Harp
I'll Lock Up
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- Chicago, IL US
Oh I don't dislike Mozart, quite the contrary, I just prefer Bach.
Of course, Best. Elvis probably preferred Bach.
Oh I don't dislike Mozart, quite the contrary, I just prefer Bach.
Never listened Heidt band (time to make a youtube search!), but Sammy Kaye I know. And I agree with you, he had the more tense sweet music I ever listened. Not a pleasure to listen. From what I have here in LPs the only "good" record is "Daddy" - but this could have a better version that I surelly believe exists.
"With the Kyser band, you always had the feeling that if something went wrong, they'd just laugh it off and keep having fun.
Any kind of show band/gimmick band *had to* not take itself too seriously in order to produce good music -- the audience had to have the sense that the band members were actually enjoying themselves. The minute they started taking themselves too seriously, it was all over. That was where Sammy Kaye made his big mistake, and where Kay Kyser never did.
"Tense" is a perfect description of Kaye's sound, actually -- the musicians always played the correct notes, everything was always just-so. And you have the sense that if anyone made an error, the world would come to an end. With the Kyser band, you always had the feeling that if something went wrong, they'd just laugh it off and keep having fun.
Any kind of show band/gimmick band *had to* not take itself too seriously in order to produce good music -- the audience had to have the sense that the band members were actually enjoying themselves. The minute they started taking themselves too seriously, it was all over. That was where Sammy Kaye made his big mistake, and where Kay Kyser never did.
But for my all-time most loathsome, disliked and for all-around tin-foil biting annoyance I would have to go with Sinatra.
I never thought of Kyser's band as a "gimmick" band as much as just plain corny. Like I said I love his movies, but just listening to his records can be a bit much for me. As far as gimmick bands go you couldn't touch Spike Jones. As far as great boogie woogie players go Freddie Slack is the man for me...
Kay Kyser! Really?.....
The Fedora Lounge is the wrong place to rip on swing music. It’s counter productive. But since this is a sort of no-holds-barred thread, I’ll let her rip. Golden era swing music in general is lame.
That’s a broad statement; there are many exceptions to this and it’s only my opinion, obviously. But in general, swing is a still-born, neutered music. This is not to say that I don’t appreciate jazz. It’s just that I like jazz that preceded the swing era, and jazz that followed the swing era. Swing for the most part was contrived, corny, and utterly unhip.
The top bands from the day (Miller, Goodman, Dorsey) all produced music that is missing vitality, or juice. Pepper Adams once observed that it’s too bad that Miller couldn’t have lived and his music died.
There was of course some good stuff from the era. But most of the artists that produced decent music during the swing era produced better music later in their careers.
Kay Kyser! Really?.....
The Fedora Lounge is the wrong place to rip on swing music. It’s counter productive. But since this is a sort of no-holds-barred thread, I’ll let her rip. Golden era swing music in general is lame.
That’s a broad statement; there are many exceptions to this and it’s only my opinion, obviously. But in general, swing is a still-born, neutered music. This is not to say that I don’t appreciate jazz. It’s just that I like jazz that preceded the swing era, and jazz that followed the swing era. Swing for the most part was contrived, corny, and utterly unhip.
The top bands from the day (Miller, Goodman, Dorsey) all produced music that is missing vitality, or juice. Pepper Adams once observed that it’s too bad that Miller couldn’t have lived and his music died.
There was of course some good stuff from the era. But most of the artists that produced decent music during the swing era produced better music later in their careers.
I think that people are missing the point on Kyser.......the arrangements that he did required superior musicians in order to accomplish. It really is much harder to play that way, than to be "serious" all the time
Other "gimmick bands" by my definition could include such as Hal Kemp -- you heard the trumpet triplets, you instantly knew who you were listening to; Shep Fields and his Rippling Rhythm -- self-explanatory; and even Glenn Miller: if you were tuning around the radio in the night and heard massed clarinets instead of saxes, there was no doubt who you were hearing. Gimmicks were simply a way for bands to stand out on broadcasts.