Sy Oliver – King Swing Arranger – Phantom Dancer 10 September 2019


SWING ARRANGER

This week’s Greg Poppleton Phantom Dancer features a set of 1940s swing bands from the Spotlight Bands series, a set of 1940s Nat King Cole and a set of the Dorsey Brothers on air, Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey with a feature by their uptempo arranger, the influential musician and composer, Sy Oliver.

ONLINE

The Phantom Dancer will be online right after the 6 August 107.3 2SER Sydney live mix at 2ser.com.
Hear the show live every Tuesday 12:04-2pm and Saturday 5 – 5:55pm on 107.3 2SER Sydney

The last hour is all vinyl.

Sy Oliver

OLIVER

Sy Oliver was a byword for swing in the 1940s. His musicianship skyrocketed the careers of big band leaders Jimmie Lunceford and Tommy Dorsey, both of whom you hear on this week’s Phantom Dancer. From wiki,

“Sy Oliver was born in Battle Creek, Michigan. His mother was a piano teacher and his father was a multi-instrumentalist who made a name for himself demonstrating saxophones at a time that instrument was little used outside of marching bands.

Oliver left home at 17 to play with Zack Whyte and his Chocolate Beau Brummels and later with Alphonse Trent. He sang and played trumpet with these bands, becoming known for his “growling” horn playing. He also began arranging with them.

He continued singing for the next 17 years, making many recordings when he was with Jimmie Lunceford and with his own band. With Lunceford, from 1934 to 1937, he recorded more than two dozen vocals. From 1949 to 1951, he recorded more than a dozen with his own band. With Tommy Dorsey, he only recorded two vocals, both in 1941 with Jo Stafford, on his own compositions “Yes Indeed” and “Swingin’ on Nothin'”.

Oliver arranged and conducted many songs for Ella Fitzgerald from her Decca years. As a composer, one of his most famous songs was “T’ain’t What You Do (It’s the Way That You Do It)”, which he co-wrote with Trummy Young.

 

Sy Oliver

LUNCEFORD

In 1933, Oliver joined Jimmie Lunceford’s band as a trumpet player, arranger and songwriter. He contributed many hit arrangements for the band, including “My Blue Heaven” and “Ain’t She Sweet”, as well as his original composition “For Dancers Only” which in time became the band’s theme song. He was co-arranger with pianist Ed Wilson; Oliver primarily taking the up-tempo numbers, Wilcox the ballads. Oliver’s arrangements “were a dashing parade of innovation that rivaled Ellington’s for consistency and originality.”

DORSEY

In 1939, when band leader Tommy Dorsey decided he wanted a swing band, his first step was to hire Oliver as an arranger away from Lunceford for $5,000 more a year. Oliver then became one of the first African Americans with a prominent role in a white band when he joined Tommy Dorsey. (Fletcher Henderson, another African American composer/arranger, had joined the Benny Goodman orchestra as the arranger some years earlier.) He led the transition of the Dorsey band from Dixieland to modern big band. His joining was instrumental in Dorsey luring several major jazz players, including Buddy Rich to his band.

With Dorsey, Oliver continued sharing arranging duties with another arranger, Axel Stordahl, Oliver doing up tempo tunes, Stordahl ballads. As James Kaplan puts it, “Tommy Dorsey’s band got a rocket boost in 1939 when Dorsey stole Lunceford’s great arranger Sy Oliver.”

His arrangement of “On the Sunny Side of the Street” was a big hit for Dorsey in 1946, as were his compositions “Yes, Indeed!” (a gospel-jazz tune that was later recorded by Ray Charles), “Opus One” (originally titled as “Opus No. 1”, but changed to suit the lyric that was added later), “The Minor Is Muggin'”, and “Well, Git It”.

Here’s a 1947 Downbeat review of the Sy Oliver band that you’ll hear from a live 1946 broadcast on this week’s Phantom Dancer…

 

Sy Oliver

APRES DORSEY

Oliver left Dorsey after seven years, in 1946, and began working as a freelance arranger and as music director for Decca Records.

One of his more successful efforts as an arranger was the Frank Sinatra album I Remember Tommy, a combined tribute to their former boss.

June 26, 1950, Sy Oliver and his Orchestra recorded the first American version of C’est si bon (Henri Betti, André Hornez, Jerry Seelen) and La Vie en rose (Louiguy, Édith Piaf, Mack David) for Louis Armstrong.

In 1974 he began a nightly gig with a small band at the Rainbow Room in New York. He continued that gig until 1984, with occasion time off to make festival or other dates, including at the Roseland Ballroom in New York. He retired in 1984.

Oliver died in New York City at the age of 77.

Your Phantom Dancer Video of the Week this week is a 1936 Vitaphone short of Jimmie Lunceford and his Orchestra with trumpet and arrangements by Sy Oliver
Enjoy!

Make sure you come back to this blog, Greg Poppleton’s Radio Lounge, every Tuesday, for the newest Phantom Dancer play list and Video of the Week!

Thank you.

Play List – The Phantom Dancer
107.3 2SER-FM Sydney, Live Stream, Digital Radio
Community Radio Network Show CRN #403

107.3 2SER Tuesday 10 September 2019
After the 2SER 12 noon news, 12:04 – 2:00pm (+10 hours GMT)

Set 1
Swing on the 1940s Spotlight Bands Radio Series
Blue Skies + You’re Too Beautiful
Harry James Orchestra (voc) Buddy DeVito
’Spotlight Bands’
AFRS Re-broadcast
Aug 1946
Futurama
Gene Krupa Orchestra
’Spotlight Bands’
AFRS Re-broadcast
1945
Dark Eyes + Temptation (theme)
Jimmy Joy Orchestra
’Spotlight Bands’
Harlingen Tx
Blue Network
6 Jan 1945
Set 2
Nat King Cole Trio Time on 1947 – 59 Radio
Straighten Up And Fly Right (theme) + Sunday + Ad
Nat King Cole Trio (voc) NKC
’King Cole Trio Time’
KFI NBC LA
6 Mar 1948
Little Joe From Chicago + Boogie A La King
Nat King Cole Trio
’King Cole Trio Time’
Radio Transcription
1959
Tired
Pearl Bailey (voc) Nat King Cole Trio
’King Cole Trio Time’
WMAQ NBC Chicago
1 Mar 1947
Set 3
Those ‘Fabulous Dorseys’ on 1950s Radio and TV
I’m Getting Sentimental Over You (theme) + Sentimental Baby
Dorsey Brothers Orchestra (voc) Lynn Roberts
’All-Star Parade of Bands’
Claridge Hotel
WMC NBC Memphis
1953
I’m Getting Sentimental Over You (theme) + Smiles
Sy Oliver Orchestra
’Endorsed By Dorsey’
WOR Mutual NY
3 Mar 1946
When The Saints Go Marching In + I’m Getting Sentimental Over You (theme)
Dorsey Brothers Orchestra (voc) Johnny Ray
’Stage Show’
CBS TV NY
1 Jan 1955
Set 4
Modern 1950s Sounds: RnB, Bop and Cool
Open + King Jacquet
Illinois Jacquet
’Sepia Swing Club’
WDIA Memphis
14 Dec 1951
Cool Blues
Charlie Parker
Hi-Hat Club
WCOP Boston
1954
I’ve Got Rhythm
The Flexible Five
’California Melodies’
KHJ Mutual Los Angeles
1950
Set 5
Broadcasting From The Savoy
Round Midnight (theme) + 711
Cootie Williams Orchestra
’One Night Stand’
Savoy Ballroom NYC
AFRS Re-broadcast
12 Feb 1945
Body and Soul (theme) + Chant of the Groove
Coleman Hawkins Orchestra
Aircheck
Savoy Ballroom NYC
1940
They Can’t Take That Away From Me
Count Basie Orchestra (voc) Billie Holiday
Aircheck
Savoy Ballroom NYC
30 Jun 1937
Floogie Boo + St Louis Blues
Cootie Williams Orchestra
’One Night Stand’
Savoy Ballroom NYC
AFRS Re-broadcast
12 Feb 1945
Set 6
Swing Bands on 1930s – 1940s Radio
Chatterbox
Charlie Barnet Orchestra
Radio Transcription
Los Angeles
Apr 1938
Are You Kidding?
Jimmie Lunceford Orchestra (voc) Band
’Spotlight Bands’
Jefferson Barracks Missouri
Blue Network
23 Nov 1945
Benny’s Bugle
Lee and Lester Young Orchestra
Club Capri
KHJ Mutual LA
2 Dec 1941
The Blizzard
Louis Prima Orchestra
’Spotlight Bands’
Mitchell Field NY
Mutual Network
15 Jan 1945
Set 7
Pop Songs on 1930s Radio
The You And Me That Used To Be
George Hall Orchestra
Radio Transcription
New York City
1937
When Summer Is Gone (theme) + You’ve Got Me Crying Again
Hal Kemp Orchestra
’Lavena Program’
Radio Transcription
New York City
1934
Chlo-e
Benny Goodman Orchestra
’Camel Caravan’
KNX CBS LA
17 Aug 1937
The Little Man Who Wasn’t There
Johnny Messner Orchestra
’Radio Transcription’
New York City
1939
Set 8
Modern Improvised Jazz on 1950s Radio
The Cinch + I Don’t Want To Be Kissed
Buddy Rich Quintet
Birdland
WABC ABC NY
8 Nov 1958
The 7-11 Jump
Erroll Garner Trio
Basin Street
WCBS CBS New York City
May 1956
All The Things You Are
Dave Brubeck Quartet
Basin Street
WCBS CBS New York City
Feb 1956

Vincent Lopez and 1938 Cotton Club – Phantom Dancer 9 April 2019


‘Lopez Speaking.’ Band leader Vincent Lopez is your feature artist on this week’s Phantom Dancer with Greg Poppleton.

One of the early stars of radio, you’ll hear the piano playing, wisecracking band leader from live 1945-59 radio.

See the full Phantom Dancer play list below of swing and jazz mixed by Greg Poppleton from live 1920s-60s radio below.

PHANTOM DANCER

This week’s Phantom Dancer will be online right after the 9 April 2SER live mix at 2ser.com.
Hear the show live every Tuesday 12:04-2pm on 107.3 2SER Sydney

LOPEZ

Vincent Lopez was born in Brooklyn, New York, to parents who had immigrated from Portugal. At age 22 in 1917 he was leading his own dance band in New York City.

Vincent Lopez old Greg Poppleton microphone

RADIO

On November 27, 1921 The Lopez band began broadcasting on radio. The band’s weekly 90-minute show on the Newark, New Jersey, station WJZ boosted the popularity of both himself and of radio. He became one of America’s most popular bandleaders, and would retain that status through the 1940s.

He began his radio programs by announcing “Lopez speaking!”. His theme song was “Nola”, Felix Arndt’s novelty ragtime piece of 1915, and Lopez became so identified with it that he occasionally satirized it. (His 1939 movie short for Vitaphone, Vincent Lopez and his Orchestra, features the entire band singing “Down with Nola”.)

Lopez worked occasionally in feature films, notably The Big Broadcast (1932) and as a live-action feature in the Max Fleischer cartoon “I Don’t Want to Make History” (1936). In 1940, he was one of the very first bandleaders to work in Soundies movie musicals. He made additional Soundies in 1944.

INFLUENCED

Noted musicians who played in his band included Artie Shaw, Xavier Cugat, Jimmy Dorsey, Tommy Dorsey, Mike Mosiello, Fred Lowery, and Glenn Miller. He also featured singers Keller Sisters and Lynch, Betty Hutton, and Marion Hutton. Lopez’s longtime drummer was the irreverent Mike Riley, who popularized the novelty hit “The Music Goes Round and Round”.

Lopez’s flamboyant style of piano playing influenced such later musicians as Eddy Duchin and Liberace.

In 1941 Lopez’s Orchestra began a residency at the Taft Hotel in Manhattan that would last 20 years.

In the early 1950s, Lopez along with Gloria Parker hosted a radio program broadcast from the Taft Hotel called Shake the Maracas in which audience members competed for small prizes by playing maracas with the orchestra.

Vincent Lopez maracas

TV

He also broadcast the TV show “Dinner Date” from the Hotel Taft in 1950.

The Vincent Lopez Show was a popular TV series which ran from 1949 to 1957.

VIDEO

This week’s Phantom Dancer video of the week is from 1932 – the Lopez Orchestra in a Paramount short, “Those Blues”. The song is WC Handy’s St Louis Blues.

9 APRIL PLAY LIST

Play List – The Phantom Dancer
107.3 2SER-FM Sydney, Live Stream, Digital Radio
Community Radio Network Show CRN #380

107.3 2SER Tuesday 9 April 2019
After the 2SER 12 noon news, 12:04 – 2:00pm (+10 hours GMT)
National Program:
ArtSoundFM Canberra Sunday 7 – 8pm
2ARM Armidale Friday 12:04 – 1pm
and early morning on 24 other stations.

Set 1
Big Bands on 1944-46 Radio
Brahm’s Hungarian Dance No.5
Shep Fields and his New Music
‘One Night Stand’
Copacabana NYC
AFRS Re-broadcast
9 Aug 1944
These Foolish Things (ts) Charlie Ventura
Gene Krupa Orchestra
‘One Night Stand’
Meadowbrook Gardens
Culver City Ca.
AFRS Re-broadcast
31 Mar 1946
Elks Parade + Close
Bobby Sherwood Orchestra
‘One Night Stand’
Avadon Ballroom LA
AFRS Re-broadcast
3 Jun 1946
Set 2
Band Singers on the Radio
Come Rain, Come Shine
Jo Stafford
‘Let’s Go To Town’
Radio Transcription
Hollywood
1954
Exactly Like You
Andy Russell
‘Double Feature’
AFRS Re-broadcast
Hollywood
15 Oct 1944
It Happened in Monterey + Close
Perry Como
‘Let’s Go To Town’
Radio Transcription
Hollywood
1954
Set 3
1935-36 Radio
Syncopated Love Song
Nathaniel Shilkret
WEAF NBC Red NY
1935
O Miss Hannah + The Way You Look Tonight + I’m An Old Cowhand + Close
The Revellers
‘The Magic Key’
WJZ NBC Blue
11 Nov 1936
Instrumental + I Love A Parade
Freddy Rich Orchestra
‘Dodge Show’
Radio Transcription
New York City
13 Feb 1936
Set 4
Vincent Lopez
Nola
Vincent Lopez Orchestra
Comm Rec
Hollywood
8 Jan 1940
Open + Song of the Islands + My First, My Last, My Only Love
Vincent Lopez Orchestra (voc) Bruce Hayes
‘Luncheon with Lopez’
Grill Room
Hotel Taft
WOR Mutual NYC
10 Aug 1945
My Melancholy Baby + Muskrat Ramble
Vincent Lopez Orchestra (voc) Texas Teddy Norman
‘One Night Stand’
AFRS Re-broadcast
Grill Room
Hotel Taft
1959
Set 5
Cotton Club 1938 Radio
Intro + Jig Walk
Duke Ellington Orchestra
Cotton Club
WABC CBS NY
22 May 1938
Downtown Uproar
Duke Ellington Orchestra (featuring Cottie Williams)
Cotton Club
WABC CBS NY
17 Apr 1938
Slappin’ on Seventh Avenue
Duke Ellington Orchestra
Cotton Club
WABC CBS NY
22 May 1938
Oh Babe, Maybe Some Day + I Let a Song Go Out of My Heart
Duke Ellington Orchestra (voc) Ivie Anderson
Cotton Club
WABC CBS NY
22 May 1938
Set 6
Duke Ellington Alumni
Round Midnight (theme) + 711
Cootie Williams Orchestra
‘One Night Stand’
Savoy Ballroom
Harlem NYC
AFRS Re-broadcast
12 Feb 1945
Tutti for Cootie
Duke Ellington Orchestra (featuring Cottie Williams)
‘One Night Stand’
Steel Pier
Atlantic City
AFRTS Re-broadcast
Jul 1964
I Ain’t Got Nothing But The Blues
Duke Ellington Orchestra (voc) Kay Davis, (ts) Al Sears
‘Date With The Duke’
Cafe Zanzibar
WJZ ABC NY
10 Nov 1945
Right Now, Right Now
Alan Freed Big Band (ts) Al Sears
Comm Rec
New York City
1956
Set 7
Nan Wynn on Radio
All This And Heaven Too
Raymond Scott Orchestra (voc) Nan Wynn
Panther Room
Hotel Sherman
WMAQ NBC Red Chicago
1940
And So Do I
Raymond Scott Orchestra (voc) Nan Wynn
Panther Room
Hotel Sherman
WMAQ NBC Red Chicago
1940
Blueberry Hill
Raymond Scott Orchestra (voc) Nan Wynn
Panther Room
Hotel Sherman
WMAQ NBC Red Chicago
1940
A Million Dreams Ago
Raymond Scott Orchestra (voc) Nan Wynn
Panther Room
Hotel Sherman
WMAQ NBC Red Chicago
1940
Set 8
Trad Radio
Wailing Blues
The Cellar Boys
Comm Rec
New York City
30 Jan 1930
Black and Blue
Muggsy Spanier
‘This is Jazz’
WOR Mutual NY
22 Mar 1947
Didn’t He Ramble
The Southern Jazz Group
5AD
Adelaide
18 Jun 1949
That’s A’Plenty + Close
Muggsy Spanier
Club Hangover
KCBS CBS San Francisco
18 Jun 1953