Showing posts with label Glenn Miller Orchestra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Glenn Miller Orchestra. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 30, 2019

Glenn Miller - Jazz Moods - Hot

Styles: Jazz, Swing
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:28
Size: 103,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:36)  1. In the Mood
(2:52)  2. Runnin' Wild
(3:16)  3. A String of Pearls
(3:33)  4. King Porter Stomp
(3:26)  5. American Patrol
(3:02)  6. The Lady's In Love with You
(2:52)  7. Little Brown Jug
(3:01)  8. Glen Island Special
(3:29)  9. Chattanooga Choo-Choo
(3:29) 10. Tuxedo Junction
(2:50) 11. The Rhumba Jumps
(3:26) 12. Song of the Volga Boatmen
(2:33) 13. We Can Live On Love
(2:57) 14. Bugle Call Rag

This CD was released as part of the extensive Bluebird/Legacy Jazz Moods series. There are two ways to look at this release. The 14 selections, other than the fact that most of them are cookers (or, in the parlance of the swing era, solid senders), are reissued in random order. The exact recording dates are not given (just the year) nor is there a personnel listing. The only liner notes, a paragraph on the back cover, informs listeners that "the Miller band was a star-laden organization which at various times featured the greatest soloists...." Nope, Miller's band was famous for its precise ensembles and did not have any famous soloists. The notes also state that "'Moonlight Serenade' is here, of course, are such other Miller mega-hits originally made for Bluebird and Columbia as 'Little Brown Jug'...." "Moonlight Serenade" and "Little Brown Jug" are not on this sampler and Miller's early records for Columbia resulted in zero hits; none of the Columbia recordings are here anyway. On the other hand, the music that is included is quite fun and does stick mostly to the rousing instrumentals, so listeners just wanting a sampling of Miller's jazz side will find these performances enjoyable. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/jazz-moods-hot-mw0000453443

Jazz Moods - Hot

Wednesday, October 24, 2018

Glenn Miller Orchestra - Glenn Miller Time-1965

Styles:  Jazz, Big Band
Year: 1965
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:27
Size: 79,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:47)  1. Call Me Irresponsible
(2:48)  2. Chattanooga Choo Choo
(3:00)  3. Blue Velvet
(3:02)  4. Elmer's Tune
(3:03)  5. Serenade In Blue
(2:30)  6. Hello, Dolly!
(2:27)  7. The Girl From Ipanema
(2:41)  8. At Last
(2:28)  9. More
(3:01) 10. Moonlight Cocktail
(2:54) 11. Pennsylvania 6-5000
(3:41) 12. Canadian Sunset

From more than four decades on, Glenn Miller Time 1965 may seem an unlikely recording project. The year 1965, after all, marked a continuation of the British Invasion in rock & roll music, with the volume and the attitude stepped up several notches amid the success of the Rolling Stones et al., and it was also the year of the folk-rock explosion and dozens of other pop culture phenomena that seem a long way from anything to do with Glenn Miller who had been gone just a couple of weeks past 20 years at the time of these recording sessions. But the mid-'60s also saw a less widely publicized yet incontestable '40s nostalgia boom among audience members over 40 (remember how popular blockbuster war movies were then, not to mention World War II television series such as Combat?). What's more, at the time, the officially sanctioned Glenn Miller Orchestra under Ray McKinley was one of the most heavily booked performing outfits in the world, and as luck had it, trumpet legend Bobby Hackett who had played with the Miller band before World War II was signed to Epic at the time, just as the Miller Orchestra got a contract with the label. Hackett is the featured soloist here, his trumpet replacing the vocals on numbers from Miller's repertory, all arranged as were the contemporary 1960s numbers such as "Hello, Dolly!," "More," and "Blue Velvet" in the authentic Miller style by band alumnus George Williams. The sound is excellent and the band revels in the stereo profile and high-fidelity recording. Williams and company successfully picture where and how Miller might well have handled numbers such as "The Girl from Ipanema," as well as how standards from their repertory like "Chattanooga Choo Choo" and "Pennsylvania 6-5000" could have sounded under Miller's leadership some 20 years later. Glenn Miller Time 1965 was reissued in 2001 on CD paired with the orchestra's follow-up, Great Songs of the 60's. ~ Bruce Eder https://www.allmusic.com/album/glenn-miller-time-1965-mw0000860586

Glenn Miller Time-1965

Monday, October 22, 2018

The Glenn Miller Orchestra - Great Songs Of The 60's

Size: 73,1 MB
Time: 31:18
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 1965/2014
Styles: Jazz, Easy Listening
Art: Front

01. Red Roses For A Blue Lady (2:42)
02. People (2:36)
03. Everybody Loves Somebody (2:36)
04. Wives And Lovers (2:08)
05. Love Me With All Your Heart (2:57)
06. Downtown (2:19)
07. Mr. Lonely (2:30)
08. If Loved You (2:56)
09. Dominique (2:19)
10. Dear Heart (2:42)
11. Washington Square (2:39)
12. There! I've Said It Again (2:45)

This album is somewhat less successful than its predecessor, Glenn Miller Time -- 1965; that album featured Bobby Hackett on the trumpet solos and straddled the 1940s and the 1960s, dividing its repertory evenly between both decades with arrangements by George Williams that did the same, recalling the authentic Miller sound but retooling it slightly to take advantage of stereo and high-fidelity recording. And it was an instrumental album. Great Songs of the 60's, however, makes extensive use of the vocal group the Moonlight Serenaders, who push the recordings firmly in the direction of a sweet band sound at the expense of much of this orchestra's ability to swing. Moreover, the presence of numbers such as "Downtown" -- a song that Sinatra also stumbled over in the course of trying to record at around the same time -- and second-rate pop material such as "Everybody Loves Somebody" doesn't help matters any. "Wives and Lovers" shows what this band could do, in terms of making convincing '60s-based swing music, and the detour into Dixieland for "Washington Square" isn't bad, even if it isn't what one was really buying a record like this to hear, so there are bright spots, but they stand out a little less prominently here than those of the orchestra's earlier album. One also wishes that there were credits on this album, so listeners would know who plays the beautifully understated guitar on "Love Me with All Your Heart." Great Songs of the 60's was reissued in 2001 on CD paired with Glenn Miller Time -- 1965. ~by Bruce Eder

Great Songs Of The 60's

Sunday, June 25, 2017

Glenn Miller Orchestra - In The Digital Mood

Styles: Jazz, Swing, Big Band
Year: 1983
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:25
Size: 79,8 MB
Art: Front

(3:39)  1. In The Mood
(3:41)  2. Chattanooga Choo-Choo
(3:25)  3. The American Patrol
(3:16)  4. A String Of Pearls
(3:08)  5. Little Brown Jug
(2:42)  6. Kalamazoo
(3:39)  7. Tuxedo Junction
(4:19)  8. St. Louis Blues March
(3:13)  9. Pennsylvania 6-5000
(3:18) 10. Moonlight Serenade

This CD may be scoffed at by serious jazz listeners, and even by big-band devotees wary of modern "ghost band" performances, but the fact is that it sold over 100,000 pieces when it first appeared in 1983, and its CD version was among the very earliest compact discs ever released commercially in the United States (indeed, so early that the actual CDs had to be imported from Japan). The second-ever release by GRP Records, it put the label on the map, and it also stood as testimony to how good those original arrangements of the Glenn Miller Orchestra were. So how is it as music? At worst entertaining, and at best revealing, and also at times a little frustrating on the plus side, even heard in 2007, twenty-four years after the fact, the sound here is damned impressive; you can safely rank this release as one of the very earliest, if not the very first audiophile CDs to be released. The fact that it features 18 top-flight musicians under the baton of Larry O'Brien, then the leader of the touring Glenn Miller Orchestra, only makes it more impressive. What's more, with the quality of the playing, one will be able to make out minuscule elements of the original arrangements that were long obscured on the classic late-'30s/early-'40s Glenn Miller sides. Musicians with an appreciation of these arrangements will probably love this recording, and casual fans should embrace it heartily: these boys swing in 1983 about as well as their predecessors from 41 years earlier did. And the vocal numbers are no exception -- in contrast to Columbia Records' mid-'60s efforts to revive the Miller orchestra as a recording unit (which failed not just because of the timing of the project but also the uneven quality of the resulting albums), numbers like "Pennsylvania 6-5000" and "(I've Got a Gal In) Kalamazoo" are as hot here as there were four decades before. And the singers include Mel Tormé and Julius LaRosa (doing a solo) in their ranks. Still, it's the instrumentals that make up the bulk of this album, and on that level it's similarly unimpeachable, at least most of the way through "Tuxedo Junction" (which includes Dave Grusin sitting in on piano) is so close to the original that it's easy to forget who you're listening to and when they put this track down; and serious listeners should probably hold out for the "Gold Disc" edition or the Japanese version of this CD, which contain a bonus track, "At Last," featuring a trombone solo by Urbie Green that is worth the price of the CD by itself. Now, all of that said, there are a couple of quibbles: the absence of the cowbell on "In the Mood," and the "clever" notion on "Pennsylvania 6-5000" of ending the number with well, you can guess. This is still one cool, swinging release and, with its virtuoso musicianship, offers many of the same appealing qualities as the original Miller recordings. ~ Bruce Eder http://www.allmusic.com/album/in-the-digital-mood-mw0000188430

Personnel: Marlene VerPlanck, Michael Mark, Julius La Rosa, Mel Tormé, Marty Nelson (vocals); Bucky Pizzarelli (guitar); Walter Levinsky (clarinet, saxophone); Morty Lewis, Phil Bodner, Sol Schlinger, Billy Slapin (saxophone); Irvin "Marky" Markowitz, Marvin Stamm, Jimmy Maxwell, John Frosk (trumpet); Sonny Russo, George Masso, Urbie Green, Wayne Andre, Paul Faulise (trombone); Dave Grusin, Bernie Leighton (piano); Ronald Zito (drums).

In The Digital Mood

Friday, July 1, 2016

Glenn Miller Orchestra - The Very Best Of Swing

Styles: Jazz, Big Band, Swing
Year: 2008
File: MP3@224K/s
Time: 44:37
Size: 74,3 MB
Art: Front

(2:43)  1. Let's All Sing Together
(3:34)  2. Begin The Beguine
(2:35)  3. Leroy Brown
(2:11)  4. Let's Dance
(3:12)  5. Baby, It's Cold Outside
(2:29)  6. You Are The Sunshine Of My Life
(3:22)  7. Harlem Nocturn
(3:05)  8. New York, New York
(3:07)  9. Blueberry Hill
(2:37) 10. 'S Wonderful
(5:38) 11. Miller Meets Kaempfert-Medley
(2:44) 12. A Cabana In Havanna
(3:05) 13. Bouncing In Bavaria
(1:51) 14. When You're Smiling
(2:17) 15. Seventy-Six Trombones

Shortly after the beginning of the 20th century, in a small rural Southwestern Iowa town, a boy was born to Elmer and Mattie Lou Miller. The date was March 1, 1904 and the town was Clarinda. The boy that was born that night was named Alton Glen Miller (later changed to Glenn) and when he uttered his first cry, Clarinda heard Glenn Miller’s first “moonlight serenade.” Glenn’s first serenade was not particularly unique as it had been sung by children for centuries and was barely heard across South 16th Street. However, his second Moonlight Serenade was a composition he wrote while studying music under Dr. Schillinger in New York City. Glenn’s second Moonlight Serenade was unique, becoming the theme song of his number one Big Band and heard literally all around the world. Glenn’s paternal grandparents were a part of the westward movement of people during the 1800’s and moved permanently to the Clarinda area in 1870 (Glenn’s grandfather Robert had lived in Page County prior to the Civil War, returned to Ohio after the war, then moved his family to Page County in 1870). Their son Elmer, who was three years old when the family settled in Clarinda, grew up in Page County and married a local girl, Mattie Lou Cavender in 1898. Mattie Lou (she also went by Lulu and Lou) was born in Page County, and grew up to become a well respected teacher in Clarinda. In 1902,  Elmer and Lou Miller purchased the home at 601 S. 16th St. from C.H. Howard. Here, on March 1, 1904, the future big band leader was born. Their first son Elmer “Deane” had been born in a different home in Clarinda in 1901.

The Millers lived in the house from 1902 – 1906, when they sold their home on 16th St for $1,275 and moved to Tryon, Nebraska to homestead 640 acres under the Kincaid Act of 1904. While homesteading in Tryon, they lived in a sod house. In the evenings, Glenn’s mother, Mattie Lou, would play a simple pump organ which helped ease the lonesome existence on the flatlands of Nebraska. Mattie Lou started a school called Happy Hollow and her children would sing songs as they rode in a wagon on their way to school. The soothing music of his mother in their sod house and the uplifting songs on the way to school must have given Glenn a greater meaning and appreciation for music. Life in a sod house was replaced by life in town when Elmer moved the family to North Platte, Nebraska. Mattie Lou gave birth to a third son, John Herbert “Herb”, in 1913 and a daughter Emma “Irene” in 1916, while living in North Platte.Circa 1917, Glenn’s family moved to Grant City, Missouri where he went to grade school. A businessman in town, John Mosbarger, was also the community band director and wanted Glenn to join older bother Deane in the community band. Glenn, however, has an old trombone. Mr. Mosbarger bought Glenn a new trombone so that he could join the community band and in exchange Glenn worked for Mr. Mosbarger, to pay off the new trombone.

In 1918, moved to Fort Morgan, Colorado where Glenn went to high school. During his senior year, Glenn decided to try the game of football, and by the end of the season, he was chosen by the Colorado High School Sports Association as “the best left end in Colorado.” Football wasn’t Glenn’s only interest, however, as he had become very interested in a new sound called dance band music. Glenn enjoyed this music so much that he and some classmates decided to start their own band. In fact, Glenn was so excited about this new music that when it came time for his graduation in 1921, he decided to skip his graduation ceremonies and instead traveled to Laramie, Wyoming to play in a band. Meanwhile, back home, Glenn’s mother had to accept his diploma and the principal commented, “Maybe you’re the one who should get it anyway; you probably worked harder on it than he did!” By now, Glenn had made the decision that he was going to be a professional musician. His first professional contract was signed with a Dixieland group called Senter’s Sentapeeds. To most people it sounds like something you would step on rather than listen to. Then another opportunity opened up where Glenn could play in the Holly Moyer Orchestra in Boulder and earn enough money to attend the University of Colorado. This lasted for two years, but in 1924, Glenn’s musical ambition, and a new job with the Tommy Watkins Orchestra, caused him to discontinue his college education so that he could spend full time playing and arranging music. Glenn eventually headed for Los Angeles, where he had heard there were numerous band opportunities. He soon got the chance to join the Ben Pollack Orchestra, a band noted for finding talented musicians. While playing with Pollack’s band, Glenn roomed with another rising star, a clarinetist from Chicago named Benny Goodman.

In 1928, after working in Los Angeles and Chicago, Glenn moved on to New York City where he worked with bands of Ben Pollack, Red Nichols and Paul Ash as a trombonist and arranger. In 1932, Glenn organized the Smith Ballew Band, and worked two years as manager, arranger and trombonist. In 1934, he helped the Dorsey brothers to organize their first full-time Big Band and in 1935, he organized Ray Noble’s American band. Finally, in 1937, Glenn decided to fulfill his dream and organize his own band. This first band soon ran into financial difficulties and had to disband, but Glenn was not one to give up and he tried again in 1938. This time was different, and in March of 1939, his band was chosen to play the summer season at the prestigious Glen Island Casino, in New Rochelle, New York. This big break led to another important engagement at Meadowbrook, New Jersey in the spring of the same year. Both places offered frequent radio broadcasts, and by mid-summer, the Miller Orchestra had developed a nationwide following. In the fall of 1939, it began a series of radio broadcasts for Chesterfield cigarettes which increased its already great popularity. Thereafter, the band was in constant demand for recording sessions and appeared in two films; Sun Valley Serenade in 1941and Orchestra Wives in 1942.

In 1942, at the peak of his civilian career, Glenn decided he could better serve those in uniform by putting one on himself. By doing this, the band gave up a $20,000 weekly income. Too old to be drafted at age 38, Glenn first volunteered for the Navy but was told that they didn’t need his services. Not giving up, Glenn wrote to the Army’s Brigadier General Charles Young on August 12, 1942. Miller persuaded the Army to accept him so he could in his own words, “put a little more spring into the feet of our marching men and a little more joy into their hearts and to be placed in charge of a modernized army band.” After being accepted in the Army, Glenn’s civilian band played their last concert in Passaic, New Jersey on September 27th, 1942. It was such a sad event that the band couldn’t finish playing the closing theme song, Moonlight Serenade. Glenn soon became part of the Army Specialists Corps with the rank of captain. For the next year and a half, besides arranging music, Glenn created and directed his own 50-member band. Captain Miller’s mission was morale building, bringing a touch of home to the troops and modernizing military music. Glenn was also a talented fund raiser, and raised millions of dollars in war bond drives. He also attracted Air Corps recruits through his I Sustain the Wingsweekly radio broadcasts.

Still wanting to do more, Glenn arranged for overseas duty for the band. Arriving in London, the band was quartered at 25 Sloane Street, an area in constant barrage by German V-1 buzz bombs. Glenn was immediately concerned for the band and made arrangements for the unit to move to new quarters in Bedford, England. The band moved on July 2, 1944, and the very next day a buzz bomb landed in front of their old quarters, destroying the building and killing 100 people. The Glenn Miller Army Air Force Band was extremely busy and Glenn wrote home that in one month they played at 35 different bases, while performing 40 radio broadcasts in their spare time.  Finally, on December 15, 1944, Glenn boarded a single engine C-64 Norseman aircraft to travel to Paris, France where he was to make arrangements for a Christmas broadcast. Tragically, the plane never reached France and was never found. The band, without Miller, performed the scheduled Christmas concert under the direction of Jerry Gray and continued to perform, playing their last concert on November 13, 1945 at the National Press Club dinner for President Truman in Washington, D.C. At that time, General Dwight Eisenhower and General Hap Arnold thanked the band for a job well done.Glenn Miller will be remembered for many things; his musical style, showmanship, hard work, perseverance, and much more. But his patriotism in giving up his number one civilian band to enlist in the United States Army Air Corps, his pioneering efforts to modernize military bands and his supreme sacrifice for his country have caused him to be remembered as Clarinda’s and America’s favorite musical patriot.Glenn Miller’s life cannot easily be summed up in a few words. He put more in his short life of 40 years than most people do in a longer lifetime. http://glennmiller.org/glenn-miller-history

The Very Best Of Swing

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Various - Sentimental Journey: Hits From The Second World War

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 61:37
Size: 141.1 MB
Styles: Swing, Big band, Standards, Vocal jazz/pop
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[3:16] 1. Peggy Lee - We'll Meet Again
[3:01] 2. Artie Shaw & His Orchestra - Dancing In The Dark
[2:48] 3. Glenn Miller & His Orchestra - Little Brown Jug
[3:03] 4. Frank Sinatra - I'll Be Seeing You
[3:28] 5. Artie Shaw & His Orchestra - Moonglow
[3:09] 6. Louis Armstrong - Memories Of You
[2:42] 7. Harry James & His Orchestra - I'll Get By (As Long As I Have You)
[3:23] 8. The Benny Goodman Sextet - On The Alamo
[3:15] 9. Billie Holiday - Pennies From Heaven
[3:01] 10. Coleman Hawkins & His Orchestra - Body And Soul
[2:57] 11. Frank Sinatra - Let's Get Lost
[3:06] 12. Cab Calloway & His Orchestra - Blues In The Night (My Mama Done Tol' Me)
[3:10] 13. Duke Ellington & His Orchestra - There Shall Be No Night
[3:11] 14. Cootie Williams & His Rug Cutters - Echoes Of Harlem (78rpm Version)
[3:08] 15. Earl Hines And His Orchestra - Skylark
[2:41] 16. Frank Sinatra - Saturday Night (Is The Loneliest Night Of The Week)
[2:34] 17. The Mills Brothers - Paper Doll
[2:41] 18. Frank Sinatra - Long Ago And Far Away
[3:48] 19. Doris Day - Sentimental Journey
[3:06] 20. Harry James & His Orchestra - Waiting For The Train To Come In

This 20-track companion disc to the Ken Burns' PBS documentary The War provides a brief glimpse into the swing and pop music synonymous with World War II. Attempting to choose 20 songs for a single disc that are beloved by those who lived through that era, while also trying to sustain the curiosity of those who didn't, is a lofty goal. As it turns out, Burns and the producers pieced together an impeccable track listing that covers the full range of emotions withstood by a generation during wartime, from the upbeat and optimistic swing performances of "Little Brown Jug" (Glenn Miller), and "Pennies from Heaven" (Earl Hines Orchestra with Billie Holiday), to the melancholy romanticism of "Memories of You" (Louis Armstrong), "Let's Get Lost" (Frank Sinatra), and "Sentimental Journey" (Les Brown). The liner notes are informative as every title on the soundtrack was chosen by Burns and co-producer Lynn Novick. The interested listener should also investigate two other individual CDs coinciding with this series: I'm Beginning to See the Light: Dance Hits from the Second World War and Songs Without Words: Classical Music from the War. ~Al Campbell

Sentimental Journey: Hits From The Second World War

Saturday, November 8, 2014

Glenn Miller Orchestra - Timeless

Size: 128,4 MB
Time: 54:19
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2014
Styles: Jazz: Big Band, Swing, Vocals
Art: Front

01. Chattanooga Choo Choo (4:57)
02. Pennsylvania 6-5000 (3:09)
03. At Last (5:24)
04. Tuxedo Junction (3:27)
05. Mission To Moscow (2:39)
06. Don't Sit Under The Apple Tree (With Anyone Else But Me) (3:08)
07. Begin The Beguine (3:23)
08. American Patrol (3:26)
09. A-Tisket, A-Tasket (4:09)
10. Stardust (3:47)
11. The Humming-Bird (2:23)
12. Christmas Dreaming (A Little Early This Year) (2:49)
13. Sun Valley Jump (3:04)
14. Moonlight Serenade (3:45)
15. Tiger Rag (4:40)

Brand New recording from the World Famous Glenn Miller Orchestra touring road band under the direction of Nick Hilscher. Includes classic Miller hits as well as a few gems that were not hits.

The present Glenn Miller Orchestra was formed in 1956 and has been touring consistently since, with various leaders, playing an average of 300 live dates a year all around the world.
Singer Nick Hilscher became the director of the touring band in 2012, replacing previous director Gary Tole..

Timeless