On the way back from football the other evening I had a conversation with my Dad about the fact that it seems almost impossible to get hold of CD's dedicated to Benny Goodman's early 1940's band which was arguably the best he ever led. When I was growing up listening to jazz as a teenager, my Dad had a double LP of this band which was absolutely terrific - especially as it was totally instrumental and didn't feature any singers which tends to make alot of the music from the Swing Era cringeworthy.
The 1930's band is always justly celebrated albeit I think alot of the recordings suffer in comparison where the charts were originally played by superior black bands like Fletcher Henderson, Earl Hines or ChickWebb. When an edition of "Jazz File" analysed Artie Shaw and Goodman, I got the distinct impression that there was more favouritism towards Shaw even if the commitment to out and out jazz was wighed more heavily with Goodman's bands. I don't think that Goodman's 1940's group is fairly considered and when you appreciate that this orchestra had the likes of Sid Catlett, Charlie Christian, Cootie Williams, the exceptionl Mel Powell (who later swapped jazz for contemporary Classical Music ) etc in it as well as featuring arrangements by Eddie Sauter, this band was probably only second to Woody Herman as being the best assembled by a white band-leader. In one leap, Goodman's approach swapped the Henderson-esque approach which pretty much defined the 1930s for writers such as Sauter who effectively laid alot of the harmonic groundwork for the kind of jazz that emerged in the late 40's. It was a truly ground-breaking band and extremely proficient too, especially in comparison with other white bands like the Dorseys which weren't in the same league. For me, Goodman never really was ahead of the curve as he was in the early 40's. I think there is a tendancy to forget how great this band was:-
This isn't the only great track. Check out arrangements like "Benny Rides Again", "Mission to Moscow", "A string of pearls" (radically different from the rancid Glenn Miller version with some jivey piano from, I think, Mel Powell") Fiesta in Blue", "Moonlight in the Ganges", and the gem-like "Clarinade." However, "Superman " is pretty exceptional by any standards. Shame this band seems so little respected.
The 1930's band is always justly celebrated albeit I think alot of the recordings suffer in comparison where the charts were originally played by superior black bands like Fletcher Henderson, Earl Hines or ChickWebb. When an edition of "Jazz File" analysed Artie Shaw and Goodman, I got the distinct impression that there was more favouritism towards Shaw even if the commitment to out and out jazz was wighed more heavily with Goodman's bands. I don't think that Goodman's 1940's group is fairly considered and when you appreciate that this orchestra had the likes of Sid Catlett, Charlie Christian, Cootie Williams, the exceptionl Mel Powell (who later swapped jazz for contemporary Classical Music ) etc in it as well as featuring arrangements by Eddie Sauter, this band was probably only second to Woody Herman as being the best assembled by a white band-leader. In one leap, Goodman's approach swapped the Henderson-esque approach which pretty much defined the 1930s for writers such as Sauter who effectively laid alot of the harmonic groundwork for the kind of jazz that emerged in the late 40's. It was a truly ground-breaking band and extremely proficient too, especially in comparison with other white bands like the Dorseys which weren't in the same league. For me, Goodman never really was ahead of the curve as he was in the early 40's. I think there is a tendancy to forget how great this band was:-
This isn't the only great track. Check out arrangements like "Benny Rides Again", "Mission to Moscow", "A string of pearls" (radically different from the rancid Glenn Miller version with some jivey piano from, I think, Mel Powell") Fiesta in Blue", "Moonlight in the Ganges", and the gem-like "Clarinade." However, "Superman " is pretty exceptional by any standards. Shame this band seems so little respected.
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