Just to name a few ...
Let's Dance (opening theme, inspired by C. M. von Weber's Introduction to the Dance)
Stealin' Apples
Down South Camp Meeting
Roll 'em
Life Goes to a Party
Sing Sing Sing
Loch Lomond
And the Angels Sing
Dizzy Spells
Six Flats, Unfurnished
Don't Be That Way
All the Cats Join In
How High the Moon
Moonglow
Bugle Call Rag
Avalon
String of Pearls (yes, the Glenn Miller hit, but Goodman's version sold a lot of copies too)
Bei Mir Bist du Schön
After You've Gone
Stompin' At The Savoy
Swingtime in the Rockies
Body and Soul
Honeysuckle Rose
These Foolish Things Remind Me Of You
Goodbye (closing theme)
Benny Goodman
benny goodman
goodey 2shoes The King of Swing The Professor
Many people say that Benny Goodman is the King of Swing. I am one of them.
Below are some of the bands of the 1940s. Glenn Miller Harry James Jimmy Dorsey Tommy Dorsey Duke Elington Benny Goodman
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benny anderson, bjorn ulvaeus, and for some songs stig andersson
It is said that Tallulah and Billie went around with each other and may have spent some nights together, but there are no sources to deny or conform this.
His most famous today is "Sing, Sing, Sing," but he is also know for writing "Let's Dance," and "Flying Home," among others.
Any song on the Mingus Big Band album "Gunslinging Birds" Sing, Sing, Sing is a classic Benny Goodman tune High Maintenance by Gordon Goodwin's Big Phat Band Take Five by The Dave Brubeck
Some of them do.
Goodman did not have a lot of formal education. Most of his studies were purely musical, starting with clarinet lessons at his synagogue and moving on to further work at Chicago's Hull House where he was tutored by a member of the Chicago Symphony. As a young teenager he started touring and at the age of just 16 he joined the Ben Pollack band, famous as an "incubator" of musicians who would later become some of the top performers in jazz. So in effect the music world was Benny's school.