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Tag: Big Band Era

Women of the Big Band Era Everyone Should Know-Part 4

Step back in time to the vibrant and lively world of the Big Band Era, a musical era that forever changed the landscape of American culture. As the iconic sounds of jazz and swing filled the air, there were women who stood out among the sea of talented musicians, defying societal norms and paving the way for future generations.

In this article (part 4), we will dive into lives and legacies of the unsung heroines of the Big Band Era, shedding light on the remarkable women who shaped the music and history of this unforgettable era.

Women of the Big Band Era Everyone Should Know-Part 4

NOTE: This is a series that is near and dear to my heart and I have done several compilation posts and a few individually focused posts. You can find them below (take a read after).


WOMEN OF THE BIG BAND ERA EVERYONE SHOULD KNOW-PART 4

MELBA LISTON

Melba Liston was a trombone player (she was the first woman trombonist to play in big bands during the 1940s and 1960s) who was nothing less than a force of nature. In addition to being sought after for her second-to-none slide playing (in mostly all male bands), she became widely revered for her jazz arrangements and compositions. She is, without question, one of the unsung heroes of the jazz genre (Source).

Vintage Photo of Melba Liston was a trombone player who was nothing less than a force of nature. In addition to being sought after for her second-to-none slide playing. she became widely revered for her jazz arrangements and compositions.

Melba was born in Kansas City, MO on January 13, 1926 and at the age of seven years old, selected the trombone as her instrument of choice as part of her elementary school’s new music program. She did find the instrument difficult but stuck with it and one year later was good enough to be a solo act on a local radio station.

At the age of 10 her family moved to Los Angeles where she continued to work on her craft with music teacher, Alma Hightower. By the time Melba reached the age of sixteen, she decided to become a professional musician and joined the musicians union. In 1943 she became a member of the Lincoln Theatre pit band in her first professional job. It was in this job that she was able to write music for acts that came into the theatre without it (source).

(Video-Melba on Trombone in “Start Swingin’ with the ‘All American Girl’s Band’)

Melba then went on to join composer and trumpeter, Gerald Wilson, both as a musician and as his assistant arranger, in his newly-formed big band. She also worked with tenor saxophonist Dexter Gordon at this time, and the pair recorded a track called Mischievous Lady which Gordon had written especially as a tribute for her.

(video link)

Melba during this time was really starting to excel as a soloist (and as an arranger) and Dizzie Gillespie was so impressed with her skill that, when Gerald Wilson’s orchestra disbanded in 1948, he asked her to join his ensemble (source).

This was an exciting band full of talented artists that Melba loved being in, but Gillespie disbanded the group only a year later. She (and her former bandleader Gerald Wilson) then joined a band backing Billie Holiday on tour. The experience of touring throughout the south with Holiday’s band, coping with the strains of limited income and even more limited audiences, was strenuous, disheartening and exhausting for Melba.

In later years, Melba spoke candidly about the extreme difficulties of being a female jazz musician during this era (source). She was so disillusioned with the music industry that she temporarily turned her back on it. She returned to Los Angeles to take a clerical job at the Board of Education and also supplemented her income by taking small acting roles in several Hollywood movies.

In the late 1950s, Melba was lured back to play with Dizzie Gillespie’s latest big bebop band for tours to the Middle East, Asia and South America. She was both a writer and an arranger for the band and most commentators agree that she produced some of her finest work at this time.

In 1958, Melba formed her own all-female quintet and also recorded her only album as a band leader, Melba Liston & Her Bones widely regarded as a jazz classic (video link). She then went on to work with trumpeter Quincy Jones, who had formed a band to tour Europe with his Free and Easy show (source).

The rest of her career was full of historic accomplishments of which I cannot list all here in this post. So I encourage further reading on the website “Girls in the Band“. Melba passed away in 1999.

BERYL DAVIS

As the smooth sounds of the big band era filled the air, Beryl Davis’ voice stood out amongst the rest. Her captivating tone and powerful vocal range made her a force to be reckoned with in the music industry.

1940s vintage photo: 27th April 1940: The singer Beryl Davis, daughter of band leader Harry Davis, became a favourite in Britain before touring and performing for the troops with Glenn Miller's Army Air Force Orchestra.
Original Publication: Picture Post – 621 – Croonerettes – pub. 1940 (Photo by Picture Post/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

The daughter of English band leader Harry Davis, she was born in Plymouth, England, on March 16, 1924, and began performing with her father at the age of 3. At eight years old, Davis began to sing for the Oscar Rabin Band, co-led by her father and saxophonist Oscar Rabin, eventually turning professional and singing with, among others, Rabin, Geraldo, and the Skyrockets Dance Orchestra. At 12, accompanied by a chaperone, she performed and recorded with Django Reinhardt in Paris and on several European tours, and was the featured singer with the Quintette du Hot Club de France during their tour of the U.K. in July-August 1939 (source).

Here she is a short snippet of Beryl singing with Oscar Rabin and his Romany Band in 1937. Her dad Harry Davis is the guitarist. (video link).

During World War II. Davis often sang for British and American troops, sometimes live on the radio while German bombs during the Blitz fell close by (source).

She was discovered by Glenn Miller in London and performed with his Army Air Force Orchestra.

Here is the song “Goodnight, My Beautiful” from 1940 featuring Beryl on vocals (video link).

In 1947, she moved to Los Angeles at the invitation of Bob Hope who featured her on his radio show. She later joined Frank Sinatra on the radio show “Your Hit Parade” (she was on for 1 year), which led to engagements with Goodman and other prominent orchestra leaders, including Vaughn Monroe and David Rose.

1940s Vintage Photo of big band singer, Beryl Davis with Tommy Dorsey during a radio stint in 1947.

Beryl Davis with Tommy Dorsey during a radio stint in 1947. William P. Gottlieb Collection/Library of Congress

Among her later musical activities was being part of the Four Girls gospel singing group with Jane Russell, Rhonda Fleming, and Connie Haines (see her story below), having a hit with “Do Lord” in 1954. (video link)

She continued to sing at nightclubs and cruise ships into the 1970s, passing away on October 28, 2011 at the age of 87.

CONNIE HAINES

“Where did you learn to swing like that?” Dorsey asked when he first heard her at a club in New Jersey. “And when can you join my band?”

Connie Haines, a peppy, petite, big-voiced singer with a zippy, rhythmic style who most famously teamed up with Frank Sinatra as lead vocalists with the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra, then went on to a prolific career of her own (source).

Connie Haines, a peppy, petite, big-voiced singer with a zippy, rhythmic style who most famously teamed up with Frank Sinatra as lead vocalists with the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra, then went on to a prolific career of her own

Connie Haines was born Yvonne Marie Antoinette JaMais in 1921 in Savannah, Georgia, but was raised in Jacksonville, Florida after her parents separated. Her mother taught singing and dancing, and her best pupil was her daughter. When only five, she was winning talent contests and from the age of 10 she was regularly on local radio as “Baby Yvonne Marie, the Little Princess of the Air”. Her popularity grew as she had some national broadcasts with Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra.

When JaMais was 17 (maybe 16 according to other sources), she was demonstrating songs for songwriters in the Brill Building in New York when she was heard by Henry James. He invited her to join his orchestra but thought that she needed a new stage name and created Connie Haines (source).

This would also be her first professional gig with Frank Sinatra. Their songs together that included “Oh, Look at Me Now” and “You Might Have Belonged to Another”.

Financial problems forced James to fire both Sinatra and (later) Haines, though both found work with the same leader: Tommy Dorsey. Beginning in 1940, Haines, Sinatra, and the later addition of the Pied Pipers made Dorsey’s one of the strongest bands from a pop standpoint, and Haines appeared on several hits: “Two Dreams Met,” “Oh, Look at Me Now,” “Kiss the Boys Goodbye,” and “What Is This Thing Called Love?”

After leaving Dorsey’s band, Connie Haines sang with the Bob Crosby Orchestra during 1941 (Source).

She appeared in two films with the orchestra, Las Vegas Nights (1941) and Ship Ahoy (1942). Haines left to become the featured vocalist on Abbott and Costello’s radio series from 1942 to 1946. She also sang “Gee, I Love My GI Joe” with Freddie Rich’s band in the wartime film A Wave, a WAC and a Marine (1944).

Branching out as a solo singer, Haines recorded for many of the major labels, including Capitol and Mercury,  Columbia, and Dot) during the next few decades. She also joined forces with the ‘Four Girls’ gospel singing group mentioned above in the 1950s.

In 1965, Connie joined Motown Records diverse signing of new and established artists. She was one of the first white singers to record for Motown recording 14 songs written by Smokey Robinson (Source).

She continued performing into the ’90s, but passed away in 2008.

HELEN O’CONNELL

Helen O’Connell was an American singer, actress, and hostess, described as “the quintessential big band singer of the 1940s”. 

1940s vintage photo / 1940s vintage hairstyle inspiration featuring how to wear a hair flower from HELEN O'CONNELL (1920-1993) Promotional photo of American big band singer about 1943

Born in Lima, Ohio, 23 May 1920, she grew up in Toledo and began singing there as a 15-year-old on local radio, graduating to minor bands like Jimmy Richards and Arthur Wylie.

She launched her career as a big-band singer with Larry Funk and his Band of a Thousand Melodies.

O’Connell joined the Dorsey band in 1939 and achieved her best selling records in the early 1940s.

In 1940 she came top in a Metronome poll and was named Best Female Vocalist of 1940. Downbeat readers went one better and voted her Best Female Singer of 1940 & 1941 (source).

VIDEO: ‘Lord and Lady Gate’ ~ Jimmy Dorsey & His Orchestra 1942 with Helen O’Connell as the vocalist. Featuring two adorable children doing the Lindy Hop (video link).

Although primarily a solo singer (her 1942 recording of Brazil with the band was added to the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2009) she is probably best remembered for the string of Latin-flavoured duets she did with the band’s boy singer Bob Eberly (older brother of Ray, who worked for Glenn Miller) – “Time Was”, “Green Eyes”, “Amapola”, “Tangerine”, “Yours” – all of which followed what proved a winning formula; Eberly would croon a chorus in ballad-time then O’Connell and the band would up the tempo and swing it, the result being solid hits for all concerned (source).

O’Connell retired from show business upon her first marriage in 1943 (with a brief return in 1947 to play herself in the move, ‘The Fabulous Dorseys’). When her marriage ended in 1951, she resumed her career, achieving some chart success and making regular appearances on television (read about all of her shows here).

From the movie ‘The Fabulous Dorseys (1947) -.Bob Eberly + Helen O’Connell in “Green Eyes” (video link)

Fun fact: From 1972-1980 she hosted the Miss USA and Miss Universe pageants with Bob Barker and was nominated for an Emmy Award in 1976 for her coverage of the Miss Universe pageant (source).

She passed away in 1993.

1970s vintage photo of Bob Barker and singer Helen O'Connell hosting the Miss USA and Miss Universe Pageant.

MARGARET WHITING

Margaret Whiting, was famous for her association with lyricist Johnny Mercer and for introducing the standard “Moonlight in Vermont” into American popular music.

1940s vintage photo of Margaret Whiting, was famous for her association with lyricist Johnny Mercer and for introducing the standard "Moonlight in Vermont" into American popular music. Cute 1940s fashions on display.

Whiting was born in Detroit. Her family moved to Los Angeles in 1929, when she was five years old. Her father, Richard, was a composer of popular songs, including the classics “Hooray for Hollywood”, “Ain’t We Got Fun?”, and “On the Good Ship Lollipop” (source).

Whiting began learning her father’s songs when she was just a toddler. And she started recording hits when she was just a teenager, shortly after her father died of a heart attack in 1938. Johnny Mercer, a close friend of her father’s, took Whiting under his wing and personally signed her to Capitol Records, where she recorded “Moonlight in Vermont,” “It Might As Well Be Spring” and “That Old Black Magic” as a teenager (source).

In 1944, her version of “Moonlight in Vermont”, with Billy Butterfield’s Orchestra, sold over one million copies, and was awarded a gold disc by the RIAA (Recording Industry Association of America).

(video link)

1940S Vintage photo of big band singer, Margaret Whiting in the late 1946 looking at music.

Until the mid-1950s Whiting continued to record for Capitol, but as she ceased to record songs that charted as hits, she switched to Dot Records in 1957 and to Verve Records in 1960. Whiting returned to Capitol in the early 1960s and then signed with London Records in 1966. On London, Whiting landed one last major hit single in 1966, “The Wheel of Hurt“, which hit No. 1 on the Easy Listening singles chart (source).

Margaret also had an active television career, like starring in the situation comedy ‘Those Whiting Girls’ with her sister Barbara Whiting. The show, produced by Desilu Productions, aired on CBS as a summer replacement series (in place of I Love Lucy) between July, 1955 and September, 1957 (source).

1950s vintage photo of the stars of the TV show "Those Whiting Girls" featuring Margaret Whiting (right), with her sister Barbara (left) and Mabel Albertson (standing) in 1957

Later years included many more TV appearances and then a career from 1989-2001 as the Artistic Director of the annual Cabaret and Performance Conference at the Eugene O’Neill Theater Center in Waterford Connecticut. She passed away in 2011.


I hope you enjoyed my latest roundup of “Women of the Big Band Era Everyone Should Know“. I know I really enjoyed learning about these talented women and I cannot wait to do another post in the future. So stay tuned!

Friends! Please share any thoughts you have on this topic in the comments section below. I love hearing from my readers!

Thanks for dropping by and remember my other posts in this series can be found HERE.

Liz

Women of the Big Band Era Everyone Should Know: MAXINE SULLIVAN

One of my top blog posts is “Women of the Big Band Era that Everyone Should Know” that I wrote in 2016. Since then, I have written several more collections on the talented women of the era, that you can find HERE.

Today’s post is not a collection of women from this era but a focus on just one…..the incredibly talented Maxine Sullivan.

Note: If you have NEVER heard Maxine’s voice, you are in for a real treat. Her voice is so smooth and gorgeous you will be instantly a fan.

Maxine Sullivan Black Jazz Singer in 1947
Maxine Sullivan-1947 via Wikipedia

Women of the Big Band Era Everyone Should Know: MAXINE SULLIVAN

Overview of Maxine’s life:

  • Maxine Sullivan, born Marietta Williams in Homestead, Pennsylvania, May 13th 1911 and began singing & playing music at a young age.
  • Although none of her family members were trained musicians, many of her relatives played musical instruments and contributed to the sounds of what she fondly called the family’s “front porch orchestra”— an informal type of musical education common across the United States in the early twentieth century.
  • Sullivan while working on her singing skills during this time also occasionally played the flugelhorn and the valve trombone.
  • In 1936 Marietta got a gig as a singer for Homestead’s local speakeasy the Benjamin Harris Literary Society.
  • She was then discovered by pianist Gladys Mosier (then working in Ina Ray Hutton’s big bandanother one of my “Women you should know” blog posts) and headed off to New York City.
  • Shortly thereafter, Sullivan became a featured vocalist at the Onyx Club in New York City, also known as “Swing Street“.
  • During this period, she began forming a professional and close personal relationship with bassist John Kirby, who became her second husband in 1938 (she would be married 4 different times).

Sources: National Museum of African American History & Culture & Wikipedia

Maxine Sullivan at the Onyx Club – 1938: Trumpeter Charlie Shavers is hiding under the hat; John Kirby is on bass, and Buster Bailey on clarinet.)
Maxine Sullivan at the Onyx Club – 1938: Trumpeter Charlie Shavers is hiding under the hat; John Kirby is on bass, and Buster Bailey on clarinet. Source-Swingandbeyond.com
1938 vintage photo of Black Jazz Singer Maxine Sullivan

Maxine finds her hit song!

Early sessions with Kirby in 1937 yielded a hit recording of a swing version of the Scottish folk song “Loch Lomond“. The song captured widespread attention and catapulted young jazz singer Maxine Sullivan to stardom. The song, her only big hit, followed her over the course of a 40-year career (Source).

This early success “branded” Sullivan’s style, leading her to sing similar swing arrangements of traditional folk tunes mostly arranged by pianist Claude Thornhill, such as “If I Had a Ribbon Bow” (Source).

Personal note about this song: My in-laws are from Glasgow, Scotland (born & raised) and Loch Lomond is not that far away. At my wedding, the mother / son dance was to this version. Their was not a dry eye in the house.

(Video Link)

Hollywood comes a knocking

Her early popularity also led to a brief appearance in the 1938 movie Going Places with Louis Armstrong. (Video Link)

 Her early popularity also led to a brief appearance in the movie Going Places with Louis Armstrong.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dQXyiH5ddnQ

Her other big film was the 1939 St. Louis Blues. Both films placed Maxine in the few roles open to African American women at the time, maids and singers (Source).

In the clicp below, Maxine performs her great swing version of “Loch Lomond” in the 1939 film “St. Louis Blues”. (Video Link)

1939 Maxine joins the short lived Swingin’ the Dream

An Al Hirschfeld caricature featuring Benny Goodman and Louis Armstrong graced the cover of the 1939 Playbill for “Swingin’ the Dream.”Credit...Playbill.com
An Al Hirschfeld caricature featuring Benny Goodman and Louis Armstrong graced the cover of the 1939 Playbill for “Swingin’ the Dream.”Credit…Playbill.com

Maxine returned to New York City in 1939 and quickly rejoined Armstrong to star opposite him and many other Black entertainers in Swingin’ the Dream. The musical, a jazzed up version of Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream set in 1890 New Orleans, ran for only nine performances and went down in history as a disaster. 

It featured some INCREDIBLE names on the bill, like:

  • Louis Armstrong
  • Benny Goodman
  • Count Basie
  • Maxine Sullivan
  • The Dandridge Sisters (including Dorothy Dandridge)
  • Butterfly McQueen (Prissy from Gone with the Wind)
  • Jackie “Moms” Mabley (Comedic actress)

Despite the failure, the musical featured Maxine introducing the world to the beloved jazz standard “Darn that Dream” as Queen Titania (Source).

1940-Sullivan and Kirby become the FIRST Black jazz stars to have their own weekly radio series

From 1940 through 1941, Maxine and then-husband John Kirby headlined the popular CBS radio show “Flow Gently, Sweet Rhythm.” The pair were among the first African Americans to star on a nationally syndicated radio program and included many of their friends within the jazz community, including fellow singer Ella Fitzgerald (Source).

1940s and On….

Maxine continued to work throughout the 1940s performing with a wide range of bands as well as appearing at many of New York’s hottest jazz spots such as the Ruban Bleu, the Village Vanguard, the Blue Angel, and the Penthouse. In 1949, Sullivan appeared on the short-lived CBS Television series Uptown Jubilee, and in 1953 starred in the play, Take a Giant Step (Source).

In the 1950s she opted towards staying home with her children and fourth husband Cliff Jackson as performing opportunities slowed down.

Art Kane’s Photograph ‘A Great Day in Harlem‘-1958

A Great Day in Harlem’ is black-and-white photograph of 57 jazz musicians in Harlem, New York, taken by freelance photographer Art Kane for Esquire magazine on August 12, 1958.

Maxine was 1 of the 3 female musicians in the photo.

s a black-and-white photograph of 57 jazz musicians in Harlem, New York, taken by freelance photographer Art Kane for Esquire magazine on August 12, 1958

After stepping away from music life (1958) and focusing on being a nurse, mother and service to her community, she returned to the stage in 1966 performing in jazz festivals alongside her fourth husband Cliff Jackson.

Sullivan continued to perform throughout the 1970s and made a string of recordings during the 1980s, despite being over 70 years old. She was nominated for the 1979 Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Musical (won by Carlin Glynn) for her role in My Old Friends, and participated in the film biography Maxine Sullivan: Love to Be in Love,shortly before her death (Source).

Maxine Sullivan at the Village Jazz Lounge in Walt Disney World, 1975
Sullivan at the Village Jazz Lounge in Walt Disney World, 1975

Maxine Sullivan died aged 75 in 1987 in New York City after suffering a seizure. She was posthumously inducted into the Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame in 1998.

Maxine Sullivan African American Jazz Singer during the Big Band Era

I hope you enjoyed learning all about Maxine Sullivan!

Let me know if you are a big fan of Maxine or maybe a new fan thanks to this blog, by leaving a comment in the section below.

Other Blog Posts in the Series: “Women of the Big Band Era Everyone Should Know”:

Stay safe and thanks for dropping by!

Liz