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Manhattan Transfer

 
Artist: The Manhattan Transfer
The Manhattan Transfer

Group Members:

Alan Paul, Tim Hauser, Janis Siegel, Cheryl Bentyne, Laurel Massé, Pat Rosalia, Gene Pistilli, Marty Nelson, Erin Dickens

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Alex Kramer, Milton Drake, William Spivery, Joan Whitney, Manning Sherwin, Ben Oakland, Eric Maschwitz, Buddy Feyne, Frank Eyton, Robert Sour, Esther Navarro, Clarence Bassett, Brock Walsh, Rod Temperton, Gene Pistilli, Alan Paul, William Johnson, Edward Heyman, Bernard Herrmann, Johnny Green, Jay Graydon, Joe Zawinul, Bobby Troup, Julian Dash, Erskine Hawkins, Jimmy Giuffre, Tom Waits

Formal Connection With:

Laurel Anne Massé, Janis Siegel, Richie Cole
See The Manhattan Transfer Lyrics
  • Formed: 1969, New York, NY
  • Genres: Vocal Music
  • Representative Albums: "Vocalese," "Swing," "Mecca for Moderns"
  • Representative Songs: "Birdland," "Tuxedo Junction," "Boy from New York City"

Biography

Riding a wave of nostalgia in the '70s, the Manhattan Transfer resurrected jazz trends from boogie-woogie to bop to vocalese in a slick, slightly commercial setting that sometimes failed to gel with the group's close harmonies. Originally formed in 1969, the quartet recorded several albums of jazz standards as well as much material closer to R&B/pop. Still, they were easily the most popular jazz vocal group of their era, and the most talented of any since the heyday of Lambert, Hendricks & Ross during the early '60s.

When the group was formed in the late '60s, however, the Manhattan Transfer was a hippie cornball act similar to the Lovin' Spoonful or Spanky & Our Gang. The lone LP that appeared from the original lineup -- leader Gene Pistilli plus Tim Hauser, Erin Dickins, Marty Nelson, and Pat Rosalia -- was Jukin', assembled by Capitol. An odd and hardly successful satire record, it was the last appearance on a Manhattan Transfer album for all of the above except Hauser.

After Hauser met vocalists Laurel Masse and Janis Siegel in 1972, the trio re-formed the Manhattan Transfer later that year with the addition of Alan Paul. The group became popular after appearances at a few New York hotspots and recorded their own debut, an eponymous LP recorded with help from the jazz world (including Zoot Sims, Randy Brecker, Jon Faddis, and Mel Davis). Featuring vocalese covers of "Java Jive" and "Tuxedo Junction" as well as a Top 40 hit in the aggressive gospel tune "Operator," the album rejuvenated the field of vocalese (dormant since the mid-'60s) and made the quartet stars in the jazz community across Europe as well as America.

The Manhattan Transfer's next two albums, Coming Out and Pastiche, minimized the jazz content in favor of covers from around the music community, from Nashville to Los Angeles to Motown. A single from Coming Out, the ballad "Chanson d'Amour," hit number one in Britain. Though Masse left in 1979 for a solo career, Cheryl Bentyne proved a capable replacement, and that same year, Extensions introduced their best-known song, "Birdland," the ode to bop written by Weather Report several years earlier.

Throughout the 1980s, the group balanced retreads from all aspects of American song. The 1981 LP Mecca for Moderns gained the Manhattan Transfer their first American Top Ten hit, with a cover of the Ad Libs' 1965 girl group classic "The Boy from New York City," but also included a version of Charlie Parker's "Confirmation" and a surreal, wordless tribute (?) named "Kafka." (The album also earned the Manhattan Transfer honors as the first artist to receive Grammys in both the pop and jazz categories in the same year.) The production on virtually all was susceptible to '80s slickness, and though the group harmonies were wonderful, all but the most open of listeners had trouble digesting the sheer variety of material.

The group's 1985 tribute to vocal pioneer Jon Hendricks, titled Vocalese, marked a shift in the Manhattan Transfer's focus. Subsequent works managed to keep the concepts down to one per album, and the results greatly improved. Such records as 1987's Brasil, 1994's Tubby the Tuba (a children's record), 1995's Tonin' ('60s R&B), and 1997's Swing may not have found the group at their performance peak, but were much more easily understandable for what they were. ~ John Bush, All Music Guide
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Discography: The Manhattan Transfer
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Wikipedia: Manhattan Transfer (PRR station)
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Manhattan Transfer was a passenger station in Harrison, New Jersey, east of Newark, on the Pennsylvania Railroad's main line to New York City, now Amtrak's Northeast Corridor. It consisted of two transfer platforms, one on each side of the PRR line.

The only access to the station was by train; no local access was provided.

Manhattan Transfer gained considerable public familiarity in its time so that the name became used in other contexts, starting with a 1925 novel by John Dos Passos.

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History

Manhattan Transfer was built as part of the PRR construction of tunnels under the Hudson River to New York Penn Station, and was opened on November 27, 1910. The original purposes of the station were for changing steam locomotives to electric locomotives on trains bound for Penn Station in Midtown Manhattan and for allowing passengers to transfer between these trains and trains bound for Exchange Place and a ferry connection to Lower Manhattan, before the PRR was electrified to Philadelphia. When the Hudson and Manhattan Railroad (now PATH) was opened to Newark on October 1, 1911, one track was built on each side of the PRR at Manhattan Transfer, and H&M trains stopped there, giving additional connecting service to Lower Manhattan.

In 1933, the PRR completed its electrification to Philadelphia and locomotive changes no longer took place at Manhattan Transfer. It was closed when the H&M was realigned to the new Newark Penn Station on June 20, 1937 (the same day the Newark City Subway was extended to Newark Penn Station); passengers now transfer at Newark.

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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
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Manhattan Transfer (PRR station)" Read more

 

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