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| Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Thomas Andrew Dorsey |
For more information on Thomas Andrew Dorsey, visit Britannica.com.
| 5min Related Video: Tommy Dorsey |
| Biography: Thomas Andrew Dorsey |
Thomas Andrew Dorsey (1900-1993), often called the Father of Gospel Music, migrated from Atlanta to Chicago as a young man, thus exemplifying the experience of many southern blacks of his day. This journey is also critical to an understanding of what Michael W. Harris called "the rise of gospel blues" in his book of that title, which chronicles the role Dorsey's music played in urban churches.
There was a great deal of early resistance to Dorsey's work, partly because it was rooted in the rural southern African American culture from which the old-line urban churches sought to distance themselves in favor of assimilation. These churches discouraged expressive congregational participation and attempted to incorporate white church traditions in both service and music. In addition, the blues factor of the gospel blues equation had associations with secular venues and activities often discouraged by the church. It is perhaps Dorsey's greatest achievement that he was able to overcome this opposition and thus preserve important aspects of black musical expression as it had existed in both the spiritual and secular realms.
Dorsey, one of five children, was born in Villa Rica, Georgia on July 1, 1900, but soon moved with his family to Atlanta. His father was a Baptist minister with a flamboyant pulpit style. His mother played a portable organ and piano wherever the elder Dorsey preached. Young Dorsey was influenced musically by his mother's brother, an itinerant blues musician. He also was influenced by her brother-in-law, a teacher who favored shaped note singing - also known as "fasola" (fa-so-la), a rambunctious, 19th-century congregational style propagated by songbooks and popular in the rural South in which four distinct shapes (the diamond, for one) correspond to specific notes on the musical scale. In The Rise of Gospel Blues Michael Harris noted, "Other than slave spirituals, the white Protestant hymns and shaped note music, Dorsey describes a type of 'moaning' as the only other style of religious song he recalls." He left school early and was soon hanging around theaters and dance halls. His association with musicians there encouraged him to practice at home on his mother's organ, and by age 12, he claimed that he could play the piano very well. Before long he was earning money playing at private parties and bordellos. In order to improve his skills and identify himself as a professional, he briefly took piano lessons from a teacher associated with Morehouse College, as well as a harmony course at the college itself.
Moved to Chicago
Dorsey's desire to become a professional musician motivated him to move to Philadelphia in 1916. However, his plans soon changed and he settled in Chicago, then abuzz with both migrant workers and migrant musicians. According to Harris, Dorsey's piano style was already somewhat out of vogue by then. Although he was still able to find work, he remained on the periphery of the music community. Harris observed the Dorsey was held back by his lack of technique and repertoire, which prevented him from joining the union. A further obstacle was the sheer size and wealth of the musical community. In order to increase his chances for employment, he enrolled in the Chicago School of Composition and Arranging. Thus, for the rest of his life, Dorsey able to find work as a composer and arranger. By 1920, he was prospering. However, the demanding schedule of playing at night, working at other jobs during the day, and studying in between led him to the first of two nervous breakdowns. He was so ill that his mother had to go to Chicago to bring him back to Atlanta.
Dorsey returned to Chicago in 1921. His uncle encouraged him to attend the National Baptist Convention, where he was impressed by the singing of W. M. Nix. As Dorsey related in The Rise of Gospel Blues: "My inner-being was thrilled. My soul was a deluge of divine rapture; my emotions were aroused; my heart was inspired to become a great singer and worker in the Kingdom of the Lord - and impress people just as this great singer did that Sunday morning." Dorsey soon began composing sacred songs and took a job as director of music at New Hope Baptist Church on Chicago's South Side, where he described the congregation's singing of spirituals "like down home," noting that the congregants also clapped to his music.
Dorsey's conversion was fleeting. He was soon playing with the Whispering Syncopators, making a salary commensurate with professional theater musicians. As the popularity of the blues increased in New York and Chicago, especially among non-black audiences, Dorsey was able to adapt his style to the tastes of the day. Singers like Bessie Smith, who embodied the southern tradition, were also popular, especially among black Americans.
Debut at Grand Theater
In 1924, Dorsey made his debut as "Georgia Tom" with Ma Rainey at the Grand Theater. He continued to tour with her, even after he wed in 1925, until he suffered the second of his breakdowns in 1926. The pressures of touring overwhelmed him and Dorsey considered suicide. His sister-in-law convinced him to attend church. While at a service, he had a vision, after which he pledged to work for the Lord. It was not long before he penned his first gospel blues, "If You See My Savior, Tell Him That You Saw Me," which was inspired by the death of a friend.
But the Lord's work would not be easy for him. Dorsey was convinced that the same experiences that had engendered secular blues should also inform church music. As he was quoted as saying in The Rise of Gospel Blues: "If a woman has lost a man, a man has lost a woman, his feeling reacts to the blues; he feels like expressing it. The same thing acts for a gospel song. Now you're not singing blues; you're singing gospel, good news song, singing about the Creator; but it's the same feeling, a grasping of the heart." In a purely musical sense, the blues was merely a collection of improvisational techniques to Dorsey. Nevertheless, imparting a bluesy feel to a traditional arrangement was shocking to many, though Dorsey was able to vary the effect depending on his audience and their reaction. He was soon making printed copies of his gospel blues. However, since he relied on the performer to embellish the music, they did not sell well. Before long he was back to writing and performing secular blues. In 1928, "It's Tight Like That" became a hit, selling seven million copies.
Although Dorsey claimed to have been thrown out of some of the best churches, Harris observed that the time was right for Dorsey's eventual success. There were increasing numbers of store-front churches that appealed to southern migrants, and there was a booming trade in recorded sermons of the type Dorsey's father might have delivered. Harris even linked the blues soloist to the preacher, as each embodies the yearning of a people and manifests that yearning principally through improvisation. There were also a growing number of influential choirs in Chicago, challenging the musical norms of the established churches, though Dorsey was usually more associated with the rise of the solo tradition. In the late 1920s, he would begin work with one of the great gospel soloists of all time, Mahalia Jackson. According to Dorsey, she asked him to coach her, and for two months they worked together on technique and repertoire. They would tour together in the 1940s.
Personal Tragedy
In 1931, Dorsey again experienced great personal tragedy. The death in childbirth of both his wife and newborn son devastated him. As he related in the documentary Say Amen Somebody, "People tried to tell me things that were soothing to me … none of which have ever been soothing from that day to this." Out of that tragedy he wrote "Precious Lord," the song for which he is best known. This work has been translated into 50 languages and recorded with success by gospel and secular singers alike, including Elvis Presley. A second song, "Peace in the Valley," was a hit for Tennessee Ernie Ford and others. In 1932 Dorsey was appointed musical director of Pilgrim Baptist Church in Chicago, a post he held until his retirement in 1983. 1932 was also the year he formed the National Convention of Gospel Choirs and Choruses with blues singer Sallie Martin. Their collaboration would continue over the years as his fame spread, Martin often accompanying him on his tours around the country. She also helped him with his publishing business, which quickly became so successful that people nationwide called any piece of gospel sheet music a "Dorsey."
Dorsey remarried in 1941. His career continued to flourish. He would eventually compose over 3,000 songs. Well known within the African American community, Dorsey nonetheless remained relatively obscure outside of it - though people were singing his songs all over the world - until he became the subject of a BBC documentary in 1976. His appearance with another great gospel singer, Willie Mae Ford Smith, in the documentary Say Amen Somebody also afforded him considerable exposure. In that film, after being helped into a room, he addresses a group of people, moving comfortably in and out of song all the while. He was ordained a minister in his sixties, formalizing the union of song and worship. The Pilgrim Baptist Church created the T. A. Dorsey Choir to honor him in 1983. Dorsey died of Alzheimer's disease on January 23, 1993 in Chicago, Illinois. However, he lives on each Sunday as voices rise in praise, singing the gospel across the land.
Books
Harris, Michael W., The Rise of Gospel Blues: The Music of Thomas Andrew Dorsey in the Urban Church, Oxford University Press, 1992.
We'll Understand It Better By and By: Pioneering African American Gospel Composers, edited by Bernice Johnson Reagon, Smithsonian Institution Press, 1992.
Periodicals
Ann Arbor News, February 24, 1993.
Chicago Tribune, January 25, 1993.
Down Beat, April 1993.
Entertainment Weekly, February 5, 1993.
Jet, February 8, 1993.
Newsweek, February 8, 1993.
New York Times, January 25, 1993.
Time, February 8, 1993.
Village Voice, October 5, 1982.
Washington Post, January 25, 1993; January 31, 1993.
| Black Biography: Thomas Dorsey |
composer; music arranger; pianist
Personal Information
Born Thomas Andrew Dorsey, July 1, 1899, in Villa Rica, Georgia; died in Chicago on January 23, 1993; son of Thomas Madison Dorsey (preacher and farmer) and Etta Plant Spencer; married Nettie Harper, 1925 (deceased, 1932); children: Thomas Andrew Dorsey, Jr. (deceased, 1932).
Education: studied music at Chicago School of Composition and Arranging.
Career
Performed as blues-style pianist in Atlanta, early 1910s; worked for a short time in steel mills of Gary, IN, c.1916; performed in local house party district, Chicago, 1919; arranged music for syncopated society bands and composed vaudeville blues numbers; published first gospel song, 1921; worked as a studio pianist and arranger for the Chicago Music Publishing Company, mid-1920s; assembled Gertrude "Ma" Rainey's back-up group "Wild Cats of Jazz" and toured as the band's pianist, 1924; published gospel numbers and began recording blues under the name "Georgia Tom" with Hudson "Tampa Red" Whittaker, 1928; performed at the National Baptist Convention, 1930; performed with singer/evangelist Theodore Frye at Ebenezer Church, Chicago, c.1930-32; became choral director of Pilgrim Baptist Church, Chicago, 1932- c.1972; teamed up with singer Sallie Martin and toured gospel music circuit, 1932; toured with Mahalia Jackson, 1939-1944; served as assistant pastor at Pilgrim Baptist and toured as lecturer, c.1940-1960s; made occasional appearances at gospel conventions, late 1970s; appeared in documentary Say Amen, Somebody, 1983.
Life's Work
Deemed the "father of gospel music," Thomas Dorsey emerged, during the early 1930s, as the creator of an African American religious music style known as the gospel blues--an idiom responsible for ushering in the "Golden Age of Gospel Music." In his long career Dorsey published nearly 400 compositions, including a large body of religious and secular music. Like many other African musicians of the 1920s, he moved freely between the performance of blues and gospel. After working as a blues pianist he worked as a composer of vaudeville blues and eventually became a popular blues recording artist. Despite criticism regarding his involvement in the 1920s hokum fad, Dorsey proved an able composer and pianist who exhibited a stylistic quality that walked the line between city and country blues traditions. With his final redemption and abandonment of blues in 1932, he took the stylistic foundations and inflections of blues music, infused them into gospel blues, and over the following decades found fame as an African American religious composer and chorus director at Chicago's Pilgrim Baptist Church.
Thomas Andrew Dorsey was born the son of Reverend Thomas M. Dorsey and Etta Plant Spencer on July 1, 1899, in Villa Rica, Georgia, a small town 30 miles west of Atlanta. Without funds to build a home on their farmland in Villa Rica, Reverend Dorsey and his wife--who originally purchased the land--moved their family to Atlanta. Not long afterward, the Dorseys took up residence in Forsyth, Georgia, where for two years, despite Reverend Dorsey's position as a church pastor, the family lived in a state of bare subsistence. Back in Villa Rica in 1903, Reverend Thomas resorted to farming as the main source of family income and served in the area as a guest preacher. Between working in the fields and traveling with his father to various churches, Thomas spent three months of the year attending his father's auxiliary elementary school.
Dorsey's mother sang in the church choir and lead group vocals during hymns and spirituals. As Michael W. Harris noted in, The Rise of the Gospel Blues, "Etta seems to have created an ambience in their home, the musical aspect of which was totally her doing." Apart from listening to his mother play the organ, Dorsey heard the blues guitar playing of Etta's brother, Phil Plant. Dorsey's early exposure to religious music and blues would later surface in a dichotomous career, which in its early years straddled the fence between the secular world of nightclubs and brothels and the sounds of the church.
In 1908 the Dorsey family returned to Atlanta. Demoted several grades in school, Dorsey lost interest in his studies and directed his attention to learning the styles of local pianists who performed in the thriving theater scene along Atlanta's Decatur Street. By age 12 he left school to become a professional pianist. At Decatur Street's Eighty-One Theater--home to such visiting performers as Gertrude "Ma" Rainey and Bessie Smith--he sold soft drinks and popcorn during intermission and studied the talents of the establishment's main pianist, Ed Butler. He also learned from pianists James Hennenway (or Hemingway) and Lark Lee. Proficient at the keyboard at an early age, Dorsey began playing house parties throughout Atlanta's black districts, including bordellos where he earned the nickname "Barrelhouse Tom." Working in theaters and playing a variety of styles, Dorsey later explained in The Rise of the Gospel Blues that at this "time I didn't understand blues or nothing . . . . All of the music sounded just about alike to me . . . . I had become very popular with the younger set, or now you would say teenagers, and I lucked up on a few good-looking clothes."
Despite his local reputation as a house party pianist, Dorsey was determined to learn to read music--a skill he believed would allow him to join more socially-respected musicians. He took private lessons from Mrs. Graves, a woman affiliated with Atlanta Baptist College--now Morehouse College. Still averse to formal instruction, however, he soon returned to the house party scene and continued to teach himself the rudiments of written music through instruction books.
After settling in Chicago in 1919, Dorsey played the local house party circuit and by 1922 joined "The Whispering Syncopators" led by Will Walker. Around this time, while studying at the Chicago School of Composition and Arranging, Dorsey engaged in the lucrative trade of scoring and arranging music for syncopated society bands. Influenced by the commercial blues compositions of W. C. Handy, Dorsey found success in the song writing field in 1923 with his number "I Want a Daddy I Call My Own." The number was recorded by singer Monette Moore, who subsequently recorded Dorsey's "Muddy Water Blues." In the same year, New Orleans trumpeter King Oliver recorded Dorsey's "Riverside Blues." As Michael Harris noted, in The Rise of Gospel Blues, "With one piece published by a large popular music company, and three recorded by two of the most famous artists of the time, Dorsey had become at last one of the major blues composers in Chicago. In little more than a year, Dorsey had risen from relative obscurity to a position of prominence."
In the mid-1920s, as recorded blues replaced the popularity of the published vaudeville blues industry, Dorsey turned his attention to arranging music. Hired by the Chicago Music Publishing Company, owned by Mayo Williams, Dorsey worked as composer, arranger, and studio pianist. In 1924, he was recruited as the accompanying pianist with "Ma" Rainey. The job also included the duty of assembling and leading the "Wild Cats Jazz Band," Rainey's back-up musicians. Dorsey later recounted Rainey's stage presence, as quoted in Looking Up At Down: "[S]he would open the door and step out into the spotlight with her glittering gown that weighed twenty pounds and wearing a necklace of five, ten and twenty gold pieces." For the next two years, Dorsey traveled with the band on the Theater Owner's Booking Association circuit, until severe psychological depression temporarily forced him to leave music.
After attending church he experienced a spiritual healing that renewed his conviction in his worldly pursuits. Soon after, the sudden death of a neighbor inspired him to write one his most famous religious compositions, "If You See My Savior, Tell Him That You Saw Me." Just as Dorsey looked to W. C. Handy as a model for his early vaudeville blues, he first modeled his religious compositions after the music of Charles Albert Tindley. As C. Eric Lincoln and Lawrence H. Mamiya wrote, in The Black Church in the African American Experience, "[Dorsey's] blues-like gospel songs reflect the same eschatology [concern with death] as the Tindley hymns in their quest for the glorious hereafter."
In need of a more reliable source of steady income, Dorsey ventured back into the composition and performance of blues. Under the name "Georgia Tom," he made recordings for the Vocalion Record Company along with guitarist and vocalist Hudson "Tampa Red" Whittaker, a talented and influential Georgia-born slide guitarist. The combination of Dorsey and Whittaker contributed to a new trend of guitar-piano blues that reflected an urban style. In November, Georgia Tom and Tampa Red recorded their 1928 double-entendre number, "Tight Like That." The song sold nearly one-million copies, inspired two other recorded versions by Dorsey and Whittaker, and generated numerous derivatives by other artists.
During his blues career Dorsey made about 40 recordings as a vocalist. He recorded numerous albums with other musicians such as Scrapper Blackwell and Big Bill Broonzy. In 1929 Dorsey and Whittaker recorded for the Paramount label as the Hokum Boys, initiating a new blues genre that drew upon minstrelsy antecedents, ragtime, and vaudeville. Dorsey also recognized his debt to New Orleans-born banjoist and guitarist "Papa" Charlie Jackson. Though criticized by several blues writers and historians, the hokum tradition exemplified by Dorsey and Whittaker did not produce music totally devoid of blues content or inventive wit. The duo also produced tracks of serious, down-home style blues exhibiting a forceful sound. Stephen Calt wrote, in the liner notes to Georgia Tom Dorsey, that Dorsey "probably ranked as the most self-conscious, serious and accomplished blues lyricist of his time. Far from debasing the medium, he raised the blues to new levels of inventiveness, and brought a degree of wit and sophistication that had never previously been known to blues lyrics."
While still performing as a blues artist, Dorsey experienced a career breakthrough in the gospel realm in 1930 when he performed at the National Baptist Convention. Not long afterward, he performed with a Mississippi-born singing evangelist, Theodore Frye, at Chicago's Ebenezer Church. At Ebenezer, Dorsey often stood while playing the keyboard, accompanying Frye as he sang and "strutted" in front of the congregation. "I always had rhythm in my bones," recalled Dorsey in Reflections on Afro-American Music. "I like the solid beat. I like the long, moaning, groaning tone. I like the rock. You know how they rock and shout in church . . . . This rhythm I brought into the gospel songs."
In 1932 Dorsey accepted an invitation to become choir director of Chicago's Pilgrim Baptist Church--a post he held for nearly 40 years. That same year, he began his musical association with singer Sallie Martin. "Dorsey's genius and Sallie's fervor proved an irresistible combination," observed Tony Heilbut, in The Gospel Sound. "Within a year's time, gospel choruses especially trained to sing Dorsey's tunes began sprouting all over Chicago's South Side." In the documentary, Say Amen, Somebody, Sallie Martin expressed her contribution to Dorsey's success as a gospel composer: "Wherever I'd go I carried the [sheet] music and sing the songs [and] sell them after the service was over. And that's the way Mr. Dorsey built his business."
Dorsey's new-found devotion to the church, during the years of economic depression, inspired numerous gospel blues compositions. As Dorsey explained in The Gospel Sound, his songs "lifted people out of the muck and mire of poverty and loneliness, of being broke, and gave them some kind of hope anyway." That same year, Dorsey and Sallie Martin founded the National Convention of Gospel Choir and Choruses. After performing at a concert in August of 1932, Dorsey learned that his wife, Nettie, had died while giving birth to their first child, Thomas Andrew, Jr. The next morning his new-born son also died. Seeking further solace in God, he vented his despair by composing his most famous gospel song, "Take My Hand, Precious Lord."
April of 1932 marked Dorsey's last known recorded performance of blues music. He then pursued a full-time career evangelizing through gospel music. By 1937 Dorsey's University Gospel Singers made their debut on Chicago's WLFL radio. At this time, Dorsey toured America, billing his performances as "An Evening with Dorsey." In 1940, under the auspices of the Gospel Choral Union of Chicago, he served as Dean of Evangelistic Musical Research and Ministry of Church Music. Between 1939 and 1944 he toured with Mahalia Jackson, who succeeded Sallie Martin as his main chorister.
In the 1960s Dorsey served as assistant pastor at Pilgrim Baptist and toured as a lecturer for various social and educational functions. In the early 1970s Tony Heilbut, who interviewed Dorsey for his study The Gospel Sound, noted that "At age seventy-five, Dorsey no longer writes or travels, but he continues to direct the convention." In dedication to his long career as a gospel composer, Dorsey's music was featured on the 1973 album Precious Lord, an effort that featured such guest singers as Sallie Martin--accompanied by Dorsey on piano--Marion Williams, the Dixie Hummingbirds, and R. H. Harris. In 1982 Dorsey appeared in the gospel music documentary Say Amen, Somebody. The film revealed his unabashed views concerning his earlier blues career. Shown in the film recovering from two broken hips and forced to use a walker, Dorsey displayed a tireless passion for his music and devotion to religion by singing along with a 1930 recording of "How Can You Have the Blues?" "God is still in business," he stated in the documentary, "and if you're God's child or anything to God he'll take care of you." After 60 years in the service of spreading the "good news of the gospel" through music, Dorsey died from Alzheimer's disease in Chicago on January 23, 1993.
Over the last six decades, Dorsey's compositions have found their way into the repertoires of the greatest gospel singers from Mahalia Jackson to the Five Blind Boys of Alabama to Sister Rosetta Tharpe. White artists such as Elvis Presley and Red Foley both scored gold records with Dorsey's "(There'll Be) Peace in the Valley." In Reflections on Afro-American Music, Dorsey conveyed the universal purpose of his music: "I don't write songs for Black men, or White men, or Red men, or Yellow men, or Brown men. I write songs for people, and I want all men to sing these gospel songs."
Awards
Honorary Doctor of Gospel Music degree from the Simmons Institute of South Carolina, 1946; American Music Conference National Music Award, 1976.
Works
Selective Discography
Further Reading
Sources
— John Cohassey
| Columbia Encyclopedia: Thomas Andrew Dorsey |
| Artist: Georgia Tom Dorsey |
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| Discography: Georgia Tom Dorsey |
| Actor: Tommy Dorsey |
| Filmography: Tommy Dorsey |
| Wikipedia: Tommy Dorsey |
| This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (January 2008) |
| Tommy Dorsey | |
|---|---|
Tommy Dorsey, in The Fabulous Dorseys
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| Background information | |
| Birth name | Thomas Francis Dorsey Jr. |
| Born | November 19, 1905 |
| Origin | Shenandoah, Pennsylvania, USA |
| Died | November 26, 1956 (aged 51) |
| Genres | Big band Swing Jazz |
| Occupations | Bandleader |
| Instruments | Trombone Trumpet Cornet |
| Years active | 1920's -1956 |
| Labels | RCA, Decca, OKeh, Columbia |
| Associated acts | California Ramblers Jimmy Dorsey Jean Goldkette Paul Whiteman Frank Sinatra Buddy DeFranco Buddy Rich Jo Stafford Connie Haines Glenn Miller The Boswell Sisters Dick Haymes Gene Krupa Sy Oliver Nelson Riddle |
| Notable instruments | |
| trombone | |
Thomas Francis Dorsey (November 19, 1905 – November 26, 1956[1]) was an American jazz trombonist, trumpeter, composer, and bandleader of the Big Band era. He was known as "The Sentimental Gentleman of Swing".[2]. He was the younger brother of bandleader Jimmy Dorsey."[3]. Dorsey disliked improvisation and had a reputation for being a perfectionist.[4] He was volatile and also known to hire and fire (and sometimes rehire) musicians based on his mood.[5] [6]
Contents |
Thomas Francis Dorsey, Jr. was a native of Shenandoah, Pennsylvania, the second of four children born to Thomas Francis Dorsey, Sr. and Theresa (née Langton) Dorsey[7] . The Dorsey brothers' two younger siblings were Mary and Edward (who died young)[8].
At age 15, Jimmy Dorsey recommended his brother Tommy as the replacement for Russ Morgan in the germane 1920s territory band "The Scranton Sirens." Tommy and Jimmy worked in several bands, including those of Tal Henry, Rudy Vallee, Vincent Lopez, and especially Paul Whiteman. In 1928, the Dorsey Brothers had their first hit with "Coquette" for OKeh records.[9] The Dorsey Brothers band signed with Decca records in 1934, having a hit with "I Believe In Miracles".[10]Future bandleader Glenn Miller was a member of the Dorsey Brothers Orchestra in 1934 and 1935, composing "Annie's Cousin Fanny"[11] and "Dese Dem Dose" both recorded for Decca[12] for the band. Ongoing acrimony between the brothers, however, led to Tommy Dorsey's walking out to form his own band in 1935, just as the orchestra was having a hit with "Every Little Moment." [13]
Tommy Dorsey's first band was formed out of the remains of the Joe Haymes band. The new band was popular from almost the moment it signed with RCA Victor with "On Treasure Island", the first of four hits for the new band in 1935. The Dorsey band had a national radio presence in 1936 first from Dallas and then from Los Angeles. Tommy Dorsey took over Jack Pearl's radio show in 1937.[14]
By 1939, Dorsey was conscious of criticism that his band lacked a jazz feeling and Dorsey hired arranger Sy Oliver, from the Jimmy Lunceford band to arrange for his band.[15][16]Sy Oliver's arrangements for Tommy Dorsey include "Well Git It" and "On The Sunny Side of the Street".[17] In 1940, Dorsey hired singer Frank Sinatra from bandleader Harry James. Frank Sinatra made eighty recordings from 1940 to 1942 with the Dorsey band.[18] Two of those eighty songs are "In The Blue of Evening" and "This Love of Mine".[19] Frank Sinatra achieved his first great success as a vocalist in the Dorsey band and claimed he learned breath control from watching Dorsey play trombone.[20][21] In turn Dorsey said his trombone style was heavily influenced by that of Jack Teagarden.[22] Among Dorsey's staff of arrangers was Axel Stordahl[23] who arranged for Frank Sinatra in his RCA, Columbia and Capitol years. Another member of the Dorsey band was trombonist Nelson Riddle, who later had a partnership as one of Sinatra's arrangers and conductors in the 1950s and afterwards.[24] Another noted Dorsey arranger, who in the nineteen-fifties, married and was professionally associated with Dorsey veteran Jo Stafford, was Paul Weston.[25] Bill Finegan, an arranger who left Glenn Miller's civilian band, arranged for the Tommy Dorsey band from 1942 to 1950.[26]
The band featured a number of future famous instrumentalists, singers and arrangers in the thirties and forties, including trumpeters Zeke Zarchy[27], Bunny Berigan[28], Ziggy Elman[29][30], Carl "Doc" Severinsen[31], and Charlie Shavers[32], pianists Milt Raskin, Jess Stacy[33], clarinetists Buddy DeFranco[34], Johnny Mince[35], and Peanuts Hucko[36]. Others who played with Dorsey were drummers Buddy Rich[37], Louie Bellson[38], Dave Tough[39] and singers Jack Leonard[40],Edythe Wright[41], Jo Stafford with The Pied Pipers[42], Dick Haymes[43] and Connie Haines[44] In the 1944, Dorsey hired The Sentimentalists who replaced The Pied Pipers[45]. Dorsey also performed with singer Connee Boswell[46] Dorsey hired ex-bandleader and drummer Gene Krupa after Krupa's arrest and scandal for marijuana possession in 1943.[47] In 1942 Artie Shaw broke up his band and Dorsey hired the Shaw string section. "They're used in the foreground and background (note some of the lovely obbligatos) for vocal effects and for Tommy's trombone."[48]
Dorsey branched out in the mid nineteen forties and owned two music publishing companies, Sun and Embassy.[49] After opening at the Los Angeles ballroom, The Hollywood Palladium on the Palladium's first night, Dorsey's relations with the ballroom soured and he opened a competing ballroom, The Casino Gardens circa 1944.[50] Dorsey also owned for a short time a trade magazine called The Bandstand.[51] Dorsey was also part owner of the Bob Chester band in 1940. He was also an early investor in Glenn Miller's second successful band of 1938.[52]
Tommy Dorsey disbanded the orchestra at the end of 1946. Dorsey might have broken up his own band permanently following World War II, as many big bands did due to the shift in music economics following the war, but Tommy Dorsey's album for RCA, "All Time Hits" placed in the top ten records in February, 1947. In addition, "How Things In Glocca Morra?" a single recorded by Dorsey became a top ten hit in March, 1947. Both of these successes made it possible for Dorsey to re-organize a big band in early 1947.[53] The Dorsey brothers were also reconciling. The biographical film of 1947, The Fabulous Dorseys describes sketchy details of how the brothers got their start from-the-bottom-up into the jazz era of one-nighters, the early days of radio in its infancy stages, and the onward march when both brothers ended up with Paul Whiteman before 1935 when The Dorsey Brothers' Orchestra split into two.[54] In the early nineteen fifties, Tommy Dorsey moved from RCA Victor back to the Decca record label.[55]
Jimmy Dorsey broke up his own big band in 1953. Tommy invited him to join up as a feature attraction and a short while later, Tommy renamed the band the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra featuring Jimmy Dorsey. In 1953, the Dorseys focused their attention on television.[56] On December 26, 1953, the brothers appeared with their orchestra on Jackie Gleason's CBS television show, which was preserved on kinescope and later released on home video by Gleason. The brothers took the unit on tour and onto their own television show, Stage Show, from 1955 to 1956. On one episode they introduced future noted rock musician Elvis Presley to national television audiences.[57]
Dorsey's married life was varied and, at times, lurid.[58] His first wife was 16-year-old Mildred Kraft, with whom he eloped in 1922, when he was 17. They had two children, Patricia and Tom (nicknamed "Skipper"). They divorced in 1943 after Dorsey's affair with his former singer Edythe Wright[59]. He then wed movie actress Pat Dane in 1943, and they were divorced in 1947[60], but not before he gained headlines for striking actor Jon Hall when Hall embraced his wife Pat. Finally, Dorsey married Jane Carl New [61] on March 27, 1948 in Atlanta, Georgia. She had been a dancer at the Copacabana nightclub in New York City. Tommy and Jane Dorsey had two children, Catherine Susan and Steve.
On November 26, 1956, Tommy Dorsey died at age 51 in his Greenwich, Connecticut home. Tommy Dorsey had eaten a heavy meal and began choking in his sleep. Tommy Dorsey customarily began taking sleeping pills at this time and he was so sedated he was unable to awaken and died from choking.[62] Jimmy Dorsey led his brother's band until his own death of throat cancer the following year. At that point, trombonist Warren Covington assumed leadership of the band with Jane Dorsey's blessing[63] as she owned the rights to her late husband's band and name. Billed as the "Tommy Dorsey Orchestra Starring Warren Covington", they topped the charts in 1958 with Tea For Two Cha-Cha.[64] After Covington led the band for a short period, Sam Donahue led it starting in 1961, continuing until the late sixties.[65] The Tommy Dorsey orchestra today is conducted by Buddy Morrow. Jane Dorsey died of natural causes at the age of 80, in Miami, Florida in 2003. Tommy and Jane Dorsey are interred together in Kensico Cemetery in Valhalla, New York.[66]
Tommy Dorsey had a run of two-hundred eighty six Billboard chart hits.[67] The Dorsey band had seventeen number one hits with his orchestra in the 1930s and 1940s including: "On Treasure Island", "The Music Goes 'Round and Around", "You", "Marie", "Satan Takes a Holiday", "The Big Apple", "Once in a While", "The Dipsy Doodle", "Our Love", "All the Things You Are", "Indian Summer", and "Dolores". He had two more number one hits in 1935 when he was a member of the Dorsey Brothers Orchestra: "Lullaby of Broadway", number one for two weeks, and "Chasing Shadows", number one for three weeks. His biggest hit was "I'll Never Smile Again", featuring Frank Sinatra on vocals, which was number one for twelve weeks on the Billboard pop singles chart in 1940. "In the Blue of Evening"[68] was number 1 on the Billboard pop singles chart in 1943.[69]
written ca. 1932: "Three Moods"[70]
1937: "The Morning After"
1938: "Chris and His Gang"
Also, Tommy Dorsey wrote the song "Peckin' With Penguins" for a 1938 Frank Tashlin directed Porky Pig cartoon, "Porky's Spring Planting" for the studio Warner Bros.[71]
1939: "To You"[72][73], "This Is No Dream", "You Taught Me To Love Again"[74], "In The Middle Of A Dream", "Night In Sudan"
1946: "Nip and Tuck"
1947: "Trombonology"[75]
In 1977, bandleader Bill Tole portrayed Tommy Dorsey in the movie New York, New York.[76] In 1982, the 1941 Victor recording "I'll Never Smile Again" was the first of a trio of Tommy Dorsey recordings to be inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.[77] His theme song, "I'm Getting Sentimental Over You" was inducted in 1998, along with his recording of "Marie".[78] In 1992, Bob Gunton portrayed Dorsey in the CBS miniseries Sinatra, starring alongside Philip Casnoff.[79] In 1996, the U.S. Postal Service issued a commemorative Tommy Dorsey and Jimmy Dorsey postage stamp.[80]
In the "Filmography" portion of the website "Thomas (Tommy) Dorsey 1905-1956"[3], two movies are listed for 1929 that suggest that Tommy Dorsey appears in them. They are "Segar Ellis and His Embassy Club Orchestra" and "Alice Boulden and her Orchestra"[81]
Tommy Dorsey and his Orchestra appear in the following films for the studios Paramount, MGM, Samuel Goldwyn, Allied Artists and United Artists[82]:
The Dorsey Brothers appear in the 1953 sixteen-minute Universal-International film called "The Dorsey Brothers Encore".[93]
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