The Night We Called It A Day
Guy Barker continues to explore the history of jazz, looking at Frank Sinatra and the 'Sing Era'.
Guy Barker continues to explore the history of jazz, focusing on the turning points and pivotal events that have shaped the genre, and discovering some great stories and larger-than-life characters along the way. Episode five, The Night We Called It A Day, looks at Frank Sinatra and the "Sing Era".
In January 1942, Frank Sinatra had been the featured singer with the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra for exactly two years. During that time his popularity had taken off and he realised that, in order to capitalise on this, he had to break away from Dorsey and launch his solo career. The defining moment came on 20 September 1942: Sinatra left Dorsey and went on to record-breaking success at the Paramount Theatre in New York, originally supporting and then overtaking Benny Goodman, the "King of Swing", as top of the bill. It was the beginning of the end of the Swing Era and the start of the "Sing Era".
Sinatra's timing was perfect: America was at war and the wives and girls of the departed GIs wanted a target for their emotions; and Sinatra was it. The war, coupled with the disastrous two-year Musicians' Union recording ban started a tail-spin for the big bands, leaving the door wide open for the singers they had helped to create. Frank Sinatra, Dick Haymes and dozens more singers were allowed to make records with vocal backings, and as the back catalogue of big band records ran out, the singers flooded the charts, sealing the fate of the big bands. The bands' demise was astonishing in its speed: in 1945 the big band scene was booming, but by the end of 1947 it was dead.
Guy examines the collapse of the big bands and the rise of the singers via brand new interviews with Frank Foster, Louise Tobin, Buddy DeFranco, George Avakian, Terry Gibbs, Dave Brubeck, Scott Yanow, Ira Gitler, Dame Cleo Laine and Bruce Boyd Raeburn, alongside archive of Sammy Cahn, Nat "King" Cole and John Hammond.
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Music Played
-
Fred Astaire
IF SWING GOES I GO TOO
- DANCING CHEEK TO CHEEK WITH FRED ASTAIRE.
- Retrospective.
- CD2 T21.
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Louis Armstrong
I'm Not Rough
- LONNIE JOHNSON: A LIFE IN MUSIC - SELECTED SIDES.
- JSP.
- JSP77117A.
-
Mamie Smith and Her Jazz Hounds
Crazy Blues
- Mamie Smith Volume 1.
- Document Records.
- DOCD--5357.
-
Ethel Waters & plantation Orchestra
Dinah
- Am I Blue?.
- Living Era.
- AJA-5290.
-
Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra
YOU TOOK ADVANTAGE OF ME
- The Bix Beiderbecke Story.
- Proper.
- Properbox-66.
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Louis Armstrong
I'm In The Market For You
- LOUIS ARMSTRONG VOL.6: ST LOUIS BLUES.
- COLUMBIA.
- CK-46996.
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Eddie Lang & His Orchestra
Some of These Days (feat. Bing Crosby)
- BING CROSBY THE CROONER THE CBS YEARS 1928- 1934.
- CBS.
- CBS-465596 2.
-
Billie Holiday
Why Was I Born?
- The Centennial Collection.
- Columbia.
- 8875048762.
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Ozzie Nelson and His Orchestra; Harriet Nelson, Vocal
I'm Looking For a Guy Who Plays Alto
- THE NELSON TOUCH - 25 BAND HITS 1931-41.
- LIVING ERA.
- CD=AJA-5197.
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Benny Goodman and His Orchestra
I Didn't Know What Time It Was (feat. LOUISE TOBIN)
- BENNY AND THE SINGERS.
- MEMOIR.
- CDMOIR-516.
-
Harry James and His Orchestra
From The Bottom Of My Heart (feat. Frank Sinatra)
- FRANK SINATRA: THE FORMATIVE YEARS.
- AVID.
- AVC-534.
-
Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra
The Song Is You (feat. Frank Sinatra)
- THAT SENTIMENTAL GENTLEMAN.
- RCA.
- 74321-364012.
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Tommy Dorsey With Frank Sinatra
I'll Be Seeing You
- Tommy Dorsey With Frank Sinatra.
- RCA.
- 89-810-2.
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The Nat King Cole Trio
Sweet Georgia Brown
- The Best of the Nat King Cole Trio: The Instrumental Classics.
- Capitol.
- 98-288.
-
Benny Goodman and His Orchestra & Peggy Lee
WHY DON'T YOU DO RIGHT
- THE ESSENTIAL BENNY GOODMAN.
- AVID.
- AVC-864.
-
The Charioteers
Open The Door Richard
- BEST OF THE CHARIOTERS.
- SONY.
- CCM377 2.
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THE METRONOME ALL-STARS
LOCAL 802 BLUES
- METRONOME ALL STARS.
- MEMOIR.
- CDMOIR-591.
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Dick Haymes
You'll Never Know
- FORCES SWEETHEARTS.
- LIVING ERA.
- CDAJS-286.
-
Louis Armstrong
BLUEBERRY HILL
- LOUIS ARMSTRONG AT HIS VERY BEST.
- UNIVERSAL CLASSICS & JAZZ.
- UCJ-9812425.
-
Woody Herman
KEEN AND PEACHY
- THIS IS JAZZ.
- COLUMBIA.
- CK-65040.
-
Ella Fitzgerald
The Song is ended
- ELLA FITZGERALD SINGS THE IRVING BERLIN SONG BOOK.
- VERVE.
- 543-830-2.
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Nat King Cole
Stardust
- Capitol Sings Hoagy Carmichael.
- EMI.
- 7243-8325922.
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The Rezillos
Destination Venus
- Sire.
-
John Handy
Hard Work
- Global Television.
Broadcasts
- Wed 3 Nov 2010 22:00麻豆社 Radio 2
- Thu 4 Feb 2016 22:00麻豆社 Radio 2
- Thu 9 May 2019 01:00麻豆社 Radio 6 Music
- Sun 11 Oct 2020 04:00麻豆社 Radio 6 Music
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