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Al Hirt

 

Trumpet player

Al Hirt is a favorite son of his native New Orleans, the town that gave America Dixieland Jazz. Known for years as the "Round Mound of Sound," the genial Hirt is the most popular working Dixieland musician in the country. His original fusion of jazz and rock elements helped to bring the music of New Orleans to the attention of a new generation in the 1960s; since then he and his trumpet have been closely associated with both the city and its signature sound.

Alois Maxwell Hirt was born in New Orleans late in 1922. The son of a police officer, he acquired his first trumpet from a pawnshop when he was six years old. He quickly mastered the instrument and became something of a prodigy with it, so much so that he headed the Sons of the Police Department Junior Police Band before he hit his teens. Hirt’s first professional job came in 1939, when he was hired to call horses to the post at the Louisiana Fairgrounds. The weekly salary of 40 dollars was extravagant for a youth of 17, but the beginnings of a lifelong interest in betting on horse races absorbed some of the wages.

Deciding to pursue a career in music, Hirt enrolled at the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music in 1940 and attended classes there until he entered the Army in 1943. At the conservatory he studied classical trumpet and cornet, dabbling in jazz as a sideline. "I always aspired to be a legitimate player," Hirt told the Richmond News Leader. "That was my training. Now I’m a jazz player. People paid attention to trumpet always. It’s an attractive instrument. It’s got a great sound. Every kid in school wants to play the trumpet."

Hirt may have chosen a popular instrument, but he played it so well that he suffered little competition for high-paying work. After the war he played with a number of top-ranked big bands, touring America and Europe in grand style with Jimmy Dorsey, Tommy Dorsey, and Benny Goodman. In the early 1950s Hirt decided to form his own group. He settled down in New Orleans and fronted a Dixieland band that soon became the house outfit for Dan Levy’s Pier 600 Club. The band quickly attracted a local following and within a few years it had gained a national reputation for its exuberant horn numbers.

Hirt became a national celebrity after he signed with RCA Records in 1960. Early albums Greatest Horn, He’s the King and Bourbon Street sold very well and RCA began to release new material from the artist roughly every six months. At a time when rock ’n’ roll seemed to hold a monopoly on the air waves, Hirt actually placed Dixieland-flavored band music on the charts with hits such as "Java" and "Cotton Candy." The rotund performer earned his nickname "Round

Mound of Sound" when he began appearing on television variety shows in the mid-1960s.

National prominence notwithstanding, Hirt never gave up his New Orleans roots. For years he owned his own club at 501 Bourbon Street; when he sold it, he moved to the J. B. Rivers Club along the Mississippi. He was a minority owner of the New Orleans Saints when the club moved to town and for many seasons played trumpet right behind the team bench at home games. Hirt has performed with a number of America’s largest symphony orchestras as a guest soloist; in 1965 he gave a standing-room-only concert at New York City’s Carnegie Hall.

Despite his popularity, reviewers have not always been kind to Hirt. Even at the height of his success, he was criticized for adding rock elements to his work and for watering down his personal ability to appeal to a mainstream audience. To this day Hirt bridles at such charges. "I couldn’t care less what jazz purists say," he told the Richmond News Leader. "Who … is a jazz purist? Somebody who doesn’t play an instrument."

Purists aside, the public still loves Hirt’s playful sound. His affectionate nickname, however, no longer applies as a strict diet has reduced the jazz master’s once legendary weight. Well into his sixties, Hirt plays dozens of concerts a year, both at home in New Orleans and across the country. His performances include not only Dixieland numbers, but Latin, pop, jazz, and classical works as well—though his finale remains the rousing "When the Saints Go Marching In." A grandfather nine times over, Hirt nonetheless has no plans to hang his trumpet on a peg. "It’s always been fun for me," he confided to the Richmond News Leader. "I enjoy playing." He concluded: "There’s more to playing than playing, though. You gotta be a nice person, too."

Selected discography
Al Hirt at Dan’s Pier 600, Audio Fidelity.
Swingin’ Dixie, two volumes, Audio Fidelity, 1960 and 1961.
Greatest Horn, RCA, 1961.
He’s the King, RCA, 1961.
Bourbon Street, RCA, 1961.
Horn a Plenty, RCA, 1962.
Al Hirt at the Mardi Gras, RCA, 1962.
Trumpet and Strings, RCA, 1962.
Al Hirt in New Orleans, RCA, 1963.
Honey in the Horn, RCA, 1963.
Cotton Candy, RCA, 1964.
(With Ann-Margaret) Beauty and the Beard, RCA, 1964.
Honey Horn Hound, RCA, 1965.
Al Hirt at Carnegie Hall, RCA, 1965.
Sugar Lips, RCA, 1965.
Best of Al Hirt, RCA, 1966.
They’re Playing Our Song, RCA, 1966.
Best of Al Hirt, Volume 2, RCA, 1966.
Happy Trumpet, RCA, 1966.
Horn Meets Hornet, RCA, 1966.
Music to Watch Girls By, RCA, 1967.
Latin in the Horn, RCA, 1967.
Struttin’, RCA, 1967.
Soul in the Horn,, RCA, 1967.
Hirt Plays Kaempfert, RCA, 1968.
AI in’, RCA, 1970.
This Is Al Hirt, RCA, 1970.
Al’s Place, Camden, 1970.
Best of Al Hirt, with Pete Fountain, Ampex.
New Orleans by Night, 1986.
Blues Line (also contains Fountain’s Fountain of Youth), 1987.
(With Fountain) Super Jazz (reissue), Monument, 1988.
All Time Greatest Hits, RCA, 1989.

Sources
Charlotte Observer, February 1, 1989.
Houston Post, March 27, 1988.
Richmond News Leader, July 7, 1988; July 18, 1988.
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  • Genres: Jazz

Biography

A virtuoso on the trumpet, Al Hirt was often "overqualified" for the Dixieland and pop music that he performed. He studied classical trumpet at the Cincinnati Conservatory (1940-1943) and was influenced by the playing of Harry James. He freelanced in swing bands (including both Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey, and Ray McKinley) before returning to New Orleans in the late '40s and becoming involved in the Dixieland movement. He teamed up with clarinetist Pete Fountain on an occasional basis from 1955 on, and became famous by the end of the decade. An outstanding technician with a wide range, along with a propensity for playing far too many notes, Hirt had some instrumental pop hits in the 1960s. He also recorded swing and country music, but mostly stuck to Dixieland in his live performances. He remained a household name throughout his career, although one often feels that he could have done so much more with his talent. Hirt's early Audiofidelity recordings (1958-1960) and collaborations with Fountain are the most rewarding of his long career; he died at his home in New Orleans on April 27, 1999. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi
Al Hirt with the Japanese singing twins The Peanuts at the 1966 Grand Gala du Disque in the Netherlands.

Al Hirt (November 7, 1922 – April 27, 1999) was an American trumpeter and bandleader.[1] He is best remembered for his million selling recordings of "Java", and the accompanying album, Honey in the Horn (1963). His nicknames included 'Jumbo' and 'The Round Mound of Sound'.[1] Al was a member of The Louisiana Music Hall of Fame.

Contents

Biography

Alois Maxwell Hirt was born in New Orleans, Louisiana,[1] the son of a police officer. At the age of six, he was given his first trumpet, which had been purchased at a local pawnshop. He would play in the Junior Police Band with the children of Alcide Nunez, and by the age of 16, Hirt was playing professionally, often with his friend Pete Fountain. During this time, he was hired to play at the local horse racing track, beginning a six-decade connection to the sport.

In 1940, Hirt went to Cincinnati, Ohio to study at the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music with Dr. Frank Simon (a former soloist with the John Philip Sousa Orchestra). After a stint as a bugler in the United States Army during World War II, Hirt performed with various Swing big bands, including those of Tommy Dorsey, Jimmy Dorsey, Benny Goodman, and Ina Ray Hutton.

In 1950, Hirt became first trumpet and soloist with Horace Heidt's Orchestra.

Hirt then returned[when?] to New Orleans, working with various Dixieland groups and leading his own bands. Despite Hirt's statement years later "I'm not a jazz trumpeter and never was a jazz trumpeter", he made a few recordings where he demonstrated ability to play in that style during the 1950s, with bandleader Monk Hazel and a few other recordings on the local Southland Records label.

Hirt's virtuoso dexterity and fine tone on his instrument soon attracted the attention of national labels and signed with RCA Victor Records. Hirt posted twenty two albums on the Billboard charts in the 1950s and 1960s. The albums Honey In The Horn and Cotton Candy were both in the Top 10 best sellers for 1964, the same year Hirt scored a hit single with his cover of Allen Toussaint's tune "Java" (Billboard #4), and later won a Grammy Award for the same recording. Both Honey in the Horn and "Java" sold over one million copies, and were awarded gold discs.[2]

Hirt's Top 40 charted hit "Sugar Lips" in 1964 would be later used as the theme song for the NBC daytime game show Eye Guess, hosted by Bill Cullen and originally airing during the mid-to-late 1960s.

Hirt was chosen to record the frenetic theme for the 1960s TV show "The Green Hornet", by famed arranger and composer Billy May. Thematically reminiscent of Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's Flight of the Bumblebee, it showcased Hirt's technical prowess. The recording again gained public attention in 2003 when it was used in the film Kill Bill.

From the mid 1950s to early 1960s, Hirt and his band played nightly at Dan's Pier 600 at the corner of St. Louis and Bourbon Street. The club was owned by his business manager, Dan Levy, Sr. In 1962 Hirt opened his own club on Bourbon Street in the French Quarter, which he ran until 1983. He also became a minority owner in the NFL expansion New Orleans Saints in 1967.

In 1962, in an effort to showcase him in a different musical setting, Hirt was teamed with arranger and composer Billy May and producer Steve Sholes to record an album titled Horn A Plenty that was a departure from the Dixieland material that he was generally associated with. Covering an eclectic variety of popular, standard and show tunes, it featured a big-band supplemented by timpani, French horns and harp.

On February 8, 1970, while performing in a Mardi Gras parade in New Orleans, Hirt was injured while riding on a float. It is popularly believed that he was struck in the mouth by a thrown piece of concrete or brick. Factual documentation of the details of the incident is sparse, consisting primarily of claims made by Hirt after the incident. Whatever the actual cause of his injuries, Hirt underwent surgery and had to wait a while and then practice slowly to make a return to the club scene. This incident was parodied in a Saturday Night Live skit from their second season Mardi Gras special, the "Let's Hit Al Hirt in the Mouth with a Brick Contest".[3]

In 1987, Hirt played a solo rendition of "Ave Maria" for Pope John Paul II's visit to New Orleans.

In 1999, Hirt died, aged 76, in New Orleans of liver failure,[1] after spending the previous year in a wheelchair due to edema in his leg. Despite the bout with edema, Hirt continued to play in local clubs including Chris Owens Club. Hirt was buried in Metairie Cemetery in New Orleans.

Hirt had eight children, ten grandchildren, and six great-grandchildren. In 1990, he married Beverly Estabrook Essel, a friend of 40 years.

He is referred to in the 1987 film, Good Morning Vietnam, in a broadcast made by Lieutenant Hauk (Bruno Kirby).

Al returned to New Orleans around 1953, and played a morning radio show called Dawn Busters with his friend Pete Fountain.

Discography

  • 30 Greatest Trumpet Hits of All Time
  • A Living Legend
  • Al (He's The King) Hirt and His Band
  • Al Hirt
  • Al Hirt at the Mardi Gras
  • Al Hirt Blows His Own Horn
  • Al Hirt Now!
  • Al Hirt Plays Bert Kaempfert
  • Beauty and the Beard (with Ann-Margret)
  • Cotton Candy
  • Have a Merry Little Al Hirt
  • Here in my Heart
  • Honey in the Horn, 1963 (His first album recorded in Nashville - published in Italy as La tromba magica di Al Hirt, which means Al Hirt's magic trumpet)
  • Horn A Plenty
  • In A Blue Mood
  • In Love With You
  • Jumbo's Gumbo
  • Live at Carnegie Hall
  • Le Roi De La Trompette
  • Louisiana Man
  • Music to Watch Girls By
  • Our Man in New Orleans
  • 'Pops' Goes The Trumpet
  • Raw Sugar, Sweet Sauce, Banana Pudd'n'
  • Soul in the Horn
  • Struttin' Down Royal Street
  • Sugar Lips
  • Super Jazz
  • Swingin' Dixie! At Dan's Pier 600
  • That Honey Horn Sound
  • The Best of Al Hirt
  • The Best of Al Hirt Volume 2
  • The Best of Dixieland Jazz
  • The Greatest Horn in The World
  • The Happy Trumpet
  • The High-flying Trumpet of Al Hirt
  • The Horn Meets The Hornet
  • They're Playing Our Song
  • This is Al Hirt
  • Trumpet and Strings

References

  1. ^ a b c d Thedeadrockstarsclub.com Accessed March 2010
  2. ^ Murrells, Joseph (1978). The Book of Golden Discs (2nd ed.). London: Barrie and Jenkins Ltd. p. 160. ISBN 0-214-20512-6. 
  3. ^ "Season 2 Mardi Gras Special". snltranscripts.jt.org. http://snltranscripts.jt.org/76/mgrasbacchus.phtml. Retrieved 2008-12-21. 

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Gale Musician Profiles. Contemporary Musicians © 1989-2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
AMG AllMusic Guide: Pop Artists. Copyright © 2012 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia on Answers.com. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Al Hirt Read more

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