutton 38 Movies editBig Bands began to appear in movies in the 1930s through the 1960s though cameos by bandleaders were often stiff and incidental to the plot Shep Fields appeared with his Rippling Rhythm Orchestra in a playful and integrated animated performance of This Little Ripple Had Rhythm in the musical extravaganza The Big Broadcast of 1938 62 Fictionalized biographical films of Glenn Miller Gene Krupa and Benny Goodman were made in the 1950s The bands led by Helen Lewis Ben Bernie and Roger Wolfe Kahn s band were filmed by Lee de Forest in his Phonofilm sound on film process in 1925 in three short films which are in the Library of Congress film collection 63 See also editList of big bands Swing jazz performance style a term of praise for playing that has a strong rhythmic groove or driveReferences edit a b c d e Gioia Ted 2011 The History of Jazz 2 ed New York Oxford University Press pp 100 ISBN 978 0 19 539970 7 Big Band Music Genre Overview AllMusic Retrieved September 6 2017 a b How We Got the Big Sound of Big Band Jazz Redlands Symphony Archived from the original on June 21 2023 Retrieved June 21 2023 a b c Collier James 2002 Kernfeld Barry ed The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz Vol 1 2nd ed New York Grove s Dictionaries p 122 ISBN 1 56159 284 6 O Meally Robert G Edwards Brent Hayes Griffin Farah Jasmine 2004 Uptown Conversation The New Jazz Studies New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 50836 0 Retrieved December 9 2021 Wilson John S May 15 1981 Ellingtonians salute swing era clarinets The New York Times NYTco Retrieved December 9 2021 Shep Fields Leader of Big Band Known for Rippling Rhythm The New York Times February 24 1981 Retrieved October 28 2020 The Big Bands 4th Edition George T Simon Schirmer Trade Books London 2012 ISBN 978 0 85712 812 6 Shep Fields Biography on Books google com A Passion for Polka Old TIme Ethnic Music in America Greene Victor University of California Press 1992 p 124 Paul Whiteman featured the accordion on Google Books com Music Around The World A Global Encyclopedia Andrew Martin amp Matthew Mihalka editors Accordion Americas p 3 Paul Whiteman Orchestra accordion on Google Books Palmer Robert April 5 1981 Two Little Big Bands offer new jazz The New York Times Retrieved December 9 2021 Music Around The World A Global Encyclopedia Andrew Martin amp Matthew Mihalka editors Accordion Americas p 3 Charles Magnanate amp accordion on Google Books Discography of American Historical Recordings Charles Magnante s Accordion Quartette with guitar and string bass on uscb edu a b Record Reviews Billboard April 27 1946 p 124 ISSN 0006 2510 a b Joe Biviano his Accordion and Rhythm Sextette Tom Delaney John Serry Leone Jump Swing Low Sweet Chariot The Jazz Me Blues Nursery Rhymes Archive org Retrieved November 26 2018 Discography of American Historical Recordings John Serrapica aka John Serry as a member of the Charles Magnante Accordion Quartette with guitar and string bass on uscb edu Dot into Pkgs Billboard September 8 1956 pp 22 ISSN 0006 2510 Review of album Squeeze Play p 22 in The Billboard 1 December 1956 Squeeze The A Cultural History of the Accordion in America Jacobson Marion University of Illinois Press Chicago Il 2012 P 39 Advent of the Piano Accordion Charles Magnante Accordion and Big Band jazz recordings on GoogleBooks com Music in American Life An Encyclopedia of the Songs Styles Stars and Stories that Shaped Our Culture Edmondson Jacqueline ABC CLIO 2013 p 3 Accordion Charles Magnante jazz bands recordings on GoogleBooks com West Michael J JazzTimes 10 Great Modern Big Band Recordings JazzTimes Madavor Media Retrieved November 8 2020 Difference Between Music Composer amp Arranger BestAccreditedColleges org Retrieved December 21 2021 Thompson William Forde 2014 Music in the Social and Behavioral Sciences Los Angeles SAGE p 85 ISBN 978 1 4522 8302 9 Retrieved December 22 2021 What does a Bandleader do Berklee Retrieved December 21 2021 Hefti Neal ejazzlines com Hero Enterprises Retrieved June 12 2023 Studwell William Emmett and Mark Baldin 2000 The Big Band Reader Songs Favored by Swing Era Orchestras and Other Popular Ensembles New York Haworth Press pp 175 77 ISBN 978 0 7890 0914 2 Retrieved December 21 2021 Chinen Nate July 24 2020 Composer Maria Schneider Returns With A Reckoning On Data Lords npr Retrieved December 21 2021 Abate Robert February 10 2015 Composer vs Arranger Robert Abate Music Retrieved December 21 2021 Effinger Shannon J July 27 2021 Billy Strayhorn s Lush Life Beyond Duke Ellington uDiscoverMusic Universal Music Group Retrieved December 21 2021 Big Band Music History TheMusicHistory com Retrieved November 8 2020 A Guide To Song Forms AABA Song Form Songstuff February 18 2014 Retrieved December 9 2021 Rogers Evan Big Band Arranging for composers orchestrators and arrangers 16 Solos and Backgrounds Evan Rogers Orchestrator Arranger Conductor Retrieved November 10 2020 Dennis Tyler Inside the Score in the 21st Century Techniques for Contemporary Large Jazz Ensemble Composition The Aquila Digital Community University of Southern Mississippi Retrieved November 11 2020 Bowman Robert 1982 The question of improvisation and head arrangement in King Oliver s Creole Jazz Band M F A thesis ed Toronto York University ISBN 978 0 612 15541 1 Definitions Timbre Ostinato Stride W W Norton Retrieved November 8 2020 Simon 105 Kernfeld Barry 1995 What to Listen to in Jazz New Haven u a Yale Univ Press pp 90 91 ISBN 0 300 05902 7 a b John Behrens March 2011 America s Music Makers Big Bands amp Ballrooms 1912 2011 AuthorHouse pp 36 ISBN 978 1 4567 2952 3 Retrieved August 31 2017 Martin Henry and Keith Waters 2010 Jazz The First 100 Years 3rd ed Boston Cengage Learning ISBN 978 1 4390 8333 8 Retrieved November 8 2020 1910s Pop Trend The Ragtime Dance Craze Pop Song History June 11 2014 Retrieved December 19 2021 Schuller Gunther The Swing Era The Development of Jazz 1930 1945 New York Oxford University Press 1991 Print p 226 a b Bindas Kenneth J 2001 Swing that Modern Sound Jackson University Press of Mississippi pp 10 11 ISBN 978 1 57806 382 6 Retrieved June 11 2023 Wilson Jeremy George Robert Crosby Bandleader Vocalist Actor Radio TV Host JazzStandards com Retrieved November 28 2021 Yanow Scott Les Brown AllMusic Retrieved December 30 2021 Music of the Great Depression Young William H 2005 p 120 Shep Fields Sweet Band on Google Books Big Bands and Great Ballrooms Behrens Jack 2006 p 23 Shep Fields Sweet Band on Google Books Jazz Music The Swing Era University of Colorado Boulder Retrieved December 23 2021 Dicaire David 2010 Jazz Musicians of the Early Years to 1945 Jefferson NC McFarland pp 18 35 ISBN 978 0 7864 8556 7 Retrieved June 11 2023 Stewart Alex 2007 Making the Scene Contemporary New York City Big Band Jazz Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 24953 0 Retrieved June 11 2023 Starr Larry Waterman Christopher Alan 2014 American Popular Music From Minstrelsy to MP3 New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 985911 5 a b B C music instructor says touring swing bands lifted military spirits during WW II CBC News November 11 2017 Retrieved June 11 2023 Epstein Benjamin July 18 1986 Sounds of Hot Jazz Stay Warm Harry James Band to Play at the Mission Los Angeles Times Retrieved December 13 2021 Boyd Michael Stan Kenton Progressive Concepts in Jazz plosin com Peter Losin Retrieved May 27 2023 Progressive Big Band JAZZMUSICARCHIVES COM JMA Retrieved May 27 2023 Hoffmann Frank and Robert Birkline Big band rock Survey of American Popular Music Retrieved November 11 2020 Lawrence Rick November 6 2019 Best College Jazz Bands in The World Studio Notes Online Retrieved November 7 2020 Travis Dempsey J March 26 1985 Where The Jazz Was Super hot Chicago Tribune Retrieved September 6 2017 Dunning John 1998 On the Air the Encyclopedia of Old Time Radio New York Oxford University Press p 105 ISBN 978 0 19 977078 6 Strait Raymond 2016 Chapter 11 Bob Hope Shep Fields and The Rippling Rhythm Revue Bob Hope A Tribute Crossroad Press Photograph of Bob Hope as master of ceremonies on the Rippling Rhythm Revue Show in 1937 on Gettyimages Crump William D 2008 Encyclopedia of New Year s Holidays Worldwide London McFarland amp Co p 101 ISBN 978 0 7864 3393 3 Stanley Green and Elaine Schmidt 2000 Hollywood musicals year by year ISBN 0 634 00765 3 Shep Fields and His Rippling Rhythm Orchestra in The Big Broadcaste of 1938 Geduld Harry M 1975 The Birth of the Talkies From Edison to Jolson Indiana University Press p 97 ISBN 978 0 253 10743 5 Retrieved July 12 2022 Further reading editPage Drew 1981 Drew s Blues A Sideman s Life with the Big Bands Baton Rouge LA Louisiana State University Press ISBN 978 0 8071 0686 0 Russo William 1973 Composing for the Jazz Orchestra University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 73209 6 LCCN 61 8642 Simon George T 1967 The Big Bands New York The Macmillan Company LCCN 67 26643 OCLC 1169701 External links editInternational Big Band Directory State University of New York Fredonia Rockefeller Arts Center Jazz Big Band Arrangements Christopher Popa s Big Band Library Big Bands After The Big Band Era Bill Kirchner faculty at Manhattan School of Music 6 Steps to Big Band Writing with Steven Feifke YouTube video Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Big band amp oldid 1217021191, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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