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Bob Eberly

 
Artist: Bob Eberly
  • Born: July 24, 1916, Mechanicsville, NY
  • Died: December 17, 1981
  • Active: '50s
  • Genres: Vocal Music
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "The Best of Bob Eberly with Jimmy Dorsey," "Tender Love Songs," "Recapturing the Excitement of the Jimmy Dorsey Era"
  • Representative Songs: "Tangerine," "Green Eyes," "Amapola"

Biography

Bob Eberly was a superior, if somewhat inflexible ballad singer during the swing era, best known for his association with Jimmy Dorsey. He started his career by winning an amateur hour contest on the Fred Allen radio show and singing locally. When Bob Crosby left the Dorsey Brothers Band in 1935, Eberly (who had changed his name from Eberle) was hired. After Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey soon split up, Eberly went with Jimmy and became a fixture with his orchestra for the next eight years through rough times and prosperity.

His deep voice and very straight delivery were an inspiration for Dick Haymes and indirectly for Frank Sinatra. Starting in December 1940, Eberly and Helen O'Connell (who had joined the band nearly two years earlier) teamed up regularly on records; Eberly would have a ballad chorus (he much preferred slow tempos) and then, after an instrumental interlude, O'Connell would take a hotter chorus. Engineered originally by arranger Tutti Camarata so both singers could be featured on Dorsey's radio show, the combination clicked from the start, resulting in hit versions of "Amapola," "Tangerine," "Green Eyes" and "Maria Elena." Eberle was with Dorsey until December 1943, when he was drafted into the military. He was able to sing during the next two years with Wayne King's military group, but after his discharge, Eberly was never really able to get a very successful solo career going. He did continue working into the 1970s, and co-hosted a summer replacement television show with Helen O'Connell one year, but was largely forgotten. Ironically, Bob's younger brother Ray Eberle, who had much less of a voice, is today better remembered for his many ballad vocals with Glenn Miller. ~ Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
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Bob Eberly (July 24, 1916 - November 17, 1981[1]) was a big band vocalist. He was born in Mechanicville, New York and was the brother of another well-known big-band singer, Ray Eberle. (He changed the spelling of his last name because of mispronunciation by Milton Berle's announcer[1].) He is known for singing with Jimmy Dorsey's band and is most well-known for singing "Green Eyes," one of a number of songs that were revived because of a songwriters' strike[2]. Many people thought that he would end up marrying Helen O'Connell because of the way they sang the song "Green Eyes". His sisters include Patricia Knapp, Margaret Rimkunas, Gail Himes & Jackie Cardilli, all of Bradenton, Florida. A brother, Alfred J. Eberle, lives in their childhood home in Hoosick Falls, N.Y.

External links

See also

Notable Recordings:


 
 
Learn More
1938-1939 in Hi-Fi Broadcasts (1997 Album by Jimmy Dorsey)
The Uncollected Jimmy Dorsey & His Orchestra, Vol. 1 (1939-1940) (1939 Album by Jimmy Dorsey)
The Best of Bob Eberly with Jimmy Dorsey (2000 Album by Bob Eberly & Jimmy Dorsey)

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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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