Monday, February 6, 2017

Anita Ellis - Look To The Rainbow

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:56
Size: 164.7 MB
Styles: Cabaret, Vocal
Year: 2000
Art: Front

[2:32] 1. On A Clear Day You Can See Forever
[3:29] 2. Moments Like This
[3:48] 3. Anyone Can Whistle
[2:57] 4. Spring Will Be A Little Late This Year
[3:17] 5. Hury! It's Lovely Up Here!
[4:55] 6. But Beautiful
[2:26] 7. Swinging On A Star
[2:12] 8. Like Someone In Love
[3:51] 9. Poor Loulie Jean
[2:30] 10. Everywhere I Look (There Are You)
[3:00] 11. Birthday Candles
[2:42] 12. Sunday, Monday Or Always
[2:52] 13. Don't Let It Get You Down
[2:42] 14. Suddenly It's Spring
[2:57] 15. All Of Us In It Together
[3:53] 16. Who Can I Turn To
[3:49] 17. Too Late Now
[3:52] 18. The World Is In My Arms
[3:14] 19. Look To The Rainbow
[2:52] 20. It's Anybody's Spring
[2:29] 21. Here's To My Lady
[2:53] 22. Melinda
[2:32] 23. Wht Did I Have That I Don't Have

A superior cabaret singer whose stage fright kept her from appearing in public that often, Anita Ellis was 57 when she taped two of Alec Wilder's radio shows in 1977. It is from those programs that these previously unreleased performances are drawn. Ellis is particularly wonderful on ballads and her voice is strong, quite expressive and very appealing. Many of the songs are by Burton Lane or the team of Van Heusen and Burke with a few other favorites tossed in. The accompaniment by pianist Loonis McGlohon's rhythm section is tasteful and very sympathetic, and Anita Ellis sings quite beautifully throughout the extended set, doing great justice to the lyrics. ~Scott Yanow

Look To The Rainbow

Various - Heart & Soul: Celebrating The Unforgettable Songs Of Frank Loesser

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 64:16
Size: 147.1 MB
Styles: Easy Listening
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[2:51] 1. Helen Forrest - I Don't Want To Walk Without You
[3:06] 2. Bea Wain - Heart And Soul
[3:45] 3. Della Reese - Two Sleepy People
[2:31] 4. Kay Kyser - Praise The Lord And Pass The Ammunition
[2:48] 5. Sarah Vaughan - Can't Get Out Of This Mood
[2:59] 6. Vaughn Monnroe - Let's Get Lost
[2:49] 7. Johnny Mathis - What Are You Doing New Year's Eve
[2:40] 8. Sarah Vaughan - Spring Will Be A Little Late This Year
[2:55] 9. Dinah Shore - I Wish I Didn't Love You So
[2:56] 10. Pearl Bailey - Baby, It's Cold Outside
[7:32] 11. Four Lads - Where's Charley
[3:01] 12. Doris Day - I've Never Been In Love Before
[2:15] 13. Barry Manilow - Luck Be A Lady
[2:50] 14. Four Lads - Standing On The Corner
[2:51] 15. Doris Day - Somebody Somewhere
[3:55] 16. Johnny Mathis - Joey, Joey, Joey
[2:40] 17. Vic Damone - Never Will I Marry
[3:21] 18. Michele Lee - I Believe In You
[6:22] 19. Arthur Fiedler - Hans Christian Anderson Medley

There may be no better shorthand for Frank Loesser’s genius than the words “heart and soul.” They never deserted him, from the dapper hit-parade favorites he wrote for Hollywood, to his ambitious Broadway career that produced – in little more than a decade – Where’s Charley?, Guys and Dolls, The Most Happy Fella and How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying. A complex and sophisticated man, Loesser somehow managed to keep the essence of “heart and soul” in everything he wrote, without ever seeming glib. His craft deepened and broadened, but it never lost an almost streetwise honesty that is as dazzling and sharp as a diamond. You never feel cheated or manipulated in a Frank Loesser song. Seduced, maybe. Teased and kidded, certainly. Moved, almost always. And joyously entertained. ~ David Foil

Heart & Soul: Celebrating The Unforgettable Songs Of Frank Loesser

Chuck Wayne - Tapestry

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:49
Size: 95.8 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 1964/2013
Art: Front

[2:54] 1. On Green Dolphin Street
[3:27] 2. My Favorite Things
[3:45] 3. Satin Doll
[2:49] 4. Down The Road
[4:19] 5. Loads Of Love
[3:32] 6. Askaterine
[3:09] 7. Lady's Love Song
[6:44] 8. 'round Midnight
[2:59] 9. Greensleeves
[4:51] 10. Softly As In A Morning Sunrise
[3:15] 11. Thank The Lord

Bass – Ernie Furtado; Drums – Jimmy Campbell; Guitar – Chuck Wayne. Recorded in New York City at Nola's Penthouse Studios.

Although he often paid his bills with non-jazz pursuits, native New Yorker Chuck Wayne was an expressive and talented, if underexposed, bebop guitarist along the lines of Barney Kessel, Tal Farlow, Jimmy Raney, and Johnny Smith. Wayne was never a huge name in the jazz world, but he did cross paths with major jazzmen like Dizzy Gillespie, Zoot Sims, and Woody Herman — and improvisers who were familiar with his swinging yet lyrical playing (a relatively small group) swore by him. Wayne was capable of playing more than one style of jazz; he played swing before he played bop, and he could handle Dixieland as well. But bop was his preference, and that's the style that he is best known for in jazz circles.

Tapestry

Steve Lawrence - Going Solo

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:19
Size: 126.7 MB
Styles: Vocal, Pop
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[2:38] 1. (The Bad Donkey) Pum-Pa-Lum
[2:08] 2. Fabulous
[2:11] 3. Footsteps
[2:48] 4. Fraulein
[2:12] 5. Go Away Little Girl
[3:24] 6. Hallelujah
[2:30] 7. (I Don't Care) Only Love Me
[2:41] 8. I Gotta Be Me
[3:07] 9. In Time
[2:24] 10. Many A Time
[2:53] 11. More
[2:44] 12. My Claire De Lune
[2:10] 13. Party Doll
[2:49] 14. Portrait Of My Love
[3:08] 15. A Room Without Windows
[2:59] 16. Sunrise, Sunset
[3:55] 17. That's What Friends Are For
[3:35] 18. Through The Years
[2:43] 19. True Love
[2:11] 20. Uh-Huh Oh Yeah

Oldies fans remember Buddy Knox's chart-topper "Party Doll," but Steve Lawrence also enjoyed a number one hit with the song according to the Cash Box charts. By Billboard's accounting it went Top Five and is only one of several hits included on his first Coral album, Songs by Steve Lawrence. Taragon's CD reissue adds three bonus tracks to make the disc a complete collection of Lawrence's Coral hits, of which there were eight. The material is diverse, from light rock to orchestral pop to ethnic numbers like "(The Bad Donkey) Pum-Pa-Lum." Lawrence even released a competing version of Bobby Helms' crossover country hit "Fraulein," although Lawrence's rendition was made exclusively for the pop audience. This is an excellent and concise summary of his Coral years.

Going Solo

East Coast JazzBand - It Might As Well Be Spring

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 56:26
Size: 129.2 MB
Styles: Swing, Dixieland
Year: 1997
Art: Front

[3:14] 1. Honeysuckle Rose
[4:22] 2. Indiana
[3:57] 3. Lover Come Back To Me
[4:57] 4. I'm Gonna Sit Right Down And Write
[3:35] 5. I Can't Believe That You're In Love With
[3:14] 6. Them There Eyes
[4:50] 7. West End Blues
[3:54] 8. When The Saints Go Marching In
[4:11] 9. Baby Won't You Please
[3:48] 10. It's Only A Paper Moon
[4:20] 11. It Might As Well Be Spring
[4:58] 12. Someone To Watch Over Me
[3:02] 13. I Can't Give You Anything But Love
[3:58] 14. It Don't Mean A Thing

Described as the “lively band with cool sounds from the sunny side”, the East Coast Jazz Band perform an eclectic mix of popular jazz styles ranging from Dixieland, Ragtime and Swing to Bossa Nova and Blues. Hailing from the sunny south east, the band has been playing festivals and gigs throughout Ireland for almost twenty years. They had their inaugural performance at the world renowned Guinness Cork Jazz festival in 1998 and have been welcomed back EVERY year since. This culminated at 2013 festival when the band played 3 performances at the flagship Metropole festival club in addition to other venues. Their high energy take on jazz classics ensure they appeal to all walks of music fans. The band tours various festivals throughout Ireland, including the Kilkenny Arts Fest, Arklow Maritime Fest and the Jazz festivals at Doonbeg, Ballydehob and Bray.

It Might As Well Be Spring

Bob Wilber Quintet Feat Clark Terry - Blowin' The Blues Away

Styles: Clarinet And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1960
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:21
Size: 85,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:23)  1. After Midnight
(2:53)  2. Please Blues Go On Away From Here
(3:09)  3. Soulful Serenade
(4:34)  4. Basie Eyes
(3:41)  5. The Maryland Farmer
(4:18)  6. Baptist Blues
(5:39)  7. Where Will I Go
(4:25)  8. La Valse Bleue (The Blue Waltz)
(3:14)  9. Blue Rhumba

This quintet date matches together Bob Wilber (doubling on clarinet and tenor) with flugelhornist Clark Terry, pianist Dick Wellstood, bassist George Duvivier and drummer Panama Francis. Wilber's last album as a leader until 1969 consists of nine blues-oriented originals and was also issued (with the horn solos cut out) in the Music Minus One series. This Lp (if it can be found) is worth picking up but since Wilber was suffering a bit of an identity crisis at the time, the music is not really all that essential. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/blowin-the-blues-away-mw0000906886

Personnel:  Bob Wilber (clarinet and saxophone); Clark Terry (flugelhornist);  Dick Wellstood (piano);  George Duvivier (bass); Panama Francis (drums).

Blowin' The Blues Away

Susanne Abbuehl - Compass

Styles: Vocal
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:40
Size: 123,3 MB
Art: Front

(5:46)  1. Bathyal
(4:21)  2. Black Is The Color...
(4:58)  3. Where Flamingos Fly
(3:45)  4. Lo Fiolairé
(4:20)  5. Sea, Sea!
(4:02)  6. Don't Set Sail
(5:30)  7. The Twilight Turns From Amethyst
(5:16)  8. Primrose
(4:42)  9. Bright Cap And Streamers
(4:46) 10. A Call For All Demons
(3:04) 11. Children's Song No.1
(3:03) 12. In The Dark Pine-Wood

Anyone fortunate enough to have heard Susanne Abbuehl's out-of-print first record, I Am Rose (Evoke, 1997), knows that while the singer's musical direction was already developing, it was not until her 2001 ECM debut, April, that it became fully realized. Compass is a logical evolution, but it manages a few surprises, finding Abbuehl and her unorthodox trio becoming even more integrated, intuitive and introspective. Abbuehl continues to defy convention. In contrast to jazz singers who search for new ways to portray an overworked Great American Songbook, she has chosen a different path. Alongside her own writings are adaptations of poetry by writers like James Joyce and William Carlos Williams, set to music from artists as diverse as Chick Corea and Sun Ra. All too many singers approach their material with overbearing melisma; Abbuehl's delivery remains so understated that it takes time to fully appreciate the finer nuances that are the trademark of her deeply interpretive approach. Additionally, Abbuehl shapes her music with a trio that may be unusual in its makeup but, with its clear allegiance to space as an equal component, creates a compelling orchestration for her pure and nearly vibrato-less voice. Newcomer Lucas Niggli's textural approach to percussion with the rare exception of songs like "Sea, Sea!," there's rarely a pulse to be found meshes perfectly with longtime musical collaborators Wolfert Brederode (piano) and Christof May (clarinets). 

Though it's hard to believe such a thing would be possible, Compass is even more rarefied than April. Abbuehl's take on Sun Ra's "A Call for All Demons" is an abstruse mix of staccato low notes on piano, gentle but clangy percussion, and a bass clarinet that seems to shadow her every move a far cry from Ra's more extroverted approach on Sun Song (Delmark, 1956). On the traditional "Black is the Color" and "Lo Fiolairé" both based on Luciano Berio's "Folk Songs" Abbuehl is accompanied solely by May and guest clarinetist Michel Portal. The fact that two clarinets can blend together to create such a warm foundation for Abbuehl's delicate and vulnerable delivery is just as remarkable as the blurred line they draw between form and freedom. While improvisation is a clear aspect of the music, Brederode, May and Niggli mesh so seamlessly that the melancholy pedal tone of the ever-so-slightly bluesy "Where Flamingos Fly" feels both spontaneous and clearly conceptualized at the same time. May's tone is soft and often remains in a lower register that perfectly complements Abbuehl's range, while Brederode's sparse approach often suggests more than it explicitly states.  But at the end of the day, it's Abbuehl's ability to express the beauty or bittersweet of a lyric with the slightest turn of phrase that makes Compass so rewarding. It takes a good singer to get to the core of a song; it takes a great one to do it so in a way that puts the song first and ego second. Dark, mysterious and sensual in the most insidious of ways, the appeal of Compass is its breadth of emotion, beautifully delivered without a trace of excess. ~ John Kelman https://www.allaboutjazz.com/compass-susanne-abbuehl-ecm-records-review-by-john-kelman.php

Personnel: Susanne Abbuehl: vocals; Wolfert Brederode: piano, harmonium; Christof May: clarinet; Lucas Niggli: percussion; Michel Portal: clarinet (2,4).

Compass

Harold Danko - This Isn't Maybe

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 65:46
Size: 151,4 MB
Art: Front

(5:58)  1. Whatever Possessed Me
(7:00)  2. I Thought About You
(4:22)  3. I Fall In Love Too Easily
(5:42)  4. Gnid
(6:17)  5. Deep In A Dream
(4:01)  6. The Touch Of Your Lips
(3:58)  7. D's Dilemma
(5:21)  8. These Foolish Things
(6:06)  9. When She Smiles
(4:22) 10. Way To Go
(6:49) 11. Gone With The Wind
(5:45) 12. This Is Always

It's a dilemma that has been common to jazz for decades now. It involves those players who might accurately be called "the middle children." You know how it works, players who can't get the same attention from the major labels like the young lions are able to nor are old enough to be referred to as elder statesmen. The transcendent and always appealing pianist Harold Danko falls into this trap. He should clearly be better known than what he is, yet he fulfills a valuable role as educator at the Eastman School in Rochester and also has in Nils Winter the support of a very congenial producer. Following up on his 1994 solo piano tribute to John Coltrane, After the Rain, Danko puts forward another solo set dedicated to the spirit of the late trumpeter/vocalist Chet Baker. The pianist, of course, is uniquely suited for this endeavor considering that he spent time in the '70s and '80s working with Baker. Some familiar standards and a few rare lines from Jimmy Heath and Phil Urso make up this recital that clocks in at over an hour. Detailed commentary seems superfluous, as Danko plays with the kind of finesse and heartfelt emotion that has always marked his work. Bravo! ~ C.Andrew Hovan https://www.allaboutjazz.com/this-isnt-maybe-harold-danko-steeplechase-records-review-by-c-andrew-hovan.php
 
Personnel: Harold Danko (solo piano)

This Isn't Maybe

Rodney Jones - Soul Manifesto

Styles: Guitar, Funk
Year: 2001
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:09
Size: 156,9 MB
Art: Front

( 5:25)  1. Groovebone, Part 1
( 6:48)  2. Soul Makossa/Wake Up Call  (Interlude)
(10:17) 3. Soul Manifesto/Roll Call (Interlude) 
( 5:41)  4. One Turnip Green
( 4:23)  5. Ain't No Sunshine
( 7:40)  6. Mobius 3
( 8:17)  7. Soup Bone
( 8:13)  8. Soul Eyes
(11:22)  9. Groovebone, Part 2/Last Call (Interlude) 

You've got to funkafize... Guitarist Rodney Jones departs from the mainstream fare of his most recent recordings ( The Undiscovered Few, Blue Note 96902, 1999 and My Funny Valentine, Timeless 162, 2000) and testifies his funk philosophy on Soul Manifesto. Joined by Funk/R&B specialists Maceo Parker, Arthur Blythe, and Dr. Lonnie Smith, Jones weaves a hypnotic tapestry with a limbic collection of originals and standards so funky the listener might have to leave the room or succumb to the groove. The foundation of Jones's Soul philosophy is grounded in Gospel, Funk, and the Blues. He began playing guitar at age 6, beginning formal lessons age 8. He saturated himself with the Funk-forefront of the day: Jimi Hendrix, Sly Stone, and the formidable James Brown. "You have soul that was created by God, and you have soul created by James Brown. I've always been fascinated by that connection," says Jones. Jones joined the James Brown Mythology when he linked up with Brown alto saxophonist Maceo Parker for Parker's breakthrough Roots Revisited (Verve 843 751, 1992). Jones went on to work with the funkmeister for five years (and that definitely shows on this recording). Jones bookends this recording with the original "Groove Bone, Parts 1 and 2." He establishes the mood of the recording with these pieces while jamming through the other funky tone orgies "Soul Makossa," "Mobius 3," and "One Turnip Green." Standards include a soulful "Ain't No Sunshine" and "Soul Eyes." The band was well chosen, particularly Maceo Parker and Arthur Blythe. They truly reveal the soulfulness of the alto saxophone. Makes one wish King Curtis was on hand for the tenor chair. Is this Jazz? Quoting Mark Corroto in his primer on funk, "As the tee-shirt sez, 'F*** Art, Let's Dance." ~ C.Michael Bailey https://www.allaboutjazz.com/soul-manifesto-rodney-jones-blue-note-records-review-by-c-michael-bailey.php

Personnel: Rodney Jones: Guitars;  Maceo Parker: Alto Saxophone;  Arthur Blythe: Alto Saxophone;  Dr. Lonnie Smith: Hammond B-3 Organ;  Lonnie Plaxico: Bass;  Idris Muhammad: Drums.


Harry James and his Music Makers - Trumpet Blues

Styles:  Jazz, Big Band
Year: 1953
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:18
Size: 102,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:35)  1. Trumpet blues
(2:50)  2. Serenade in blue
(3:12)  3. Cherry
(2:33)  4. Autumn leaves
(2:53)  5. Roll'em
(2:42)  6. Cherry pink and apple blossom white
(3:25)  7. You made me love you
(3:10)  8. Don't be that way
(3:27)  9. Stealin' apples
(3:10) 10. Sleepy lagoon
(4:14) 11. Ultra
(3:11) 12. Jealousie
(3:08) 13. Two o'clock jump
(3:43) 14. Back beat boogie

Harry James was one of the most outstanding instrumentalists of the swing era, employing a bravura playing style that made his trumpet work instantly identifiable. He was also one of the most popular bandleaders of the first half of the 1940s, and he continued to lead his band until just before his death, 40 years later. James was the child of circus performers. His father, Everette Robert James, was the bandleader and trumpet player in the orchestra for the Mighty Haag Circus, and his mother, Maybelle Stewart Clark James, was an aerialist. Growing up in the circus, James became a performer himself as early as the age of four, when he began working as a contortionist. He soon turned to music, however, first playing the snare drum in the band from about the age of six and taking trumpet lessons from his father. At 12, he took over leadership of the second band in the Christy Brothers Circus, for which his family was then working. He attended grade school in Beaumont, Texas, where the circus spent the winter, and when he was 14 he won a state music contest as a trumpeter. That inspired him to turn professional and begin playing in local bands. James' first job with a national band came in 1935 when he was hired by Ben Pollack. In May 1935, he married singer Louise Tobin, with whom he had two children and from whom he was divorced in June 1943. He made his first recordings as a member of the Pollack band in September 1936. Not long after, he was tapped by Benny Goodman, then leading one of the country's most popular bands, and he began working for Goodman by the end of 1936. He rapidly gained notice in the Goodman band, and by December 1937 he had begun to make recordings under his own name for Brunswick Records (later absorbed by Columbia Records).

In early 1939, he left Goodman and launched his own orchestra, premiering it in Philadelphia in February. That spring, he heard the then-unknown Frank Sinatra on a radio broadcast and hired him. The band struggled, however, and when the more successful bandleader Tommy Dorsey made Sinatra an offer at the end of 1939, James did not stand in his way. Around the same time, he was dropped by Columbia and switched to the tiny Varsity Records label. After two years of difficulties in maintaining his band, James changed musical direction in early 1941. He added strings and turned to a sweeter, more melodic style, meanwhile re-signing to Columbia Records. The results were not long in coming. In April 1941, he first reached the Top Ten with the self-written instrumental "Music Makers." (His band was sometimes billed as Harry James and His Music Makers.) A second Top Ten hit, "Lament to Love," featuring Dick Haymes on vocals, followed in August, and late in the year James reached the Top Five with an instrumental treatment of the 1913 song "You Made Me Love You (I Didn't Want to Do It)." This was the record that established him as a star. But with its sweet style and what was frequently described as James' "schmaltzy" trumpet playing, it was also, according to jazz critic Dan Morgenstern (as quoted in the 1999 biography Trumpet Blues: The Life of Harry James by Peter J. Levinson), "the record that the jazz critics never forgave Harry for recording."  James was second only to Glenn Miller as the most successful recording artist of 1942. During the year, seven of his recordings peaked in the Top Ten: the Top Five "I Don't Want to Walk Without You," with vocals by Helen Forrest; the number one instrumental "Sleepy Lagoon"; the Top Five "One Dozen Roses," with vocals by Jimmy Saunders; the Top Five instrumental "Strictly Instrumental"; "He's My Guy"; the Top Five "Mister Five by Five"; and "Manhattan Serenade," the last three with vocals by Helen Forrest. In September, when Miller went into the armed forces and gave up his radio show, Chesterfield Time, he handed it over to James, a symbolic transference of the title of top bandleader in the country. (James was ineligible for military service due to a back injury.) Meanwhile, wartime travel restrictions and the recording ban called by the musicians union, which took effect in August 1942, had limited James' touring and recording activities, but another avenue had opened up. He began appearing in movies, starting with Syncopation in May 1942 and continuing with Private Buckaroo in June and Springtime in the Rockies in November. His next hit, "I Had the Craziest Dream," with vocals by Helen Forrest, was featured in Springtime in the Rockies; it hit number one in February 1943. The movie is also memorable for having starred Betty Grable, whom James married in July 1943; they had two children and divorced in October 1965.

"I Had the Craziest Dream" was succeeded at number one in March 1943 by another James record with a Helen Forrest vocal, "I've Heard That Song Before." "Velvet Moon," an instrumental, followed and did almost as well, but with that Columbia's stockpile of James recordings made just before the start of the recording ban was almost exhausted. The label went into its vaults and began reissuing older James recordings. Frank Sinatra had recently emerged as a solo star, and in the spring of 1943, Columbia reissued "All or Nothing at All," a song he had recorded as James' vocalist in 1939; the song reached the Top Five. Next, Columbia released "I Heard You Cried Last Night," a year-old recording with a Helen Forrest vocal; it too reached the Top Five. Once again, James ranked as the second most successful recording artist of the year, just behind Bing Crosby. Meanwhile, James was based in New York, doing his three-times-a-week radio show and appearing at major venues such as the Paramount Theatre and on the Astor Hotel Roof. He also appeared in the June 1943 film release Best Foot Forward. Decca Records settled with the musicians' union in 1943, which gave its recording stars an advantage, but while Bing Crosby, the Andrews Sisters, and Jimmy Dorsey (all on Decca) were the top recording artists of 1944, James came in fourth without ever stepping into a recording studio. His instrumental "Cherry," recorded in 1942, became a Top Five hit early in the year; "I'll Get By (As Long as I Have You)," recorded in 1941 with Dick Haymes on vocals, hit number one in June; and he had eight other chart records during the year. He also continued with his radio show through March and had two films, Two Girls and a Sailor and Bathing Beauty, in release in June. The two remaining major labels, Columbia and RCA Victor, came to terms with the musicians' union in November 1944, freeing James to return to the recording studio. This resulted in seven Top Ten hits in 1945: the number one "I'm Beginning to See the Light"; "I Don't Care Who Knows It"; "If I Loved You"; "11:60 P.M."; the Top Five "I'll Buy That Dream"; "It's Been a Long, Long Time"; and "Waitin' for the Train to Come In." "If I Loved You" had vocals by Buddy DiVito; all the rest had vocals by Kitty Kallen. That was enough to make him the third most successful recording artist of 1945, behind only Bing Crosby and Sammy Kaye.

Meanwhile, he and his band became regulars on the Danny Kaye Show radio series in January 1945, and he hosted its summer replacement program from June to September. James scored two Top Ten hits in early 1946 -- the Top Five "I Can't Begin to Tell You," which featured a pseudonymous vocal by his wife Betty Grable, and "I'm Always Chasing Rainbows," with a vocal by Buddy DiVito -- but then his recording success began to decline, though he managed one more Top Ten hit, "This Is Always," with Buddy DiVito on vocals, in the fall. Having appeared in a number of films, he formally signed a movie contract with 20th Century Fox, resulting in bigger parts in Do You Love Me?, released in May, and If I'm Lucky, out in September. He also took to the road for the first time since the end of the war. The declining popularity of the big bands led many to break up in December 1946, James' orchestra among them. But in January 1947, his All Time Favorites collection was at the top of the album charts, indicating he was still broadly popular, and within months he had reorganized his band, reducing the number of strings (and soon eliminating them entirely), and taking a more jazz-oriented approach. He scored only one Top Ten hit in 1947, "Heartaches," with vocals by Marion Morgan. And he appeared in the film Carnegie Hall in May. James appeared in the film A Miracle Can Happen (aka On Our Merry Way) in February 1948, the same month he became a regular on the radio show Call for Music, which ran until June. He was not much visible in 1949, but in February 1950, his trumpet playing was heard in the film Young Man with a Horn, though the man fingering the trumpet onscreen was Kirk Douglas.

The Young Man with a Horn soundtrack, credited to James with Doris Day, hit number one in May 1950. Repeating that pairing, Columbia teamed James with Day for "Would I Love You (Love You, Love You)," which hit the charts in March 1951 and reached the Top Ten. Similar success was achieved with "Castle Rock," which paired James with Frank Sinatra and reached the charts in September. Meanwhile, James had his own TV series, The Harry James Show, which ran on a Los Angeles station for the first six months of 1951. From this point on, James maintained his band as a touring unit, though he was less frequently glimpsed in the media. He played himself in the film biography The Benny Goodman Story in 1955, the same year that, having moved to Capitol Records, he released Harry James in Hi-Fi, an album of re-recordings of his hits that reached the Top Ten in November. (The 1999 compilation Trumpet Blues: The Best of Harry James combines tracks from this album and its follow-up, More Harry James in Hi-Fi.) 

By now, he was deliberately trying to make his band sound like Count Basie's. He was back onscreen in November 1956 in the film The Opposite Sex. He made his first major tour of Europe in October 1957, and in ensuing years he alternated national and international tours with lengthy engagements at Las Vegas hotels. There were two more film appearances, The Big Beat (June 1958) and The Ladies Man (July 1961). James performed regularly through the early '80s. He was diagnosed with lymphatic cancer in 1983, but continued to play, making his last appearance only nine days before his death at 67. Led by trumpeter Art Depew, his band continued to perform. No one questioned James' talent as a jazz trumpeter, though after his commercial ascendance in 1941 many jazz critics dismissed him. After his period of greatest success, he turned back to a more jazz-oriented style, which failed to change the overall impression of him, if only because he was no longer as much in the public eye. Nevertheless, his swing hits remain among the most popular music of the era. In addition to the Columbia recordings from his heyday, there are numerous other titles in his discography, notably many airchecks, though his recordings of the '50s are also worth seeking out. ~ William Ruhlmann http://www.allmusic.com/artist/harry-james-mn0000950571/biography

Trumpet Blues