Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated:
1
00:00:32,717 --> 00:00:35,652
I THINK IT'S
TERRIBLY IMPORTANT THAT
2
00:00:35,778 --> 00:00:39,201
JAZZ IS PRIMARILY DANCE MUSIC.
3
00:00:39,326 --> 00:00:42,540
SO, YOU MOVE
WHEN YOU HEAR IT,
4
00:00:42,666 --> 00:00:49,555
AND IT ALWAYS MOVES
IN A DIRECTION OF ELEGANCE,
5
00:00:49,680 --> 00:00:54,857
WHICH IS THE MOST
CIVILIZED THING THAT A HUMAN BEING CAN DO.
6
00:00:54,982 --> 00:01:04,000
THE ULTIMATE EXTENSION,
ELABORATION, AND REFINEMENT OF EFFORT
7
00:01:04,126 --> 00:01:10,639
IS ELEGANCE WHERE JUST DOING IT
GIVES PLEASURE OF ITSELF.
8
00:01:10,764 --> 00:01:15,774
THAT'S ABOUT AS FAR
AS WE CAN GET WITH LIFE.
9
00:01:15,899 --> 00:01:18,112
THAT'S EQUIVALENT TO WHAT
ERNEST HEMINGWAY CALLED
10
00:01:18,237 --> 00:01:20,241
THE SWEAT ON A WINE BOTTLE.
11
00:01:20,366 --> 00:01:25,126
IF YOU DON'T ENJOY HOW THOSE
BEADS OF SWEAT LOOK, YOU KNOW,
12
00:01:25,251 --> 00:01:27,631
WHEN YOU POUR THE WHITE WINE OUT
AND YOU TASTE IT
13
00:01:27,798 --> 00:01:32,098
AND HOW YOUR PARTNER LOOKS
AND HOW THE SUNLIGHT COMES THROUGH, YOU MISSED IT.
14
00:01:55,812 --> 00:02:01,866
JANUARY 1, 1936...
THE SWINGOS THINK THAT SWING
15
00:02:01,991 --> 00:02:05,373
IS MARKING AN INDELIBLE NOTATION
ON THE EVOLUTION OF JAZZ.
16
00:02:05,498 --> 00:02:09,297
WITH THEM,
IT'S A CREED, A CODE.
17
00:02:09,422 --> 00:02:13,222
THAT'S WHY THE SWING ADDICTS
SEEM SO GLAZED AND DAZED
18
00:02:13,347 --> 00:02:19,234
IN THEIR Nth DEGREE APPRECIATION
OF THIS...SWING BUSINESS...
19
00:02:19,359 --> 00:02:22,031
SO WHAT IS SWING?
20
00:02:22,156 --> 00:02:28,127
ASK ANY ONE OF THE SWINGOISTS,
AND THEY ALL VAMP OFF, "WELL, SWING IS SOMETHING LIKE..."
21
00:02:28,252 --> 00:02:32,593
BUT NONE SEEMS ABLE TO DEFINE
JUST WHAT IT IS.
22
00:02:32,761 --> 00:02:43,282
ABEL GREEN. VARIETY.
23
00:02:43,407 --> 00:02:48,960
IN THE MID 1930s,
AS THE GREAT DEPRESSION STUBBORNLY REFUSED TO LIFT,
24
00:02:49,085 --> 00:02:52,133
JAZZ CAME AS CLOSE
AS IT HAS EVER COME
25
00:02:52,258 --> 00:02:56,976
TO BEING AMERICA'S
POPULAR MUSIC.
26
00:02:57,101 --> 00:03:00,566
IT HAD A NEW NAME NOW--SWING--
27
00:03:00,692 --> 00:03:04,021
AND ITS IMPACT
WAS REVOLUTIONARY.
28
00:03:04,097 --> 00:03:07,154
SWING RESCUED
THE RECORDING INDUSTRY.
29
00:03:07,448 --> 00:03:13,085
IN 1932,
JUST 10 MILLION RECORDS HAD BEEN SOLD IN THE UNITED STATES.
30
00:03:13,833 --> 00:03:22,684
BY 1939, THAT NUMBER WOULD GROW
TO 50 MILLION.
31
00:03:22,809 --> 00:03:26,607
SWING--WHICH HAD GROWN UP
IN THE DANCEHALLS OF HARLEM--
32
00:03:26,734 --> 00:03:38,716
WOULD BECOME THE DEFINING MUSIC
FOR AN ENTIRE GENERATION OF AMERICANS.
33
00:03:38,841 --> 00:03:42,974
I THINK THAT WE ALL
HAVE A HANKERING FOR THE MUSIC
34
00:03:43,099 --> 00:03:45,730
WE WERE HEARING WHEN WE WERE
14, 15, 16 YEARS OLD.
35
00:03:45,897 --> 00:03:47,524
I THINK THAT NEVER
GETS AWAY FROM US,
36
00:03:47,649 --> 00:03:52,075
AND WITH ME,
IT WAS THE SWING BANDS.
37
00:03:52,242 --> 00:03:54,831
THAT WAS MY MUSIC.
THIS IS WHERE I WAS COMING FROM.
38
00:03:54,956 --> 00:03:57,253
THIS IS THE THING THAT GRIPPED
MY HEART AT THE BEGINNING,
39
00:03:57,321 --> 00:04:01,913
AND AS IS THE CASE WITH ANYBODY,
THOSE THINGS THAT YOU PICKED UP
40
00:04:02,038 --> 00:04:05,504
EARLY IN YOUR LIFE ARE THE ONES
YOU TURN BACK TO, YOU KNOW,
41
00:04:05,629 --> 00:04:07,215
WHEN YOU WANT A LITTLE SOLACE.
42
00:04:11,891 --> 00:04:16,276
PEOPLE NEEDED
DANCE MUSIC, MAYBE MORE THAN EVER IN AMERICA,
43
00:04:16,401 --> 00:04:21,911
BECAUSE THE COUNTRY
WAS IN SUCH DOLDRUMS.
44
00:04:22,037 --> 00:04:26,338
SO I THINK PEOPLE NEEDED
THE ESCAPE OF GOING TO THE SAVOY
45
00:04:26,463 --> 00:04:28,049
AND TO THOSE OTHER PLACES
TO DANCE.
46
00:04:28,174 --> 00:04:30,512
THEY NEEDED THOSE BANDS.
47
00:04:30,638 --> 00:04:34,312
AS AN ANTIDOTE
TO THE DEPRESSION, I THINK SWING MUSIC
48
00:04:34,437 --> 00:04:46,126
DID AS MUCH AS MGM MUSICALS
TO HELP AMERICA THROUGH.
49
00:04:46,251 --> 00:04:50,051
SWING PROVIDED
HOLLYWOOD WITH ITS THEME MUSIC
50
00:04:50,176 --> 00:04:56,314
AND OFFERED ENTERTAINMENT,
ELEGANCE, AND ESCAPE FOR A PEOPLE DOWN ON THEIR LUCK.
51
00:04:56,481 --> 00:05:01,991
RADIOS AND JUKEBOXES COULD
BE HEARD PLAYING SWING ALONG EVERY MAIN STREET IN AMERICA,
52
00:05:02,117 --> 00:05:04,162
PROVIDING THE ACCOMPANIMENT
53
00:05:04,330 --> 00:05:07,210
FOR A HOST OF
EXHILARATING NEW DANCES--
54
00:05:07,336 --> 00:05:10,467
THE BIG APPLE
AND LITTLE PEACH,
55
00:05:10,592 --> 00:05:13,097
THE SHAG AND SUSY Q,
56
00:05:13,229 --> 00:05:16,235
AND THE DANCE THAT HAD
STARTED IT ALL--
57
00:05:16,354 --> 00:05:21,698
THE LINDY HOP--
NOW CALLED JITTERBUGGING.
58
00:05:21,823 --> 00:05:23,952
HUNDREDS OF BANDS
WERE ON THE ROAD--
59
00:05:24,077 --> 00:05:26,708
AND YOUNG PEOPLE
FOLLOWED THE CAREERS
60
00:05:26,833 --> 00:05:28,462
OF THE MUSICIANS
WHO PLAYED IN THEM
61
00:05:28,587 --> 00:05:32,720
JUST AS THEY FOLLOWED
THEIR FAVORITE BASEBALL PLAYERS.
62
00:05:32,887 --> 00:05:36,226
MILLIONS OF WHITE AMERICANS
WHO HAD NEVER LISTENED TO JAZZ BEFORE
63
00:05:36,352 --> 00:05:40,486
SUDDENLY FILLED BALLROOMS
AND THEATERS ALL OVER THE COUNTRY--
64
00:05:40,611 --> 00:05:43,240
THE ARAGON IN CHICAGO,
65
00:05:43,366 --> 00:05:48,042
THE ALCAZAR IN BALTIMORE,
AND THE ALI BABA IN OAKLAND;
66
00:05:48,167 --> 00:05:50,881
THE TWILIGHT
IN FORT DODGE, IOWA,
67
00:05:51,006 --> 00:05:56,266
AND THE MOONLIGHT
IN CANTON, OHIO...
68
00:05:56,392 --> 00:05:58,772
THE ARCADIA BALLROOM IN DETROIT,
69
00:05:58,897 --> 00:06:02,111
THE PARAMOUNT THEATER
IN NEW YORK,
70
00:06:02,278 --> 00:06:04,450
AND THE PALOMAR BALLROOM
IN LOS ANGELES,
71
00:06:04,617 --> 00:06:07,832
WHERE BENNY GOODMAN
HAD THRILLED AUDIENCES
72
00:06:07,957 --> 00:06:11,296
WITH HIS VERSION OF THE MUSIC
FIRST PLAYED BY LOUIS ARMSTRONG,
73
00:06:11,464 --> 00:06:17,852
FLETCHER HENDERSON, CHICK WEBB
AND DUKE ELLINGTON.
74
00:06:17,977 --> 00:06:23,112
SWING MUSIC WAS
AN ELECTRIFYING DEVELOPMENT IN AMERICAN POPULAR CULTURE.
75
00:06:23,237 --> 00:06:32,088
IT UNLEASHED FORCES THAT,
I THINK, PEOPLE DIDN'T KNOW EXISTED.
76
00:06:32,213 --> 00:06:36,973
THERE HAD BEEN DANCE BANDS,
SWEET BANDS, SENTIMENTAL BANDS,
77
00:06:37,098 --> 00:06:39,019
BUT WHEN BENNY GOODMAN
REACHED THOSE KIDS
78
00:06:39,144 --> 00:06:41,482
AT THE PALOMAR BALLROOM
IN CALIFORNIA,
79
00:06:41,608 --> 00:06:43,193
IT WAS LIKE 20 YEARS LATER
WITH ROCK AND ROLL.
80
00:06:43,319 --> 00:06:46,576
HE WAS PLAYING
A SWINGING ROUGH MUSIC
81
00:06:46,701 --> 00:06:48,955
THAT HAD BEEN PLAYED
IN BLACK COMMUNITIES FOR YEARS.
82
00:06:49,080 --> 00:06:51,878
ELLINGTON, YOU KNOW,
WROTE IT DON'T MEAN A THINGIF IT AIN'T GOT THAT SWING
83
00:06:52,003 --> 00:06:53,213
3 YEARS EARLIER,
84
00:06:53,339 --> 00:06:54,884
AND CHICK WEBB'S BAND
WAS DOING IT
85
00:06:55,009 --> 00:06:56,053
AND FLETCHER HENDERSON'S.
86
00:06:56,219 --> 00:06:57,973
IT SWEPT THE COUNTRY.
87
00:06:58,098 --> 00:07:00,812
IT WAS--IT UNLEASHED
SOME KIND OF PENT-UP EXCITEMENT
88
00:07:00,938 --> 00:07:06,574
AND--AND--AND PHYSICALITY
THAT I THINK NOBODY WAS QUITE PREPARED FOR.
89
00:07:06,699 --> 00:07:09,580
ALSO, THIS WAS THE DEPRESSION.
IT WAS NOT AN EASY PERIOD.
90
00:07:09,747 --> 00:07:26,113
AND THIS WAS A MUSIC THAT
WAS JUST PURE PLEASURE, PURE PHYSICAL PLEASURE.
91
00:08:11,161 --> 00:08:14,375
WE ARE GETTING THIS MONEY
OUT JUST AS FAST AS WE CAN
92
00:08:14,543 --> 00:08:20,555
BECAUSE WE ARE ANXIOUS TO GET
THE UNEMPLOYED FROM RELIEF ROLLS ONTO PAYROLLS.
93
00:08:20,680 --> 00:08:27,569
WE ARE NOT ONLY BUILDING ROADS,
WE ARE BUILDING BRIDGES, WE'RE BUILDING DAMS...
94
00:08:27,694 --> 00:08:39,593
IT IS GOING INTO
PUBLIC BUILDINGS AND VARIOUS OTHER PROJECTS.
95
00:08:39,718 --> 00:08:45,104
SONG IS THE WIND-CHIME
OF MEMORY,
96
00:08:45,229 --> 00:08:48,611
AND THESE WERE OUR SONGS.
97
00:08:48,778 --> 00:08:53,913
THEY WERE PART OF
THE DAILY ORDINARY...
98
00:08:54,038 --> 00:08:59,090
AND THIS, I THINK, IS WHAT TOOK
BENNY OVER THE GAP,
99
00:08:59,215 --> 00:09:01,804
OUT OF JAZZ,
INTO THE AMERICAN PARLOR.
100
00:09:01,971 --> 00:09:06,731
HE ARRIVED WITH BLUESKIES.
WELL, WE KNEW BLUE SKIES.
101
00:09:06,856 --> 00:09:10,739
I MEAN, EVERYBODY KNEW
IRVING BERLIN SO THAT WE WERE HOME FREE.
102
00:09:10,864 --> 00:09:18,671
THIS IS OUR GUY.
103
00:09:18,796 --> 00:09:22,962
WITHIN A MONTH OF
BENNY GOODMAN'S UNEXPECTED SUCCESS AT THE PALOMAR,
104
00:09:22,995 --> 00:09:30,569
HIS RECORDS STOOD AT NUMBER 3,
NUMBER TWO, AND NUMBER ONE IN CALIFORNIA RECORD STORES.
105
00:09:30,695 --> 00:09:37,584
HE WAS 26 YEARS OLD
AND ALREADY BEING BILLED AS THE "KING OF SWING."
106
00:09:37,709 --> 00:09:41,884
SUDDENLY, HIS MUSIC
WAS EVERYWHERE,
107
00:09:42,009 --> 00:09:46,184
AND GOODMAN, THE RETICENT SON
OF JEWISH IMMIGRANTS FROM THE SLUMS OF CHICAGO,
108
00:09:46,322 --> 00:09:49,136
WAS BECOMING A MATINEE IDOL.
109
00:09:52,043 --> 00:09:54,380
I KIND OF WAS IN LOVE
WITH BENNY GOODMAN.
110
00:09:54,505 --> 00:09:55,537
I DON'T KNOW WHY.
111
00:09:55,924 --> 00:09:57,471
I THOUGHT HE LOOKED GREAT,
112
00:09:57,496 --> 00:09:59,548
AND I LOVED THE WAY
HE JUST STOOD THERE,
113
00:09:59,573 --> 00:10:03,361
AND HE DIDN'T OVER--
YOU KNOW--EMPHASIZE HIMSELF.
114
00:10:03,386 --> 00:10:06,281
HE WAS COOL. TO ME,
HE WAS A COOL GUY--IN MY YOUTH.
115
00:10:06,306 --> 00:10:08,785
YOU KNOW,
I WAS 16 YEARS OLD, 17.
116
00:10:08,910 --> 00:10:10,481
THE "KING OF SWING".
117
00:10:10,506 --> 00:10:12,375
YES, SIR, IT'S BENNY GOODMAN
HIMSELF, PLAYING...
118
00:10:12,400 --> 00:10:15,966
AND I USED TO PUT
THE RADIO ON AT HIGH VOLUME
119
00:10:16,091 --> 00:10:18,595
AND PUT MY EAR TO IT
TO HEAR GENE KRUPA,
120
00:10:18,620 --> 00:10:22,311
AND MY MOTHER WOULD GO CRAZY,
SAYING, "WHAT ARE YOU DOING?"
121
00:10:22,436 --> 00:10:26,898
I SAID, "MOM, SHH!
I GOTTA HEAR THIS!"
122
00:10:29,062 --> 00:10:34,795
ON MARCH 3, 1937,
BENNY GOODMAN'S ORCHESTRA BEGAN A TWO-WEEK ENGAGEMENT
123
00:10:34,920 --> 00:10:38,037
AT THE PARAMOUNT THEATER
IN TIMES SQUARE.
124
00:10:38,635 --> 00:10:42,377
UNTIL THEN, THEY HAD PLAYED
HOTELS AND BALLROOMS
125
00:10:42,398 --> 00:10:46,406
WHERE ALCOHOL WAS SERVED
AND THE CUSTOMERS WERE MOSTLY ADULTS.
126
00:10:50,957 --> 00:10:57,512
BUT AT THE PARAMOUNT,
EVERYONE WAS WELCOME.
127
00:10:57,637 --> 00:11:00,518
FOR THE FIRST TIME,
HIGH-SCHOOL STUDENTS,
128
00:11:00,643 --> 00:11:03,315
WHO HAD BEEN BUYING UP
BENNY GOODMAN'S RECORDS,
129
00:11:03,440 --> 00:11:11,540
NOW HAD A CHANCE TO SEE
THEIR HERO IN PERSON.
130
00:11:11,665 --> 00:11:13,419
THE MOMENT HAD COME,
131
00:11:13,544 --> 00:11:20,266
AND THEY WERE
POURING OUT OF THE SUBWAYS AROUND TIMES SQUARE IN MOBS,
132
00:11:20,391 --> 00:11:24,064
AND THE POLICE DIDN'T KNOW
WHAT WAS GOING ON.
133
00:11:24,190 --> 00:11:26,068
WHERE WERE ALL THESE KIDS
COMING FROM?
134
00:11:26,194 --> 00:11:28,072
WHAT WAS IT ALL ABOUT?
135
00:11:28,198 --> 00:11:34,084
THE MUSIC HAD SUCH
AN INCREDIBLE BEAT THAT IT JUST BROUGHT YOU OUT OF YOURSELF
136
00:11:34,252 --> 00:11:37,759
AND YOU GOT OUT OF YOUR SEAT
AND YOU DANCED WITH WHOEVER-- A STRANGER, YOU DIDN'T KNOW.
137
00:11:37,925 --> 00:11:46,276
BUT IT WAS JUST FUN TO GET UP
AND MOVE WITH THAT BEAT.
138
00:11:46,443 --> 00:11:50,409
AND THE KIDS STARTED
JITTERBUGGING IN THE AISLES...
139
00:11:50,534 --> 00:11:54,918
RIGHT UP AROUND THE STAGE,
AND SOME OF THEM EVEN JUMPING UP ON THE STAGE.
140
00:11:55,043 --> 00:11:57,507
AND THAT WAS WHAT TRIGGERED
A GREAT DEAL OF PUBLICITY,
141
00:11:57,632 --> 00:12:00,971
AND BENNY GOODMAN THEN,
ALTHOUGH HE HAD BEEN SUCCESSFUL,
142
00:12:01,097 --> 00:12:02,809
NOW HE HAD BECOME
REALLY AN ICON.
143
00:12:02,934 --> 00:12:05,609
A GREAT--A GREAT HERO
OF POPULAR CULTURE.
144
00:12:28,235 --> 00:12:31,992
BENNY WAS
A GOOD ROLE MODEL.
145
00:12:32,117 --> 00:12:33,829
HE COMES OUT,
HE LOOKS LIKE A GENTLEMAN,
146
00:12:33,954 --> 00:12:35,666
AND THEN, IN THE MIDDLE
OF A CLARINET SOLO,
147
00:12:35,791 --> 00:12:38,380
ALL OF A SUDDEN,
HE'S GOT ONE FOOT RAISED, AND HE'S HOPPING AROUND,
148
00:12:38,505 --> 00:12:40,718
THEN HE SITS DOWN ON A CHAIR,
AND HE PRACTICALLY FALLS OVER,
149
00:12:40,843 --> 00:12:43,348
AND HE BECOMES COMPLETELY
CONSUMED IN THE MUSIC,
150
00:12:43,474 --> 00:12:46,020
AND THIS IS MESMERIZING
FOR AN AUDIENCE BECAUSE IT'S NOT A SHOW,
151
00:12:46,145 --> 00:12:49,181
IT'S NOT A PUT-ON--
IT'S GOODMAN.
152
00:13:26,768 --> 00:13:36,496
THE THING ABOUT BENNY
THAT WAS SO GREAT WAS THAT IT WAS KIND OF AN EXPLOSION.
153
00:13:36,663 --> 00:13:41,548
HE SHOWED UP ON THE SCENE,
COMPLETELY UNKNOWN AS FAR AS WE WERE CONCERNED.
154
00:13:41,673 --> 00:13:44,345
WE KNEW ELLINGTON,
WE KNEW ALL THE OTHER BIG NAMES,
155
00:13:44,470 --> 00:13:46,683
AND HERE IS THIS KID
NOBODY HAD EVER HEARD OF.
156
00:13:46,808 --> 00:13:53,822
AND OVERNIGHT, THIS GUY WALKS
INTO THE AMERICAN PARLOR WITH JAZZ BY THE SCRUFF OF ITS NECK.
157
00:13:53,947 --> 00:13:57,384
AND ALL OF A SUDDEN, JAZZ,
WHICH WAS ALMOST A CULT MUSIC,
158
00:13:57,411 --> 00:13:59,778
HAS BECOME
AMERICAN POPULAR MUSIC,
159
00:13:59,898 --> 00:14:01,424
AND THAT'S WHAT GOODMAN DID.
160
00:14:45,759 --> 00:14:51,646
JAZZ MUSIC
IS NOT RACE MUSIC.
161
00:14:51,771 --> 00:14:57,198
EVERYBODY PLAYS JAZZ MUSIC.
EVERYBODY HAS ALWAYS PLAYED IT.
162
00:14:57,323 --> 00:15:03,503
BUT IF YOU TEACH THE HISTORY
OF JAZZ, YOU HAVE WHITE BANDS AND BLACK BANDS.
163
00:15:03,628 --> 00:15:06,341
BUT MUSICIANS DON'T
LEARN THAT WAY.
164
00:15:06,509 --> 00:15:09,347
SEE, THIS IS THE BIG LIE
IN THE WAY THAT IT'S TAUGHT.
165
00:15:09,515 --> 00:15:16,028
BENNY GOODMAN WAS GOING TO LEARN
THE CLARINET FROM WHOEVER HE COULD.
166
00:15:16,153 --> 00:15:18,206
THAT'S HOW MUSIC IS.
167
00:15:18,351 --> 00:15:21,858
YOU HEAR SOMETHING YOU LIKE,
AND YOU WANT TO PLAY LIKE THAT.
168
00:15:22,356 --> 00:15:24,966
IT'S NOT SO MUCH THAT HE WAS
THE GREAT WHITE HOPE,
169
00:15:25,119 --> 00:15:29,480
IT'S JUST THAT THE MAJORITY OF PEOPLE
WHO BOUGHT THE RECORDS WERE WHITE,
170
00:15:29,614 --> 00:15:30,949
THE MAJORITY OF PEOPLE WHO WROTE
ABOUT IT WERE WHITE,
171
00:15:31,074 --> 00:15:32,786
THE RECORD COMPANIES WERE OWNED
BY WHITE PEOPLE.
172
00:15:32,912 --> 00:15:35,918
JUST THE MUSIC CAME OUT OF
THE AFRO-AMERICAN COMMUNITY.
173
00:15:36,043 --> 00:15:40,510
SO IT JUST STANDS TO LOGIC
AND REASON THAT THE KING OF IT WOULD BE WHITE.
174
00:15:40,677 --> 00:15:46,649
NOW, BENNY GOODMAN HIMSELF
DIDN'T THINK THAT.
175
00:15:56,333 --> 00:15:59,715
WHERE DID
YOU GET YOUR IDEAS FROM?
176
00:15:59,840 --> 00:16:06,103
THE IDEAS? OH, MAN,
I GOT A MILLION DREAMS.
177
00:16:06,228 --> 00:16:09,401
IT'S ALL I DO IS DREAM...
ALL THE TIME.
178
00:16:09,527 --> 00:16:11,698
I THOUGHT
YOU PLAYED PIANO.
179
00:16:11,823 --> 00:16:14,160
NO. THIS NOT PIANO;
THIS IS DREAMING.
180
00:16:43,928 --> 00:16:47,811
THAT'S DREAMING.
181
00:16:47,936 --> 00:16:55,577
ELLINGTON ONCE DEFINED
JAZZ AS "NEGRO FEELINGS,"
182
00:16:55,702 --> 00:17:04,678
BY WHICH HE MEANT AMERICAN NEGRO
FEELINGS PUT TO RHYTHM AND TUNE.
183
00:17:04,845 --> 00:17:13,655
ELLINGTON'S MUSIC REPRESENTED
THE MUSICAL EQUIVALENT
184
00:17:13,780 --> 00:17:23,090
TO THE AMERICAN SPIRIT
OF AFFIRMATION IN THE FACE OF ADVERSITY.
185
00:17:23,215 --> 00:17:27,306
IT WAS CONSTANTLY CREATIVE,
YOU KNOW?
186
00:17:27,432 --> 00:17:34,112
IT GENERATED RESILIENCE WHICH
MADE AN EXPERIMENTAL ATTITUDE POSSIBLE.
187
00:17:34,237 --> 00:18:15,862
MEANT YOU DEVELOPED
AN EXPERIMENTAL DISPOSITION...
188
00:18:15,987 --> 00:18:18,701
DUKE ELLINGTON NEVER
PUBLICLY COMPLAINED
189
00:18:18,826 --> 00:18:22,500
ABOUT BENNY GOODMAN'S CORONATION
AS "THE KING OF SWING"
190
00:18:22,625 --> 00:18:27,678
OR THE ENORMOUS POPULARITY
OF THE NEW, MOSTLY WHITE BANDS THAT FOLLOWED IN HIS WAKE.
191
00:18:27,803 --> 00:18:32,520
"JAZZ IS MUSIC," HE SAID.
"SWING IS BUSINESS."
192
00:18:36,696 --> 00:18:42,666
HE CONTINUED ON
HIS OWN INDEPENDENT COURSE, REFUSING TO BE CATEGORIZED.
193
00:18:42,791 --> 00:18:48,176
BY DOING THAT, HIS TRUMPETER
REX STEWART REMEMBERED,
194
00:18:48,302 --> 00:18:50,639
"HE COULD STAND ABOVE
HIS CONTEMPORARIES...
195
00:18:50,765 --> 00:18:54,898
IN THE MANNER
OF A GOD DESCENDING FROM OLYMPIAN HEIGHTS...
196
00:18:55,065 --> 00:19:02,246
LET THE WORLD CATCH UP."
197
00:19:02,371 --> 00:19:05,419
HE WAS WRITING
FOR A SPECIAL ORCHESTRA,
198
00:19:05,544 --> 00:19:08,592
AND HE WAS NOT GOING
TO BE CARRIED AWAY
199
00:19:08,718 --> 00:19:11,932
BY A NEW TREND OR A NEW--
A NEW KIND OF STYLE
200
00:19:12,058 --> 00:19:16,274
JUST TO SAY,
WELL, HE'S AMONG THEM.
201
00:19:16,441 --> 00:19:20,157
HE WASN'T WORRIED ABOUT WHETHER
HE'S NUMBER ONE OR TWO OR 3.
202
00:19:20,282 --> 00:19:21,869
HE WANTED TO BE HONEST
TO HIMSELF,
203
00:19:21,994 --> 00:19:24,165
TO WHAT HE WANTED
TO DO WITH THAT ORCHESTRA.
204
00:19:24,290 --> 00:19:30,135
AND SO HE JUST SWAM THROUGH
THE WHOLE THING AND STILL COMES OUT TO BE AN IMMORTAL.
205
00:19:38,778 --> 00:19:44,873
AT THAT TIME, THERE
STILL WAS THIS DESIRE TO PUSH THE BLACK MAN DOWN AT ALL COSTS,
206
00:19:44,998 --> 00:19:50,802
AND DUKE ELLINGTON--HE WAS A MAN
WITH A LOT OF FIRE AND PRIDE,
207
00:19:50,927 --> 00:19:55,519
AND YOU CAN BELIEVE THAT
DUKE ELLINGTON DID NOT LIKE WHAT HE SAW GOING ON.
208
00:19:55,644 --> 00:20:00,571
AND EVEN THOUGH HE WASN'T
THE TYPE OF MAN WHO WOULD COME OUT
209
00:20:00,696 --> 00:20:02,784
WITH A LOT OF
VERBAL PRONOUNCEMENTS ON IT,
210
00:20:02,909 --> 00:20:05,749
IN HIS MUSIC,
HE MAKES IT VERY, VERY CLEAR
211
00:20:05,874 --> 00:20:09,757
THAT HE IS VERY, VERY PROUD OF
WHO HE IS, WHAT HE IS,
212
00:20:09,882 --> 00:20:13,221
AND HE FEELS THAT HIS MUSIC
AND THE MUSIC OF HIS PEOPLE
213
00:20:13,346 --> 00:20:19,192
WAS A TREMENDOUS CONTRIBUTION
TO THE WORLD OF MUSIC, BAR NONE.
214
00:20:19,317 --> 00:20:23,575
AN INTERVIEWER ONCE
ASKED ELLINGTON HOW HE FELT
215
00:20:23,700 --> 00:20:29,337
ABOUT THE FACT THAT HE
COULD NOT STAY IN MANY OF THE HOTELS HE PLAYED.
216
00:20:29,462 --> 00:20:31,926
ELLINGTON DEFLECTED
THE QUESTION.
217
00:20:32,051 --> 00:20:34,138
"I TOOK THE ENERGY
IT TAKES TO POUT," HE SAID,
218
00:20:34,263 --> 00:20:42,112
"AND WROTE SOME BLUES."
219
00:21:32,671 --> 00:21:35,135
♪♪ I'M BLUE AGAIN ♪♪
220
00:21:35,260 --> 00:21:36,387
♪♪ BLUE AGAIN... ♪♪
221
00:21:36,554 --> 00:21:38,725
Narrator: BY THE MID-1930s,
LOUIS ARMSTRONG,
222
00:21:38,893 --> 00:21:44,905
THE MAN WHO HAD FIRST TAUGHT
A BIG BAND TO SWING, WAS IN TROUBLE.
223
00:21:45,030 --> 00:21:54,590
HE WAS OUT OF WORK, PRESSED
FOR CASH, AND HADN'T RECORDED IN THE UNITED STATES FOR TWO YEARS.
224
00:21:54,715 --> 00:21:58,264
TWO EX-AGENTS WITH GANGSTER
CONNECTIONS WERE SUING HIM--
225
00:21:58,390 --> 00:22:02,564
AND ONE WAS THREATENING
BODILY HARM.
226
00:22:02,690 --> 00:22:08,243
ARMSTRONG NEEDED HELP.
HE HIRED A NEW MANAGER.
227
00:22:08,368 --> 00:22:13,169
JOE GLASER WAS
A HARD, HOT-TEMPERED MAN, COARSE AND CONTROLLING,
228
00:22:13,294 --> 00:22:16,634
WITH HIS OWN STRONG LINKS
TO THE MOB.
229
00:22:16,801 --> 00:22:21,269
THE TWO MEN NEVER
HAD A WRITTEN CONTRACT, BUT FOR THE NEXT 30 YEARS,
230
00:22:21,394 --> 00:22:26,320
HALF OF EVERYTHING ARMSTRONG
EARNED WENT TO GLASER.
231
00:22:26,487 --> 00:22:32,875
IN RETURN, GLASER WORKED
TIRELESSLY FOR HIS STAR.
232
00:22:33,001 --> 00:22:38,511
HE BOUGHT OUT
ARMSTRONG'S FORMER AGENTS, PLACATED HIS EX-WIFE,
233
00:22:38,636 --> 00:22:41,684
MADE SURE HE PLAYED THE BEST
NIGHTCLUBS AND DANCEHALLS,
234
00:22:41,809 --> 00:22:45,358
AND GOT HIM A LUCRATIVE CONTRACT
WITH DECCA RECORDS.
235
00:22:45,525 --> 00:22:49,033
ARMSTRONG WAS HAPPY
FOR THE HELP.
236
00:22:49,158 --> 00:22:51,370
HE WAS FOLLOWING
THE PRACTICAL ADVICE
237
00:22:51,537 --> 00:22:56,714
A NEW ORLEANS BOUNCER HAD GIVEN
HIM YEARS BEFORE: IN A WORLD RUN BY WHITE PEOPLE,
238
00:22:56,839 --> 00:23:01,724
"ALWAYS HAVE A WHITE MAN
BEHIND YOU."
239
00:23:01,849 --> 00:23:06,234
JOE GLASER WAS TOUGH,
HE WAS BRUTAL, HE USED TO HAVE SALAMIS HANGING FROM HIS OFFICE.
240
00:23:06,359 --> 00:23:08,238
THE TERRIBLE ODOR.
241
00:23:08,404 --> 00:23:10,993
AND IF HE LIKED YOU,
HE'D PULL DOWN A SALAMI AND GIVE IT TO YOU.
242
00:23:11,119 --> 00:23:16,921
AND ARMSTRONG'S DEVOTION TO
GLASER, HOWEVER MUCH GLASER MAY DISTURB THE REST OF US,
243
00:23:17,047 --> 00:23:22,015
HIS DEVOTION TO GLASER WAS REAL
AND IT WAS ABSOLUTE.
244
00:23:25,730 --> 00:23:30,157
ARMSTRONG ALSO
APPEARED IN THE MOVIES.
245
00:23:30,282 --> 00:23:32,411
ONE OF HIS FIRST FILMS
WAS A SHORT CALLED
246
00:23:32,536 --> 00:23:35,125
A RHAPSODY IN BLACK AND BLUE.
247
00:23:35,292 --> 00:23:41,137
UNLIKE DUKE ELLINGTON,
WHO ALWAYS APPEARED ON-SCREEN
248
00:23:41,262 --> 00:23:45,770
AS HE WAS IN LIFE--
SUAVE AND SOPHISTICATED--
249
00:23:45,896 --> 00:23:48,693
LOUIS ARMSTRONG,
A DARK-SKINNED BLACK MAN,
250
00:23:48,818 --> 00:24:02,346
WAS OFFERED
VERY DIFFERENT ROLES.
251
00:24:02,471 --> 00:24:08,024
HE'S DRESSED IN
A LEOPARD SKIN, HE'S STANDING ANKLE DEEP IN SOAP BUBBLES,
252
00:24:08,191 --> 00:24:12,324
AND HE'S PERFORMING IN HEAVEN
BECAUSE SOMEBODY WAS DREAMING THIS.
253
00:24:12,449 --> 00:24:15,747
SO THERE'S ALL SORTS OF
MINSTREL KIND OF HUMOR SURROUNDING IT.
254
00:24:15,872 --> 00:24:19,463
♪♪ OH, CHERRY DROP
THAT MEAN, 'CAUSE ♪♪
255
00:24:19,588 --> 00:24:24,223
♪♪ MY HAIR IS GRITTY ♪♪
256
00:24:24,390 --> 00:24:28,037
♪♪ JUST BECAUSE MY TEETH
ARE PEARLY ♪♪
257
00:24:28,091 --> 00:24:30,805
BUT WHAT ARE YOU
ACTUALLY SEEING?
258
00:24:30,943 --> 00:24:35,745
YOU'RE SEEING A VERY POWERFUL,
CHARISMATIC BLACK MAN
259
00:24:35,857 --> 00:24:39,113
WHO IS PRACTICALLY
FLEXING HIS MUSCLES AT YOU
260
00:24:39,238 --> 00:24:42,620
BECAUSE THEY ARE BARED
BY THE LEOPARD SKIN,
261
00:24:42,787 --> 00:24:45,167
AND SINGING THE TUNE "SHINE",
262
00:24:45,292 --> 00:24:47,129
WHICH ITSELF
IS A MINSTREL NUMBER,
263
00:24:47,254 --> 00:24:49,300
IN SUCH A WAY THAT IT BECOMES--
264
00:24:49,425 --> 00:24:53,768
IT LOSES WHATEVER MINSTREL
OR NEGATIVE QUALITIES IT HAS.
265
00:24:53,893 --> 00:25:01,302
AND PLAYING THIS UNBELIEVABLE,
UNPRECEDENTED, MAGNIFICENT VIRTUOSO TRUMPET.
266
00:25:23,660 --> 00:25:28,533
BUT THE ARMSTRONG EFFECT
WAS JUST TOO COMPLICATED FOR MOST PEOPLE.
267
00:25:30,883 --> 00:25:32,386
THEY BECAME EMBARRASSED
ABOUT IT,
268
00:25:32,511 --> 00:25:34,891
AND THEY REFUSED TO SEE
WHAT WAS CLEARLY ON THE SCREEN,
269
00:25:35,017 --> 00:25:37,354
WHICH WAS A BRILLIANT,
BRILLIANT YOUNG MAN
270
00:25:37,479 --> 00:25:39,692
THEY'RE TRYING TO IMPRISON
WITH THESE STEREOTYPES,
271
00:25:39,818 --> 00:25:43,119
AND HE'S JUST BREAKING
THE CHAINS RIGHT AND LEFT.
272
00:25:51,332 --> 00:25:54,296
MOVIES MADE ARMSTRONG
EVEN MORE FAMOUS
273
00:25:54,321 --> 00:25:59,457
AND INTRODUCED HIS MUSIC TO A
STILL LARGER NATIONAL AUDIENCE.
274
00:25:59,482 --> 00:26:06,788
LOOK OUT, BOYS,
FOR PUBLIC MELODY #1. HA!
275
00:26:09,126 --> 00:26:11,297
BUT AS THE SWING ERA
REACHED ITS ZENITH,
276
00:26:11,422 --> 00:26:13,468
MOST AMERICANS REMAINED UNAWARE
277
00:26:13,635 --> 00:26:22,319
OF HOW CENTRAL LOUIS ARMSTRONG
WAS TO THE MUSIC THEY LOVED.
278
00:26:22,444 --> 00:26:26,452
WHEN YOU LISTEN TO
BENNY GOODMAN PLAYING THOSE FLETCHER HENDERSON CHARTS,
279
00:26:26,577 --> 00:26:28,164
AND HE GOES, YOU KNOW...
280
00:26:28,331 --> 00:26:30,335
♪♪ BAP BA DA DOO DEE DOO BE DOO
BAP BE DAP ♪♪
281
00:26:30,460 --> 00:26:32,381
YOU KNOW, IF YOU JUST MAKE
THE VOICE A LITTLE GRAVELLY...
282
00:26:32,506 --> 00:26:33,466
♪♪ BAP BA DA DOO DA DOO ♪♪
283
00:26:33,591 --> 00:26:36,389
♪♪ BAP BA DA DOO DA DOO... ♪♪
284
00:26:36,514 --> 00:26:38,936
YOU CAN HEAR ARMSTRONG
IN EVERY PHRASE.
285
00:26:39,061 --> 00:26:42,025
SO, LOOK OUT
FOR PUBLIC MELODY #1.
286
00:26:42,192 --> 00:26:45,782
THE MORE YOU LISTEN TO
THOSE ARRANGEMENTS, THE MORE YOU LISTEN TO THE SOLOISTS,
287
00:26:45,908 --> 00:26:48,246
THE MORE YOU LISTEN
TO EVERYTHING IN JAZZ,
288
00:26:48,371 --> 00:26:50,667
THE MORE YOU KEEP HEARING
LOUIS, LOUIS, LOUIS.
289
00:26:50,792 --> 00:26:52,922
I MEAN, HE CREATED
THE VOCABULARY.
290
00:26:53,047 --> 00:26:56,345
AND WE'VE NEVER REALLY GOTTEN
SO FAR BEYOND IT
291
00:26:56,471 --> 00:26:59,602
THAT IT DOESN'T KEEP CROPPING UP
AND THAT YOU DON'T HEAR ECHOES OF IT.
292
00:26:59,727 --> 00:27:02,566
BUT IN SWING, IT REALLY IS,
THE SOUND THAT HE BROUGHT,
293
00:27:02,733 --> 00:27:05,405
THAT INCREDIBLE POWER,
IT'S ORCHESTRATED FOR A BIG BAND.
294
00:27:05,530 --> 00:27:19,266
IT'S ORCHESTRATED LOUIS.
THAT'S WHAT THE SWING ERA IS.
295
00:27:19,391 --> 00:27:25,654
THE BIG BAND MUSIC WAS
POPULAR BECAUSE FIRST IT COMES OUT OF THE SOIL OF THE COUNTRY.
296
00:27:25,779 --> 00:27:32,459
IT HAS THE HAPPINESS AND JOY
OF THE SOUND OF JAZZ IN IT.
297
00:27:32,584 --> 00:27:36,884
IT WAS AT A CERTAIN TIME IN
THE COUNTRY WHERE YOU HAVE A CERTAIN SOPHISTICATION
298
00:27:37,010 --> 00:27:42,981
AND A BELIEF
IN ADULT SENSIBILITY.
299
00:27:43,147 --> 00:27:46,445
YOU HAD THE FLOWERING
OF THE AMERICAN POPULAR SONGS.
300
00:27:46,571 --> 00:27:50,161
SO YOU HAD A LOT
OF POPULAR MATERIAL THEY COULD SING AND PLAY.
301
00:27:50,287 --> 00:27:54,336
YOU HAD RADIO, WHICH WAS JUST
REALLY KICKING IN, WHICH WAS PROJECTING THE BANDS.
302
00:27:54,461 --> 00:27:57,384
AND YOU HAD, ALSO, A FANTASTIC
BELIEF IN THE COUNTRY,
303
00:27:57,509 --> 00:28:01,350
LIKE A MATINEE
IN THE ROSELAND BALLROOM OR THEN THE COTTON CLUB.
304
00:28:01,475 --> 00:28:03,771
THEY WOULD HEAR THAT
ON THE RADIO AND THINK, "BOY, THIS IS SOME GREAT THING,"
305
00:28:03,897 --> 00:28:06,110
LIKE, YOU WOULD LOOK
AT SOMETHING THAT WOULD SAY, "MADE IN NEW YORK,"
306
00:28:06,235 --> 00:28:09,199
AND IF YOU WEREN'T IN NEW YORK,
YOU WOULD THINK, "BOY, NEW YORK CITY."
307
00:28:12,289 --> 00:28:14,043
A PLEASANT
AND GOOD EVENING TO YOU, LADIES AND GENTLEMEN,
308
00:28:14,209 --> 00:28:15,879
FROM MANHATTAN
TO THE GOLDEN GATE.
309
00:28:16,005 --> 00:28:20,430
IT'S ANOTHER FIRST NIGHTER
ON THE AIR FOR THE NATIONAL BROADCASTING COMPANY...
310
00:28:20,555 --> 00:28:24,730
ONE OF
THE GREAT THRILLS WAS AT THE PARAMOUNT THEATER
311
00:28:24,855 --> 00:28:30,617
WHEN YOU WOULD BE A TEENAGER--
12, EVEN AS YOUNG AS 12, 13, 14, 15--
312
00:28:30,742 --> 00:28:35,168
AND YOU'D SAVED YOUR PENNIES,
AND YOU WERE ABLE TO GO TO THE THEATER
313
00:28:35,293 --> 00:28:37,089
TO HEAR YOUR FAVORITE BAND,
314
00:28:37,214 --> 00:28:39,426
AND YOU WOULD HEAR
IN THE DISTANCE
315
00:28:39,551 --> 00:28:43,434
THE BEGINNINGS OF THE SOUND
OF THE THEME OF THAT ORCHESTRA,
316
00:28:43,601 --> 00:28:46,482
AND YOU WOULD HEAR THAT VERY
FAINTLY IN THE BACKGROUND...
317
00:28:51,450 --> 00:28:56,210
AND THEN THE BAND WOULD
RISE UP ON THIS RISING STAGE THAT THEY HAD
318
00:28:56,335 --> 00:29:10,613
AND COME INTO SIGHT PLAYING
THEIR CLASSIC THEME...
319
00:29:10,739 --> 00:29:12,951
AND THAT WAS--THAT WAS CHILLS,
I'M TELLING YOU,
320
00:29:13,077 --> 00:29:14,705
THAT WAS CHILLS RIGHT UP
YOUR BACK AND ACROSS THE TOP OF YOUR HEAD.
321
00:29:14,830 --> 00:29:18,671
THAT WAS SOMETHING.
322
00:29:18,796 --> 00:29:22,054
IN THE WAKE
OF BENNY GOODMAN'S ASTONISHING SUCCESS,
323
00:29:22,179 --> 00:29:25,685
THE SOUNDS OF DOZENS OF
BIG BANDS NOW FILLED THE AIR
324
00:29:25,810 --> 00:29:30,487
AND HELPED DRAW MILLIONS TO
MOVIE THEATERS AND DANCEHALLS.
325
00:29:30,612 --> 00:29:35,038
SOME PLAYED PRECIOUS LITTLE
JAZZ, EMPHASIZING POP TUNES
326
00:29:35,163 --> 00:29:40,131
AND FEATURING ATTRACTIVE SINGERS
GUARANTEED TO BOOST THE BOX OFFICE.
327
00:29:40,256 --> 00:29:48,397
BUT ALL OF THEM ENCOURAGED
AMERICANS TO GET BACK ON THEIR FEET AND DANCE.
328
00:29:48,523 --> 00:29:52,072
THERE WAS WOODY HERMAN'S
"BAND THAT PLAYS THE BLUES"
329
00:29:52,197 --> 00:29:55,703
AND THE CASA LOMA ORCHESTRA.
330
00:29:55,829 --> 00:29:58,876
BOB CROSBY AND THE BOBCATS.
331
00:29:59,001 --> 00:30:03,469
KAY KYSER AND HIS KOLLEGE
OF MUSICAL KNOWLEDGE.
332
00:30:03,594 --> 00:30:07,644
THERE WERE THE ALL-GIRL
INTERNATIONAL SWEETHEARTS OF RHYTHM
333
00:30:07,769 --> 00:30:11,485
AND INA RAY HUTTON
AND HER MELODEARS.
334
00:30:11,610 --> 00:30:13,573
EARL HINES HAD AN ORCHESTRA,
335
00:30:13,698 --> 00:30:15,702
SO DID BENNY CARTER...
336
00:30:15,827 --> 00:30:18,166
AND CHARLIE BARNET...
337
00:30:18,291 --> 00:30:27,225
AND JIMMIE LUNCEFORD.
338
00:30:27,350 --> 00:30:30,064
MEN, JUBILEE
IS ON THE AIR TO BRING YOU
339
00:30:30,190 --> 00:30:31,984
RIFF NUMBER ONE OF THE BATTLE
OF BARREL HOUSE,
340
00:30:32,152 --> 00:30:33,738
BOOGIE WOOGIE,
AND THE BLUES.
341
00:30:33,863 --> 00:30:35,950
FOR THOSE OF YOU WHO DON'T
COTTON TO A MELODIC HANDLE,
342
00:30:36,076 --> 00:30:39,166
THE TREBLE CLEF IS NOW BEING
TINTINNABULATED BY THE CAT
343
00:30:39,333 --> 00:30:41,670
WHOSE PAW IS THE DADDY OF
THE DICTY DOWNBEAT,
344
00:30:41,837 --> 00:30:43,257
JIMMIE LUNCEFORD.
345
00:30:49,436 --> 00:30:50,313
♪♪ BOY ♪♪
346
00:30:50,438 --> 00:30:51,732
♪♪ GINGER AND DYNAMITE ♪♪
347
00:30:51,857 --> 00:30:53,402
♪♪ ALL THEY SERVE TONIGHT ♪♪
348
00:30:53,527 --> 00:30:54,863
♪♪ BACK IN NAGASAKI WHERE
THE FELLAS CHEW TOBACCKY ♪♪
349
00:30:54,988 --> 00:30:57,076
♪♪ AND THE WOMEN
WICKY-WACKY-WOO! ♪♪
350
00:30:57,202 --> 00:30:58,537
♪♪ THE WAY THEY ENTERTAIN ♪♪
351
00:30:58,704 --> 00:31:00,208
♪♪ HURRY UP A HURRICANE ♪♪
352
00:31:00,375 --> 00:31:01,460
♪♪ BACK IN NAGASAKI WHERE
THE FELLAS CHEW TOBACCKY ♪♪
353
00:31:01,585 --> 00:31:04,383
♪♪ AND THE WOMEN
WICKY-WACKY-WOO! ♪♪
354
00:31:04,549 --> 00:31:06,595
JIMMIE LUNCEFORD
ONCE SAID THAT
355
00:31:06,720 --> 00:31:09,518
"A BAND THAT LOOKS GOOD,
GOES IN FOR BETTER SHOWMANSHIP,
356
00:31:09,643 --> 00:31:12,482
"AND SEEMS TO BE
ENJOYING ITS WORK,
357
00:31:12,607 --> 00:31:17,450
WILL ALWAYS BE SURE OF
A RETURN VISIT."
358
00:31:17,575 --> 00:31:24,256
LUNCEFORD'S ORCHESTRA
WOULD DEMONSTRATE THAT NIGHT AFTER NIGHT.
359
00:31:24,423 --> 00:31:26,677
HE HAD FINE SOLOISTS,
360
00:31:26,802 --> 00:31:29,141
BUT IT WAS THE BAND'S
ASTONISHING ENSEMBLE PRECISION
361
00:31:29,266 --> 00:31:31,687
THAT BROUGHT THE DANCERS
OUT ONTO THE FLOOR
362
00:31:31,812 --> 00:31:42,876
WHEREVER IT PLAYED.
363
00:31:43,001 --> 00:31:48,387
JIMMIE LUNCEFORD
HAD THE GREATEST SHOW BAND THAT EVER WAS.
364
00:31:48,512 --> 00:31:50,600
THE GUYS IN THAT BAND
WERE BEAUTIFUL.
365
00:31:50,725 --> 00:31:53,689
THEY HAD THE BEST-TAILORED
UNIFORMS IN THE BUSINESS,
366
00:31:53,814 --> 00:31:57,906
AND THEY ALL LOOKED GREAT.
367
00:31:58,031 --> 00:32:02,874
AND THEY HAD ALL KINDS
OF HAND THINGS, AND THEY HAD NOVELTY VOCALS.
368
00:32:02,999 --> 00:32:04,753
THEY HAD ROUTINES WHERE
THEY WOULD THROW
369
00:32:04,878 --> 00:32:13,646
THE TRUMPETS UP IN THE AIR
AND CATCH THEM SIMULTANEOUSLY.
370
00:32:13,771 --> 00:32:17,278
VERY FEW PEOPLE ARE TALKING
ABOUT JIMMIE LUNCEFORD.
371
00:32:17,404 --> 00:32:21,167
JIMMIE HAD A GREAT RESPECT
FOR WHAT HE WAS DOING,
372
00:32:21,227 --> 00:32:24,776
AND HE INFUSED HIS MEN
WITH THAT RESPECT.
373
00:32:24,901 --> 00:32:26,738
AND HE HAD A LOT OF
PRIMA DONNAS IN THAT BAND,
374
00:32:26,864 --> 00:32:28,533
BUT ONCE THEY WERE
IN THAT BAND,
375
00:32:28,659 --> 00:32:30,370
THEY SUBMERGED
THEIR PERSONALITIES
376
00:32:30,495 --> 00:32:32,792
INTO THE OVERALL ENSEMBLE.
377
00:32:32,917 --> 00:32:37,342
AND IT WAS A TREMENDOUS BAND.
378
00:32:37,467 --> 00:32:45,233
IT WAS ALWAYS AT ITS PEAK.
379
00:32:55,295 --> 00:32:59,386
MMM...WHAT MUSIC,
LET'S DANCE.
380
00:32:59,511 --> 00:33:08,613
NO, LET'S LISTEN,
IT'S TOMMY DORSEY.
381
00:33:08,739 --> 00:33:11,703
AND HERE'S THAT
SENTIMENTAL GENTLEMAN HIMSELF,
382
00:33:11,828 --> 00:33:13,247
TOMMY DORSEY!
383
00:33:24,395 --> 00:33:27,819
THOUGH
HE WAS BILLED AS
384
00:33:27,944 --> 00:33:29,781
"THE SENTIMENTAL GENTLEMAN
OF SWING,"
385
00:33:29,906 --> 00:33:34,791
THERE WAS NOTHING SENTIMENTAL
ABOUT TOMMY DORSEY.
386
00:33:34,916 --> 00:33:38,006
HE WAS COMBATIVE
AND TIGHT-FISTED,
387
00:33:38,131 --> 00:33:41,554
A HARD-DRINKING TASKMASTER
WHO CREATED HIS OWN BAND
388
00:33:41,679 --> 00:33:44,226
MOSTLY BECAUSE HE COULD
NO LONGER BEAR TO PLAY
389
00:33:44,351 --> 00:33:46,982
ALONGSIDE HIS BROTHER, JIMMY.
390
00:33:47,107 --> 00:33:52,242
BUT HIS BAND WAS HUGELY POPULAR
AND THROUGH ITS RANKS MOVED
391
00:33:52,367 --> 00:33:57,127
SUCH STARS AS BUNNY BERIGAN,
DAVE TOUGH, BUDDY RICH,
392
00:33:57,252 --> 00:34:00,050
AND A SKINNY SINGER FROM
HOBOKEN, NEW JERSEY,
393
00:34:00,175 --> 00:34:03,014
NAMED FRANK SINATRA.
394
00:34:03,181 --> 00:34:07,857
DORSEY, HE WAS
A SUPERB MUSICIAN,
395
00:34:08,024 --> 00:34:11,782
HE WAS A GREAT TROMBONE PLAYER.
396
00:34:11,907 --> 00:34:17,542
TOMMY MADE THE TROMBONE
INTO A SINGING INSTRUMENT.
397
00:34:17,667 --> 00:34:20,925
HE WAS THE FIRST GUY WHO TOOK IT
FROM A "BLATTING" INSTRUMENT,
398
00:34:21,050 --> 00:34:24,264
YOU KNOW... ♪♪ TA DA TA DA
DA DAH DA DA DA DA DAH ♪♪
399
00:34:24,389 --> 00:34:26,268
AND HE MADE IT INTO
A SONG INSTRUMENT.
400
00:34:26,393 --> 00:34:27,980
HE PLAYED MELODIES ON IT.
401
00:34:28,106 --> 00:34:29,776
HIS BREATH CONTROL WAS SUPERB.
402
00:34:29,901 --> 00:34:32,072
HE WAS A HELL OF A PLAYER.
HE HAD A HELL OF A BAND.
403
00:34:32,197 --> 00:34:37,082
VERY, VERY,
VERY UNDERESTIMATED.
404
00:34:37,207 --> 00:34:39,963
HE REALLY, I THINK,
MORE THAN ANYBODY ELSE,
405
00:34:40,088 --> 00:34:44,054
WAS ABLE TO CREATE AN ORCHESTRA
THAT HAD TWO SOULS.
406
00:34:44,179 --> 00:34:45,975
IT COULD BE A VERY GOOD
JAZZ ORCHESTRA
407
00:34:46,100 --> 00:34:47,895
AND A VERY GOOD POP ORCHESTRA.
408
00:34:48,020 --> 00:34:51,152
IT COULD BE A SWEET BAND
PLAYING VERY SENTIMENTAL TUNES,
409
00:34:51,277 --> 00:34:53,239
BUT IT COULD ALSO BE
A VERY VIGOROUS JAZZ BAND.
410
00:34:53,364 --> 00:35:44,758
AND HE ALWAYS KEPT
VERY GOOD SOLOISTS IN THE BAND.
411
00:36:02,837 --> 00:36:07,888
ONE OF THE MOST
POPULAR SWING BANDS OF ALL TIME WAS LED BY
412
00:36:08,014 --> 00:36:11,020
ANOTHER TROMBONIST,
GLENN MILLER,
413
00:36:11,145 --> 00:36:13,357
WHO FAVORED TIGHTLY
CONTROLLED ARRANGEMENTS--
414
00:36:13,482 --> 00:36:17,782
AND PLENTY OF VOCALS
AND SHOWMANSHIP.
415
00:36:17,908 --> 00:36:21,123
♪♪ HI THERE, TEX,
HOW'S YOUR NEW ROMANCE ♪♪
416
00:36:21,290 --> 00:36:24,629
♪♪ THE ONE YOU MET AT
THE CAMPUS DANCE? ♪♪
417
00:36:24,796 --> 00:36:26,508
♪♪ WAIT UNTIL
YOU SEE HER ♪♪
418
00:36:26,633 --> 00:36:28,054
♪♪ YOU'LL AGREE ♪♪
419
00:36:28,179 --> 00:36:34,901
♪♪ MY HOMETOWN GAL'S
THE ONLY ONE FOR ME ♪♪
420
00:36:35,026 --> 00:36:41,246
♪♪ A-B-C-D-E-F-G-H-
I GOT A GAL ♪♪
421
00:36:41,372 --> 00:36:44,151
♪♪ IN KALAMAZOO ♪♪
422
00:36:44,171 --> 00:36:45,717
I THINK THE IMPORTANCE
OF GLENN MILLER
423
00:36:45,842 --> 00:36:49,515
WAS THAT HE POPULARIZED
SWING MUSIC FOR A LOT OF PEOPLE
424
00:36:49,640 --> 00:36:53,315
WHO COULDN'T EVEN GET WITH,
YOU KNOW, GOODMAN AND ELLINGTON.
425
00:36:53,440 --> 00:36:55,360
HE MADE IT VERY ROMANTIC.
426
00:36:55,485 --> 00:36:58,784
HE CREATED THE SOUND OF
THAT ERA THAT--THAT--
427
00:36:58,910 --> 00:37:00,537
THAT A LOT OF PEOPLE
WILL ALWAYS ASSOCIATE--
428
00:37:00,662 --> 00:37:02,541
PEOPLE WHO WERE ALIVE THEN--
WITH THAT PERIOD.
429
00:37:02,667 --> 00:37:04,545
AND IT'S NOT
A NEGLIGIBLE CONTRIBUTION.
430
00:37:04,713 --> 00:37:09,013
CERTAINLY, IT'S NOT CREATIVE
IN A TRADITIONAL JAZZ SENSE,
431
00:37:09,138 --> 00:37:11,727
BUT IT'S A--IT'S A POTENT BREW.
432
00:37:11,852 --> 00:37:13,563
♪♪ ...TODAY ♪♪
433
00:37:13,689 --> 00:37:15,150
♪♪ AM I DREAMIN'? ♪♪
434
00:37:15,275 --> 00:37:16,569
♪♪ I CAN HEAR
HER SCREAMIN' ♪♪
435
00:37:16,695 --> 00:37:19,743
HE HAD WHAT YOU'D CALL
A REPUBLICAN BAND--
436
00:37:19,910 --> 00:37:22,874
VERY STRAIGHT-LACED,
MIDDLE OF THE ROAD.
437
00:37:22,999 --> 00:37:25,797
AND MILLER WAS THAT KIND OF GUY,
HE WAS A BUSINESSMAN.
438
00:37:25,922 --> 00:37:28,510
AND HE WAS SORT OF
THE LAWRENCE WELK OF JAZZ.
439
00:37:28,635 --> 00:37:30,597
AND THAT'S ONE OF THE REASONS
HE WAS SO BIG,
440
00:37:30,723 --> 00:37:32,643
PEOPLE COULD IDENTIFY
WITH WHAT HE DID.
441
00:37:32,769 --> 00:37:34,271
THEY PERCEIVED WHAT
HE WAS DOING.
442
00:37:34,438 --> 00:37:38,071
BUT THE BIGGEST PROBLEM,
HIS BAND NEVER MADE A MISTAKE.
443
00:37:38,196 --> 00:37:40,117
AND IT'S ONE OF
THE THINGS WRONG,
444
00:37:40,242 --> 00:37:41,619
BECAUSE IF YOU DON'T EVER
MAKE A MISTAKE,
445
00:37:41,787 --> 00:37:42,872
YOU'RE NOT TRYING,
446
00:37:42,998 --> 00:37:44,667
YOU'RE NOT PLAYING AT
THE EDGE OF YOUR ABILITY.
447
00:37:44,793 --> 00:37:46,337
YOU'RE PLAYING SAFELY,
WITHIN LIMITS,
448
00:37:46,462 --> 00:37:49,093
AND YOU KNOW WHAT YOU CAN DO,
449
00:37:49,218 --> 00:37:51,681
AND IT SOUNDS, AFTER A WHILE,
EXTREMELY BORING.
450
00:37:51,807 --> 00:37:54,980
♪♪ ...IN KALAMAZOO ♪♪
451
00:37:56,649 --> 00:37:59,697
♪♪ ZOO ZOO ZOO ZOO
ZOO ZOO ZOO ZOO ZOO ZOO ♪♪
452
00:37:59,823 --> 00:38:05,667
♪♪ ZOO... ♪♪
453
00:38:05,835 --> 00:38:09,843
♪♪ KALAMAZOO ♪♪
454
00:38:10,010 --> 00:38:14,895
IN THE YEARS TO COME,
GLENN MILLER AND HIS ORCHESTRA
455
00:38:15,020 --> 00:38:16,940
WOULD TURN OUT HIT AFTER HIT,
456
00:38:17,066 --> 00:38:18,778
INCLUDING STRING OF PEARLS,
457
00:38:18,903 --> 00:38:21,950
LITTLE BROWN JUG,
AND IN THE MOOD
458
00:38:22,076 --> 00:38:26,794
THAT WOULD BE AMONG SWING'S
MOST FAMILIAR ANTHEMS.
459
00:38:38,483 --> 00:38:41,405
I THOUGHT THAT
THE HAPPIEST I COULD BE
460
00:38:41,572 --> 00:38:48,586
WOULD BE
IN A JAZZ CLUB, PLAYING.
461
00:38:48,711 --> 00:38:57,020
THEN MY DAD SAID, "YOU'RE GOING
TO BE A CATTLEMAN."
462
00:38:57,146 --> 00:39:00,777
WHEN WE'D DRIVE THE CATTLE,
463
00:39:00,903 --> 00:39:04,201
MY DREAM WAS THAT
THE BENNY GOODMAN BAND BUS
464
00:39:04,326 --> 00:39:06,414
WOULD WANT TO GET
THROUGH THE CATTLE
465
00:39:06,539 --> 00:39:08,042
AND I WOULDN'T LET 'EM THROUGH
466
00:39:08,168 --> 00:39:13,720
UNLESS THEY LET ME GET
ON THE BUS AND PLAY WITH THEM.
467
00:39:13,846 --> 00:39:16,977
BUT IN MY MIND THAT'S
WHAT I WAS--
468
00:39:17,144 --> 00:39:19,356
SOMEDAY I'D BE HEARD
469
00:39:19,481 --> 00:39:22,654
WITH SOME BAND
GOING THROUGH HERE.
470
00:39:22,822 --> 00:39:42,611
HA HA!
471
00:40:04,154 --> 00:40:07,286
ARTIE SHAW IS PROBABLY
THE FINEST CLARINET PLAYER
472
00:40:07,411 --> 00:40:09,832
THAT JAZZ HAS EVER
PRODUCED TECHNICALLY.
473
00:40:09,958 --> 00:40:13,339
A TRUE VIRTUOSO.
474
00:40:13,464 --> 00:40:17,431
WHEN YOU COMPARE ARTIE
AND BENNY, WHAT PEOPLE USUALLY SAY IS THAT
475
00:40:17,597 --> 00:40:20,270
BENNY SWUNG MORE, HE HAD
MORE OF A BLUES QUALITY,
476
00:40:20,395 --> 00:40:23,067
BUT THAT ARTIE HAD
A PRETTIER TONE,
477
00:40:23,192 --> 00:40:26,115
HE WAS A MORE INTELLECTUAL
PLAYER, A MORE LYRICAL PLAYER,
478
00:40:26,282 --> 00:40:28,703
HAD A BETTER TECHNIQUE.
479
00:40:28,828 --> 00:40:36,218
ARTIE SHAW WAS
BENNY GOODMAN'S GREATEST RIVAL.
480
00:40:36,344 --> 00:40:40,685
GIFTED, ERUDITE, ARTICULATE,
AND OPINIONATED,
481
00:40:40,810 --> 00:40:44,151
SHAW SUCCESSFULLY COMBINED
CHAMBER MUSIC WITH JAZZ
482
00:40:44,276 --> 00:40:47,032
AND WON AN ENORMOUS FOLLOWING.
483
00:40:47,157 --> 00:40:51,624
BUT HE WAS CURSED, HE SAID,
WITH SERIOUS-MINDEDNESS.
484
00:40:51,749 --> 00:40:55,840
HE DISLIKED AUTOGRAPH-SEEKERS,
DISDAINED JITTERBUGGING,
485
00:40:56,008 --> 00:41:00,683
AND WAS MADE PROFOUNDLY UNEASY
BY HIS OWN SUCCESS.
486
00:41:00,809 --> 00:41:02,771
AND NOW, LADIES AND GENTLEMEN,
487
00:41:02,896 --> 00:41:39,470
OUR OWN VERSION OF COLE PORTER'SBEGIN THE BEGUINE.
488
00:41:39,595 --> 00:41:44,771
WELL, THE MINUTE
YOU BECAME A BIG, BIG SMASH HIT,
489
00:41:44,938 --> 00:41:47,694
IT BECAME VERY CONFUSING.
490
00:41:47,819 --> 00:41:51,285
NOTHING IN LIFE
CAN PREPARE YOU FOR STARDOM.
491
00:41:51,452 --> 00:41:55,335
SUCCESS IS A VERY BIG PROBLEM,
BIGGER THAN FAILURE.
492
00:41:55,460 --> 00:41:56,921
YOU CAN DEAL WITH FAILURE.
493
00:41:57,047 --> 00:42:00,971
IT'S TOUGH, IT'S HARD, YOU FIGHT
LIKE HELL TO GET--GET IT GOING.
494
00:42:01,096 --> 00:42:08,611
BUT SUCCESS IS AN OPIATE,
AND YOU GET VERY CONFUSED.
495
00:42:08,736 --> 00:42:14,957
THINGS HAPPEN THAT
YOU HAVE NO PREPARATION FOR.
496
00:42:15,083 --> 00:42:18,047
AND MONEY COMES IN
AND POPULARITY
497
00:42:18,172 --> 00:42:19,925
AND PEOPLE
THROW THEMSELVES AT YOU.
498
00:42:20,051 --> 00:42:27,524
AND YOU DON'T KNOW
WHAT YOU'RE INTO.
499
00:42:27,649 --> 00:42:29,027
I COULDN'T HANDLE IT,
500
00:42:29,152 --> 00:42:32,492
I DIDN'T KNOW WHAT
TO DO WITH IT.
501
00:42:32,617 --> 00:42:34,663
THE BASIC TRUTH,
ARTIE SHAW CONCLUDED,
502
00:42:34,788 --> 00:42:37,877
IS THAT POPULAR MUSIC HAS
LITTLE OR NOTHING TO DO WITH
503
00:42:38,045 --> 00:42:40,675
MUSICAL VALUES AT ALL.
504
00:42:40,800 --> 00:42:43,723
I STILL WANTED
TO PLAY MUSIC,
505
00:42:43,889 --> 00:42:47,230
AND THE AUDIENCE WAS SAYING,
"PLAY WHAT YOU'RE PLAYING,
506
00:42:47,397 --> 00:42:49,443
PLAY THE SAME THING OVER
AND OVER, WE LIKE THAT."
507
00:42:49,568 --> 00:42:52,574
AND THEY NEVER COULD GET IT
THROUGH THEIR HEADS THAT
508
00:42:52,741 --> 00:42:55,204
WHAT THEY LIKED WAS SOMETHING
I WAS DOING ON MY WAY
509
00:42:55,330 --> 00:42:56,498
TO GETTING BETTER.
510
00:42:56,624 --> 00:43:00,465
THAT RECORD THAT THEY LIKED,BEGIN THE BEGUINE--
511
00:43:00,590 --> 00:43:01,925
WHICH BECAME A MILLSTONE,
512
00:43:02,052 --> 00:43:06,393
IT BECAME AN ALBATROSS
AROUND MY NECK.
513
00:43:06,518 --> 00:43:09,900
THE OVERWHELMING
SUCCESS OF BEGIN THE BEGUINE
514
00:43:10,025 --> 00:43:14,242
WOULD EVENTUALLY PROPEL
ARTIE SHAW PAST BENNY GOODMAN
515
00:43:14,368 --> 00:43:15,787
IN POPULARITY.
516
00:43:15,912 --> 00:43:22,967
BUT IN 1939, SHAW DISBANDED
HIS ORCHESTRA IN FRUSTRATION.
517
00:43:23,094 --> 00:43:25,723
"I'M UNHAPPY IN
THE MUSIC BUSINESS," HE SAID.
518
00:43:25,848 --> 00:43:29,064
"I LIKE THE MUSIC--
LOVE AND LIVE IT, IN FACT--
519
00:43:29,189 --> 00:43:39,876
BUT FOR ME THE BUSINESS PART
PLAIN STINKS."
520
00:43:55,907 --> 00:43:59,080
AUGUST 27,
THE DUKE ELLINGTON ORCHESTRA
521
00:43:59,205 --> 00:44:00,707
WILL APPEAR FOR ONE NIGHT ONLY
522
00:44:00,834 --> 00:44:08,265
AT THE TURNPIKE CASINO,
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA.
523
00:44:08,390 --> 00:44:11,939
AUGUST 28,
WATERLOO, IOWA;
524
00:44:12,064 --> 00:44:15,404
AUGUST 29 AND 30,
525
00:44:15,529 --> 00:44:20,706
CORONADO THEATER,
ROCKFORD, ILLINOIS;
526
00:44:20,832 --> 00:44:28,388
AUGUST 31, ORPHEUM THEATER,
MADISON, WISCONSIN.
527
00:44:28,513 --> 00:44:30,142
SEPTEMBER 2 AND 3,
528
00:44:30,267 --> 00:44:37,156
THE DUKE ELLINGTON ORCHESTRA
WILL BE APPEARING IN MILWAUKEE.
529
00:44:37,323 --> 00:44:41,832
DESPITE THE DEPRESSION
AND IN PART BECAUSE OF IT,
530
00:44:41,999 --> 00:44:43,126
SWING MUSIC HAD BECOME
531
00:44:43,251 --> 00:44:45,464
A HUNDRED-MILLION-DOLLAR
INDUSTRY.
532
00:44:45,589 --> 00:44:53,563
30,000 TO 40,000 MUSICIANS WERE
EMPLOYED TO PLAY DANCE MUSIC ACROSS THE COUNTRY.
533
00:44:53,688 --> 00:44:57,529
AND ANOTHER 8,000 MEN AND WOMEN
WERE NEEDED JUST TO MANAGE,
534
00:44:57,655 --> 00:45:04,710
BOOK, AND PROMOTE
THEIR APPEARANCES.
535
00:45:04,835 --> 00:45:06,798
EVEN FOR THE BEST-PAID BANDS,
536
00:45:06,924 --> 00:45:09,553
LIKE BENNY GOODMAN'S
AND ARTIE SHAW'S,
537
00:45:09,679 --> 00:45:12,601
THE ROAD WAS HECTIC
AND EXHAUSTING.
538
00:45:12,726 --> 00:45:18,071
THE PROBLEM WAS
TO MEET A PAYROLL.
539
00:45:18,238 --> 00:45:22,914
YOU HAVE 14 TO 20
OR AT TIMES 40 MEN,
540
00:45:23,081 --> 00:45:25,127
AND YOU GOT TO PAY THEM
EVERY WEEK.
541
00:45:25,252 --> 00:45:28,174
IN MY DAY, THE MEN WERE
PART OF AN ORGANIZATION.
542
00:45:28,300 --> 00:45:30,637
WE TRAVELED TOGETHER,
WE LIVED TOGETHER,
543
00:45:30,762 --> 00:45:56,272
AND I'M TALKING ABOUT TIMES
WHEN HOTELS WERE $3.00 A NIGHT.
544
00:45:56,397 --> 00:46:00,990
SOME BOOKERS INSISTED
BANDS COVER 500 MILES BETWEEN DATES
545
00:46:01,115 --> 00:46:03,328
AND WORK
7 NIGHTS A WEEK--
546
00:46:03,495 --> 00:46:07,002
UNTIL THE UNION FINALLY
MANAGED TO GET IT DECREASED TO
547
00:46:07,169 --> 00:46:09,882
6 NIGHTS AND 400 MILES.
548
00:46:10,008 --> 00:46:14,935
ANDY KIRK AND HIS CLOUDS OF JOY
AVERAGED MORE THAN 50,000 MILES
549
00:46:15,060 --> 00:46:17,272
A YEAR ON ROUGH ROADS.
550
00:46:17,398 --> 00:46:19,735
"WHEN I LEFT DUKE,"
551
00:46:19,860 --> 00:46:22,199
ONE LONG-TIME ELLINGTON
TRUMPET-PLAYER REMEMBERED,
552
00:46:22,324 --> 00:46:25,914
"I SLEPT ALMOST A WHOLE YEAR."
553
00:46:29,088 --> 00:46:33,388
WE DID 300 ONE-NIGHTERS
AND NEVER EVEN FELT IT.
554
00:46:33,555 --> 00:46:35,642
AFTER 300 OR 400 MILES
A DAY AT A BUS,
555
00:46:35,767 --> 00:46:37,896
WE COULDN'T WAIT TO
GET ON THE BANDSTAND,
556
00:46:38,064 --> 00:46:39,608
WE HAD THAT VITALITY.
557
00:46:39,733 --> 00:46:41,612
WE WANTED TO PLAY, YOU KNOW,
558
00:46:41,737 --> 00:46:44,410
EVEN IF WE HADN'T EATEN ALL DAY.
559
00:46:44,535 --> 00:46:47,249
'COURSE WHEN I FIRST
JOINED THE BAND,
560
00:46:47,416 --> 00:46:50,088
WE WERE MAKING ABOUT
$8.00 A NIGHT.
561
00:46:50,213 --> 00:46:51,591
SO WE DIDN'T PLAY
FOR THE MONEY.
562
00:46:51,757 --> 00:47:01,277
WE PLAYED FOR OURSELVES.
WE JUST LOVED TO PLAY.
563
00:47:01,402 --> 00:47:03,823
TRAVELING COULD BE
REALLY KIND OF ROUGH
564
00:47:03,948 --> 00:47:05,827
BECAUSE WE'D TRAVEL FOR HOURS,
565
00:47:05,952 --> 00:47:07,873
AND THEN WE'D HAVE TO
GET OUT OF THE BUS,
566
00:47:07,999 --> 00:47:11,923
GET ON THE STAGE,
AND DO A GREAT SHOW.
567
00:47:12,049 --> 00:47:13,676
AND SOMEHOW, IT'S SO FUNNY,
568
00:47:13,801 --> 00:47:15,597
THAT THE MORE DIFFICULT
THE TRAVELING WAS
569
00:47:15,722 --> 00:47:19,063
OR THE MORE TIRED EVERYONE WAS,
THE GREATER THE MUSIC.
570
00:47:19,188 --> 00:47:23,112
THE GUYS WOULD COME OFF
OF A LONG, LONG RIDE
571
00:47:23,238 --> 00:47:27,162
AND SIT ON THAT BANDSTAND
AND BLOW US AWAY.
572
00:47:27,287 --> 00:47:32,464
IT WAS UNBELIEVABLE.
573
00:47:32,589 --> 00:47:35,136
♪♪ I DON'T WANT YOU ♪
574
00:47:35,262 --> 00:47:37,474
♪♪ BUT HATE TO LOSE YOU ♪♪
575
00:47:37,599 --> 00:47:39,979
♪♪ YOU GOT ME IN BETWEEN ♪♪
576
00:47:40,105 --> 00:47:42,693
♪♪ THE DEVIL
AND THE DEEP BLUE SEA ♪♪
577
00:47:42,859 --> 00:47:44,071
♪♪ OH... ♪♪
578
00:47:44,196 --> 00:47:49,665
THE MEN DRANK HARD,
GAMBLED HARD, PLAYED HARD.
579
00:47:49,790 --> 00:47:52,421
♪♪ ...YOU'VE GOT ME IN BETWEEN ♪
580
00:47:52,546 --> 00:47:56,220
♪♪ THE DEVIL
AND THE DEEP BLUE SEA ♪♪
581
00:47:56,387 --> 00:47:58,391
♪♪ I OUGHT TO CROSS YOU
OFF MY LIST ♪♪
582
00:47:58,516 --> 00:48:01,939
♪♪ BUT WHEN YOU COME
A-KNOCKIN' AT MY DOOR ♪♪
583
00:48:02,065 --> 00:48:04,278
♪♪ FATE SEEMS TO GIVE
MY HEART A TWIST ♪♪
584
00:48:04,403 --> 00:48:07,576
♪♪ AND I COME
RUNNING BACK FOR MORE ♪♪
585
00:48:07,743 --> 00:48:10,665
♪♪ I SHOULD HATE YOU ♪♪
586
00:48:10,790 --> 00:48:13,880
♪♪ BUT I GUESS I LOVE YOU ♪♪
587
00:48:14,005 --> 00:48:16,344
♪♪ YOU'VE GOT ME IN BETWEEN ♪♪
588
00:48:16,469 --> 00:48:38,262
♪♪ THE DEVIL
AND THE DEEP BLUE SEA ♪♪
589
00:48:38,388 --> 00:48:41,644
BUS 112
FOR NEWARK, NEW JERSEY--
590
00:48:41,769 --> 00:48:43,272
"ALL YOU NEED
TO SURVIVE ON THE ROAD,"
591
00:48:43,398 --> 00:48:45,151
BENNY GOODMAN'S
GREAT TRUMPET PLAYER
592
00:48:45,276 --> 00:48:46,779
BUNNY BERRIGAN ONCE SAID,
593
00:48:46,904 --> 00:48:51,372
"WAS A TOOTHBRUSH AND A PHOTO
OF LOUIS ARMSTRONG."
594
00:48:54,837 --> 00:48:58,970
"NOVEMBER 1--
HAVING BUS TROUBLE.
595
00:48:59,096 --> 00:49:01,225
"STAY ON ROAD ALL NIGHT.
596
00:49:01,350 --> 00:49:03,521
"WEATHER COLD.
597
00:49:03,688 --> 00:49:07,779
"ORCHESTRA MAKES BONFIRE
WITH BUS TIRE.
598
00:49:07,904 --> 00:49:11,537
"GET HELP NEXT MORNING.
599
00:49:11,704 --> 00:49:16,255
"NOVEMBER 7--BUS SEIZED BY
CLOTHING STORE,
600
00:49:16,380 --> 00:49:19,178
"FINALLY REDEEMED...
601
00:49:19,303 --> 00:49:23,519
"TOO LATE FOR ORCHESTRA TO MAKE
DATE IN CUMBERLAND, KENTUCKY.
602
00:49:23,644 --> 00:49:26,776
"WOMAN PROPRIETOR OF
SOUTHERN HOTEL HOLDS
603
00:49:26,901 --> 00:49:29,823
KING OLIVER'S TRUMPET
FOR RENT."
604
00:49:29,948 --> 00:49:34,583
PAUL BARNES.
605
00:49:34,750 --> 00:49:39,176
ON THE ROAD,
BAND LEADERS RARELY PAID FOR FOOD OR LODGING,
606
00:49:39,201 --> 00:49:43,110
SO MANY MUSICIANS SPENT EVERY
OTHER NIGHT SLEEPING ON THE BUS
607
00:49:43,135 --> 00:49:45,389
TO SAVE A LITTLE MONEY.
608
00:49:46,203 --> 00:49:49,652
SOME BANDS WERE TOO POOR
TO AFFORD A BUS AT ALL.
609
00:49:49,719 --> 00:49:53,435
AS MANY AS 10 MUSICIANS PACKED
INTO A SINGLE TOURING CAR
610
00:49:53,560 --> 00:49:58,027
AND HAULED THEIR INSTRUMENTS
IN A TRAILER.
611
00:49:58,152 --> 00:50:02,745
SOMETIMES, STRANDED
BETWEEN ENGAGEMENTS,
612
00:50:02,870 --> 00:50:07,128
THEY WOULD SIMPLY PULL
INTO A ROADHOUSE, BEGIN TO PLAY,
613
00:50:07,174 --> 00:50:11,844
AND HOPE PASSING THE HAT WOULD
RAISE ENOUGH CASH TO BUY DINNER.
614
00:50:24,070 --> 00:50:26,282
TRAVELING IN
SEGREGATED AMERICA,
615
00:50:26,407 --> 00:50:28,913
THE MUSICIANS WHO HAD BEEN
THE FIRST TO PLAY SWING
616
00:50:29,038 --> 00:50:32,963
HAD TO OVERCOME OBSTACLES
UNKNOWN TO WHITES.
617
00:50:33,088 --> 00:50:38,390
BLACK MUSICIANS WERE
GENERALLY PAID FAR LESS,
618
00:50:38,516 --> 00:50:41,772
BARRED FROM CAFES AND RESTROOMS
ALONG THE ROAD,
619
00:50:41,897 --> 00:50:45,572
WERE RARELY PERMITTED TO EAT
OR SLEEP AT THE HOTELS
620
00:50:45,697 --> 00:50:48,578
WHERE THEY PERFORMED,
621
00:50:48,703 --> 00:50:53,336
BUT THEY FOUND A READY WELCOME
IN BLACK NEIGHBORHOODS.
622
00:50:53,504 --> 00:50:56,217
THERE WERE BLACK-OWNED
AND OPERATED HOTELS
623
00:50:56,342 --> 00:50:59,600
AND ROOMING-HOUSES
IN EVERY BIG TOWN.
624
00:50:59,725 --> 00:51:02,814
AND THERE WAS A NETWORK OF
CELEBRATED COOKS
625
00:51:02,939 --> 00:51:06,195
EAGER TO CATER TO
BLACK MUSICIANS.
626
00:51:06,321 --> 00:51:09,995
"THEY COOKED FOR YOU LIKE
THEY COOKED FOR THEIR FAMILY,"
627
00:51:10,120 --> 00:51:12,166
ONE BAND-MEMBER REMEMBERED.
628
00:51:12,291 --> 00:51:26,612
"AND THEY DIDN'T MIND FILLING
YOUR PLATE UP."
629
00:51:26,737 --> 00:51:28,616
AND WE'D GET IN TOWN
FROM THE BUS
630
00:51:28,741 --> 00:51:30,452
JUST IN TIME TO GET
THE INSTRUMENTS OUT
631
00:51:30,578 --> 00:51:33,960
AND SET UP THE BANDSTAND
AND GO TO PLAY.
632
00:51:34,085 --> 00:51:35,588
HADN'T HAD ANYTHING TO EAT.
633
00:51:35,713 --> 00:51:38,259
I HAD NO PLACE TO STAY,
OR ANYTHING.
634
00:51:38,385 --> 00:51:40,097
WE UP THERE PLAYING,
AND THE PEOPLE CRAMMED IN THERE,
635
00:51:40,263 --> 00:51:43,353
AND MY WIFE MONA
WOULD BE THE ONLY GIRL TRAVELING WITH THE BAND,
636
00:51:43,478 --> 00:51:46,652
SHE WOULD GO AROUND TO
THE BLACK NEIGHBORHOODS AND TALK TO THE LADIES.
637
00:51:46,777 --> 00:51:48,488
SHE SAYS, "WE HAVEN'T HAD
ANYTHING TO EAT.
638
00:51:48,614 --> 00:51:50,117
WE HAVEN'T HAD
ANY PLACE TO STAY."
639
00:51:50,283 --> 00:51:52,037
AND THESE LADIES WERE
AWFUL NICE.
640
00:51:52,162 --> 00:51:53,456
THEY WOULD GET TOGETHER
AND CALL ONE ANOTHER, SAY,
641
00:51:53,624 --> 00:51:55,795
"WELL, MRS. JONES WILL TAKE TWO
OVER AT HER HUSBAND'S HOUSE,
642
00:51:55,962 --> 00:51:57,799
AND MRS. SMITH SAY,
SHE'LL TAKE TWO."
643
00:51:57,966 --> 00:52:02,474
BY INTERMISSION TIME, MONA WOULD
COME DOWN TO THAT BANDSTAND
644
00:52:02,600 --> 00:52:04,730
WITH A GREAT BIG BASKET OF
CHICKEN AND POTATO SALAD
645
00:52:06,692 --> 00:52:08,821
"'DIZZY, YOU
AND CHU BERRY ARE STAYING OVER AT MRS. JONES HOUSE;
646
00:52:08,946 --> 00:52:11,492
CHARLIE, YOU AND SO-AND-SO
OVER AT MRS. SMITH'S HOUSE."
647
00:52:11,618 --> 00:52:12,829
AND THIS IS THE WAY
WE SURVIVED...
648
00:52:20,469 --> 00:52:24,060
Man: VARIETY. JUNE, 1937.
649
00:52:24,185 --> 00:52:26,648
"ATTENDANCE RECORDS
ARE BEING BROKEN
650
00:52:26,774 --> 00:52:28,861
"PRACTICALLY EVERY NIGHT
OF THE WEEK.
651
00:52:28,986 --> 00:52:32,326
"CLAIM IS THAT MANY OF
THE SMALLER SPOTS,
652
00:52:32,451 --> 00:52:34,956
"INCLUDING THOSE FAR OFF
THE BEATEN PATH,
653
00:52:35,082 --> 00:52:40,092
"TURN IN BETTER GROSSES
THAN RECOGNIZED CITY PALACES.
654
00:52:40,217 --> 00:52:44,225
"REASON IS THAT EVEN
THE BARE-FOOTED POPULATION
655
00:52:44,350 --> 00:53:18,836
RECOGNIZE BAND NAMES
WHEN THEY HEAR 'EM."
656
00:53:29,941 --> 00:53:31,485
♪♪ THERE ARE SMILES ♪♪
657
00:53:31,611 --> 00:53:33,239
♪♪ SILLY OL' SMILES ♪♪
658
00:53:33,364 --> 00:53:35,410
♪♪ THAT MAKE US HAPPY ♪♪
659
00:53:35,535 --> 00:53:36,537
♪♪ HAPPY ALL DAY ♪♪
660
00:53:36,663 --> 00:53:38,291
WHEN WE TALK
ABOUT SWING,
661
00:53:38,416 --> 00:53:41,505
THE SWING BANDS,
IT'S A LITTLE DICEY
662
00:53:41,631 --> 00:53:43,176
AS TO WHETHER WE'RE GOING TO
CALL THIS JAZZ OR NOT.
663
00:53:43,343 --> 00:53:45,180
♪♪ THERE ARE SMILES ♪♪
664
00:53:45,305 --> 00:53:49,689
♪♪ THAT STEAL AWAY
THE TEARDROPS ♪♪
665
00:53:49,856 --> 00:53:51,818
BECAUSE A GREAT DEAL OF
THAT MUSIC REALLY WAS
666
00:53:51,944 --> 00:53:55,952
PRETTY COMMERCIAL STUFF.
667
00:53:56,077 --> 00:53:58,206
THE KIDS OUT THERE,
MOST OF THEM, LIKE ANY KIDS,
668
00:53:58,373 --> 00:54:01,420
WERE INTERESTED IN POPULAR MUSIC
BECAUSE THAT WAS THE HIP THING,
669
00:54:01,545 --> 00:54:03,258
YOU HAD TO KNOW
THE NAMES OF THE BANDS.
670
00:54:03,383 --> 00:54:05,011
♪♪ BUT THE SMILES ♪♪
671
00:54:05,136 --> 00:54:08,559
♪♪ THAT FILLED MY LIFE
WITH SUNSHINE ♪♪
672
00:54:08,686 --> 00:54:09,896
♪♪ YES, YES ♪♪
673
00:54:10,021 --> 00:54:11,565
♪♪ ARE THE SMILES ♪♪
674
00:54:11,692 --> 00:54:20,000
♪♪ THAT YOU GIVE TO ME ♪♪
675
00:54:20,125 --> 00:54:22,212
THAT'S SWING MUSIC
IF I EVER HEARD IT.
676
00:54:28,892 --> 00:54:30,938
ADULTS LOVED SWING MUSIC,
677
00:54:31,063 --> 00:54:40,958
BUT IT WAS TEENAGERS WHO MADE IT
A NATIONAL CRAZE.
678
00:54:41,125 --> 00:54:43,756
TRUMPET SALES DOUBLED,
679
00:54:43,881 --> 00:54:46,010
AND SALES OF CLARINETS,
680
00:54:46,135 --> 00:54:51,437
ARTIE SHAW'S AND BENNY GOODMAN'S
INSTRUMENT, TRIPLED.
681
00:54:51,562 --> 00:54:54,360
THERE WAS AN UNOFFICIAL SWING
"UNIFORM."
682
00:54:54,485 --> 00:54:57,032
BOYS DRESSED IN SPORT JACKETS
AND SLACKS,
683
00:54:57,157 --> 00:55:00,246
LIKE THE ONES THEIR HEROES WORE
ON THE BANDSTAND.
684
00:55:00,372 --> 00:55:03,879
GIRLS FAVORED BOBBY SOCKS
AND SADDLE SHOES,
685
00:55:04,004 --> 00:55:07,868
AND PLEATED SKIRTS THAT
FLARED WHEN THEY GOT ONTO THE DANCE FLOOR.
686
00:55:24,205 --> 00:55:26,751
FANS HAD THEIR OWN LANGUAGE,
TOO,
687
00:55:26,876 --> 00:55:28,797
AND THE BANDLEADER CAB CALLOWAY
688
00:55:28,922 --> 00:55:33,223
PUBLISHED A HEPSTER'S DICTIONARY
TO AID THE UNINITIATED.
689
00:55:33,348 --> 00:55:36,771
A HOT NUMBER WAS
A "KILLER-DILLER."
690
00:55:36,938 --> 00:55:41,155
"ARMSTRONGS" WERE MUSICAL NOTES
IN THE UPPER REGISTER.
691
00:55:41,280 --> 00:55:44,286
"SWINGAROOS" OR "HEP CATS"
692
00:55:44,411 --> 00:55:47,292
WERE DIVIDED BETWEEN
"JITTERBUGS," WHO DANCED,
693
00:55:47,417 --> 00:55:49,547
AND "ICKIES," WHO DIDN'T
694
00:55:49,672 --> 00:55:53,513
BUT STAYED ON THE SIDELINES
SHOUTING ENCOURAGEMENT TO THE MUSICIANS
695
00:55:53,638 --> 00:55:58,395
AND CLAPPING...
USUALLY BEHIND THE BEAT.
696
00:56:00,277 --> 00:56:03,825
EVERY IMPORTANT
BANDLEADER HAD A FAN CLUB.
697
00:56:03,950 --> 00:56:08,000
YOUNG WOMEN SHOWERED
THE BEST-LOOKING PLAYERS WITH LETTERS...
698
00:56:08,125 --> 00:56:12,634
AND TELEPHONE NUMBERS.
699
00:56:12,759 --> 00:56:19,899
ARTIE SHAW ONCE DISMISSED
JITTERBUGS AND ICKIES ALIKE AS "MORONS."
700
00:56:20,024 --> 00:56:21,527
AND EVEN BENNY GOODMAN,
701
00:56:21,694 --> 00:56:25,535
WHOSE APPEARANCE AT
THE PARAMOUNT HAD PULLED THEM OUT OF THEIR SEATS,
702
00:56:25,660 --> 00:56:32,883
CONFESSED HE WAS SOMETIMES
FRIGHTENED BY THEIR ENTHUSIASM.
703
00:56:33,008 --> 00:56:36,227
TO BE A BAND LEADER
AT THAT TIME WAS TO BE, I SUPPOSE YOU COULD SAY,
704
00:56:36,252 --> 00:56:38,089
LIKE A ROCK MUSICIAN
MORE RECENTLY.
705
00:56:39,521 --> 00:56:41,734
THEY WERE COURTED BY
THE WHOLE CULTURE.
706
00:56:41,901 --> 00:56:43,446
THESE WERE THE NEW CELEBRITIES.
707
00:56:43,571 --> 00:56:45,575
AND IT WAS SOMETHING NEW
IN THE MUSIC.
708
00:56:45,700 --> 00:56:47,579
IT WAS SOMETHING NEW
IN AMERICAN POPULAR CULTURE,
709
00:56:47,704 --> 00:56:49,458
AND IT LASTED
FOR ALMOST 10 YEARS.
710
00:56:54,426 --> 00:56:57,265
BUT SWING HAD ITS CRITICS.
711
00:56:57,391 --> 00:57:02,526
THE SWEET BANDLEADER BLUE BARRON
DENOUNCED IT AS "NOTHING BUT ORCHESTRATED SEX....
712
00:57:02,651 --> 00:57:07,118
A PHALLIC SYMBOL
SET TO SOUND..."
713
00:57:07,244 --> 00:57:13,297
AND DR. A.A. BRILL,
A NOTED PSYCHIATRIST, WAS EVEN MORE CONCERNED.
714
00:57:13,423 --> 00:57:20,478
SWING MUSIC REPRESENTS OUR
REGRESSION TO THE PRIMITIVE TOM-TOM-TOM,
715
00:57:20,603 --> 00:57:25,447
A RHYTHMIC SOUND THAT PLEASES
SAVAGES AND CHILDREN ALIKE.
716
00:57:25,572 --> 00:57:32,294
IT ACTS AS A NARCOTIC
AND MAKES THEM FORGET REALITY.
717
00:57:32,419 --> 00:57:37,011
THEY FORGET THE DEPRESSION,
THE LOSS OF THEIR JOBS.
718
00:57:37,136 --> 00:57:43,691
IT IS LIKE TAKING A DRUG.
719
00:57:43,858 --> 00:57:48,284
MY PARENTS, ANYWAY,
DIDN'T REALLY UNDERSTAND ANYTHING ABOUT MUSIC.
720
00:57:48,409 --> 00:57:49,953
WHY AM I LISTENING
TO DUKE ELLINGTON?
721
00:57:50,079 --> 00:57:52,041
WHY AM I LISTENING
TO LOUIS ARMSTRONG?
722
00:57:52,208 --> 00:57:53,628
AND THEY'RE OUT OF IT
COMPLETELY.
723
00:57:53,753 --> 00:57:55,632
THEY DON'T EVEN WHY I'M INTO IT.
724
00:57:55,757 --> 00:57:58,763
I LOVED IT, THAT'S ALL I KNOW
AND THAT'S ALL I CARED ABOUT.
725
00:57:58,888 --> 00:58:01,101
THERE WAS THAT SENSE
THAT WE WERE REBELS.
726
00:58:01,226 --> 00:58:04,525
WE WERE DOING SOMETHING THAT
OUR GROWN-UPS DIDN'T KNOW ABOUT
727
00:58:04,650 --> 00:58:06,570
AND PROBABLY DIDN'T LIKE
VERY WELL.
728
00:58:06,737 --> 00:58:10,077
AND THE JITTERBUGGING,
OF COURSE, IS VERY MUCH A PART OF IT,
729
00:58:10,202 --> 00:58:13,083
THAT, THAT DANCING,
BECAUSE IT WAS STRENUOUS,
730
00:58:13,208 --> 00:58:17,592
AND THE GIRLS WERE OUT THERE
WITH THEIR LITTLE SHORT SKIRTS AND THEIR BOBBY SOCKS.
731
00:58:17,717 --> 00:58:21,892
AS THEY TWIRLED AROUND,
THOSE SKIRTS WOULD RISE UP A LITTLE BIT LIKE THAT.
732
00:58:22,017 --> 00:58:24,439
NOTHING LIKE WHAT WE HAVE TODAY,
MIND YOU.
733
00:58:24,565 --> 00:58:38,551
BUT IT WAS, YOU KNOW,
IT WAS PRETTY NICE WHEN YOU WERE A YOUNG GUY.
734
00:58:41,807 --> 00:58:44,646
I'M AT MY FRESHMAN YEAR,
GONZAGA UNIVERSITY.
735
00:58:44,771 --> 00:58:47,151
I'M IN THE GYMNASIUM ONE DAY.
736
00:58:47,189 --> 00:58:48,744
AND I'M SITTING AT THE PIANO.
737
00:58:48,769 --> 00:58:50,648
AND I'M PLAYING.
738
00:58:50,673 --> 00:58:52,969
AND THIS GUY COMES IN
AND LISTENED...
739
00:58:53,401 --> 00:58:55,957
WITH HIS ARM ON THE TOP
OF THE PIANO.
740
00:58:55,982 --> 00:59:00,031
AND HE'S LISTENING TO ME,
AND HE'S LOOKING AT ME, AND HE'S KINDA GRINNING.
741
00:59:00,198 --> 00:59:03,868
SO I FINALLY STOPPED AND I SAID,
"WELL, HOW DO YOU LIKE IT?"
742
00:59:03,893 --> 00:59:05,229
OR SOMETHING LIKE THAT.
743
00:59:05,778 --> 00:59:10,746
AND HE SAID, "I LIKE YOUR TOUCH,
YOU GOT A NICE TOUCH.
744
00:59:10,871 --> 00:59:14,294
"BUT YOU'RE NOT PLAYING
THE RIGHT STYLE.
745
00:59:14,419 --> 00:59:17,092
YOU'RE NOT PLAYING THE RIGHT WAY
TO PLAY."
746
00:59:17,217 --> 00:59:20,223
HE TAKES ME DOWNSTAIRS,
AND HE SETS ME DOWN IN THIS ROOM,
747
00:59:20,348 --> 00:59:23,229
AND HE PUTS THIS TEDDY WILSON ON
RECORD ON WITH BENNY GOODMAN.
748
00:59:23,354 --> 00:59:26,235
AND I HAD NEVER HEARD THIS KIND
OF MUSIC BEFORE IN MY LIFE.
749
00:59:26,360 --> 00:59:27,905
NEVER HEARD ANY JAZZ.
750
00:59:28,030 --> 00:59:29,909
I HADN'T EVEN HEARD
LOUIS ARMSTRONG.
751
00:59:30,967 --> 00:59:32,596
I HADN'T HEARD ANYTHING.
752
00:59:32,656 --> 00:59:34,993
JUST AMERICAN ALBUM
OF FAMILIAR MUSIC.
753
00:59:35,680 --> 00:59:38,510
AND ALL OF A SUDDEN
I'M LISTENING TO THIS GUY PLAY THE PIANO.
754
00:59:38,882 --> 00:59:40,260
I SAY, "HOLY MACKEREL,
755
00:59:40,332 --> 00:59:42,544
WAIT A MINUTE, WAIT A MINUTE,
WHO IS THAT?"
756
00:59:42,597 --> 00:59:44,689
HE SAID,
"THAT'S TEDDY WILSON.
757
00:59:44,814 --> 00:59:47,928
AND THAT'S THE WAY YOU SHOULD
PLAY THE PIANO, ACE."
758
00:59:51,368 --> 00:59:53,874
ONE OF BENNY GOODMAN'S
BEST-LOVED RECORDS
759
00:59:53,999 --> 00:59:56,755
HAD BEEN BODY AND SOUL,
760
00:59:56,880 --> 01:00:02,767
PLAYED BY A TRIO HE USED ONLY
AT RECORDING DATES.
761
01:00:02,892 --> 01:00:05,731
THE WHOLE COUNTRY
HAD HEARD THE RECORD,
762
01:00:05,856 --> 01:00:10,114
BUT IT HAD NEVER OCCURRED
TO GOODMAN TO BRING THE TRIO ON STAGE
763
01:00:10,239 --> 01:00:12,745
BECAUSE THE PIANO PLAYER,
TEDDY WILSON,
764
01:00:12,870 --> 01:00:17,630
WAS A BLACK MAN.
765
01:00:17,755 --> 01:00:21,638
WILSON WAS THE RESERVED,
URBANE SON OF A LIBRARIAN
766
01:00:21,763 --> 01:00:26,480
AND A PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH
AT TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE.
767
01:00:28,108 --> 01:00:30,948
HIS LIGHT TOUCH AND SEEMINGLY
EFFORTLESS TECHNIQUE
768
01:00:31,114 --> 01:00:33,703
PERFECTLY MATCHED
GOODMAN'S OWN PLAYING.
769
01:00:39,924 --> 01:00:43,807
THERE WAS
NEVER A PIANO PLAYER LIKE TEDDY WILSON.
770
01:00:43,932 --> 01:00:46,855
I THINK ONE OF THE THINGS
THAT DISTINGUISHES HIM
771
01:00:46,980 --> 01:00:49,526
FROM ALL THE PIANO PLAYERS
WHO PRECEDE HIM--
772
01:00:49,652 --> 01:00:50,946
WALLER, DUKE ELLINGTON--
773
01:00:51,071 --> 01:00:53,158
IS THEY HAD
A VERY PERCUSSIVE TACK.
774
01:00:53,284 --> 01:01:01,843
TEDDY WILSON HAD
A LIGHT, LYRICAL TACK.
775
01:01:01,968 --> 01:01:03,555
IT'S AN EXQUISITE SOUND.
776
01:01:03,680 --> 01:01:08,857
HE MAKES EVERY KEY SOUND LIKE
A CHIME OR A BELL.
777
01:01:08,982 --> 01:01:25,556
AND HE'S VERY FAST.
778
01:01:25,724 --> 01:01:29,397
AND YOU REALIZE THAT NO ONE
HAS EVER MADE THE PIANO SOUND QUITE LIKE THAT.
779
01:01:29,564 --> 01:01:32,070
AFTER TWO MEASURES YOU KNOW
IT CAN'T BE ANYBODY ELSE BUT TEDDY WILSON.
780
01:01:35,368 --> 01:01:41,965
GOODMAN HAD
FIRST PLAYED WITH WILSON AT A JAM SESSION IN 1934.
781
01:01:42,090 --> 01:01:44,720
"TEDDY AND I BEGAN TO PLAY,"
HE REMEMBERED,
782
01:01:44,845 --> 01:01:49,939
"AS THOUGH WE WERE THINKING
WITH THE SAME BRAIN."
783
01:01:50,064 --> 01:01:55,951
WITHIN WEEKS, GOODMAN HAD
BROUGHT HIS DRUMMER, GENE KRUPA, AND WILSON INTO THE STUDIO
784
01:01:56,076 --> 01:01:58,999
TO RECORD TOGETHER.
785
01:01:59,124 --> 01:02:01,503
BUT WHEN A CONCERT WAS SCHEDULED
IN CHICAGO
786
01:02:01,629 --> 01:02:06,973
AND THE PROMOTER, HELEN OAKLEY,
SUGGESTED WILSON BE INCLUDED ON THE PROGRAM,
787
01:02:07,098 --> 01:02:11,481
GOODMAN WAS RELUCTANT.
788
01:02:11,606 --> 01:02:14,195
I SAID,
"LET ME BRING TEDDY IN.
789
01:02:14,333 --> 01:02:17,256
THAT'LL BE
A TREMENDOUS ATTRACTION."
790
01:02:17,368 --> 01:02:19,915
BENNY SAID,
"I'M NOT SUCH A FOOL.
791
01:02:20,041 --> 01:02:22,003
"I'M MAKING A HIT HERE,
792
01:02:22,128 --> 01:02:24,215
"AND I'M--THIS IS GONNA
BE MY CAREER.
793
01:02:24,340 --> 01:02:25,593
"I DON'T WANT
TO WRECK EVERYTHING
794
01:02:25,719 --> 01:02:30,186
"TO PRESENT A BLACK TALENT
IN THE MIDDLE OF EVERYTHING.
795
01:02:30,352 --> 01:02:32,190
AND SO I DON'T LIKE THE IDEA."
796
01:02:32,356 --> 01:02:35,196
THIS WAS
THE DEPRESSION, MIND YOU,
797
01:02:35,362 --> 01:02:40,206
AND THE LAST THING HE WANTED
TO DO WAS TO JEOPARDIZE THIS
798
01:02:40,372 --> 01:02:42,543
AND THROW IT ALL OUT THE WINDOW
799
01:02:42,711 --> 01:02:49,725
BY TAKING WHAT SEEMED TO
EVERYBODY TO BE A GREAT CHANCE.
800
01:02:49,850 --> 01:02:55,236
HELEN OAKLEY, WHO KNEW
HOW PROFOUNDLY GOODMAN HAD BEEN INFLUENCED BY BLACK MUSICIANS,
801
01:02:55,402 --> 01:02:59,452
AND WHO WAS EAGER TO SHOW
THAT INTEGRATION WOULD WORK ON THE BANDSTAND,
802
01:02:59,577 --> 01:03:06,717
FINALLY CONVINCED HIM
TO TAKE THE CHANCE WITH WILSON.
803
01:03:06,843 --> 01:03:12,061
BY THAT TIME, BLACK AND WHITE
MUSICIANS WERE FRATERNIZING AND HAD BEEN FOR A LONG TIME.
804
01:03:12,186 --> 01:03:14,775
THEY'D GO INTO
MIDNIGHT JAM SESSIONS TOGETHER
805
01:03:14,942 --> 01:03:17,221
AND SIT UNTIL 2:00, 3:00
IN THE MORNING
806
01:03:17,246 --> 01:03:18,707
BUT WHAT GOODMAN DID,
807
01:03:19,068 --> 01:03:23,159
HE PUT TEDDY WILSON IN SHOW BIZ.
808
01:03:28,399 --> 01:03:37,124
GOODMAN NEVER FORGOT
THE TRIO'S FIRST APPEARANCE IN PUBLIC.
809
01:03:37,250 --> 01:03:43,011
"THE THREE OF US WORKED TOGETHER
AS IF WE HAD BEEN BORN TO PLAY THIS WAY," HE SAID.
810
01:03:43,136 --> 01:03:47,019
"THE GOODMAN THING WAS AS SOLID
AS A FAMILY," WILSON SAID LATER.
811
01:03:47,144 --> 01:04:03,553
"WE WERE ALL THERE,
JUST LIKE BROTHERS."
812
01:04:03,678 --> 01:04:07,268
BENNY GOODMAN NOW SAW NO REASON
WHY MERE CUSTOM AND PREJUDICE
813
01:04:07,394 --> 01:04:12,069
SHOULD KEEP HIM
FROM IMPROVING HIS BAND BY ENLISTING MORE GREAT MUSICIANS
814
01:04:12,194 --> 01:04:18,916
JUST BECAUSE THEY WERE BLACK.
815
01:04:19,042 --> 01:04:21,589
IN A RUNDOWN BAR
IN LOS ANGELES,
816
01:04:21,714 --> 01:04:23,635
HE HEARD LIONEL HAMPTON,
817
01:04:23,760 --> 01:04:27,099
A MASTER OF A NEW INSTRUMENT,
THE VIBRAPHONE.
818
01:04:27,224 --> 01:04:29,980
GOODMAN HIRED HIM ON THE SPOT
819
01:04:30,105 --> 01:04:32,861
AND TRANSFORMED THE TRIO
INTO A QUARTET.
820
01:04:50,814 --> 01:04:52,651
THEY PLAY EVERY NIGHT,
821
01:04:52,776 --> 01:04:58,161
AND THEY MAKE MUSIC
YOU WOULD NOT BELIEVE.
822
01:04:58,286 --> 01:04:59,665
NOT A FALSE NOTE,
823
01:04:59,790 --> 01:05:03,715
ONE FINISHING HIS SOLO
AND DROPPING INTO BACKGROUND SUPPORT,
824
01:05:03,840 --> 01:05:05,342
THEN THE OTHER,
825
01:05:05,510 --> 01:05:08,348
ALL ADDING INSPIRATION
826
01:05:08,474 --> 01:05:28,430
UNTIL THEY GET GOING
TOO STRONG TO QUIT.
827
01:05:28,556 --> 01:05:32,731
THIS IS REALLY COMPOSITION
ON THE SPOT,
828
01:05:32,898 --> 01:05:34,735
AND IT IS A COLLECTIVE THING,
829
01:05:34,860 --> 01:05:37,616
THE MOST BEAUTIFUL EXAMPLE
OF MEN WORKING TOGETHER
830
01:05:37,741 --> 01:05:40,914
TO BE SEEN IN PUBLIC TODAY.
831
01:05:41,080 --> 01:05:53,898
OTIS FERGUSON, THE NEW REPUBLIC.
832
01:05:54,023 --> 01:05:56,821
DESPITE THE QUARTET'S SUCCESS,
833
01:05:56,946 --> 01:06:01,580
FEW OTHER WHITE BANDLEADERS
WOULD DARE FOLLOW GOODMAN'S LEAD.
834
01:06:01,705 --> 01:06:03,835
THE MUSIC MAY HAVE BEEN
COLOR-BLIND,
835
01:06:03,960 --> 01:06:09,345
BUT THE COUNTRY WASN'T.
836
01:06:09,470 --> 01:06:12,644
WE HAD A PLACE
WHERE WE WERE SITTING
837
01:06:12,769 --> 01:06:16,484
AND WHERE THE MUSICIANS
COULD STOP AND HAVE A DRINK.
838
01:06:16,652 --> 01:06:19,490
AND A GUY CAME OVER TO BENNY
AND SAY,
839
01:06:19,616 --> 01:06:25,127
"WELL, BENNY, WHAT YOU DOING
WITH THOSE NIGGERS IN THE BAND?"
840
01:06:25,252 --> 01:06:28,383
AND BENNY SAY,
"IF YOU SAY THAT AGAIN TO ME,
841
01:06:28,509 --> 01:06:31,014
I'LL TAKE THE CLARINET AND BUST
YOU ACROSS THE HEAD WITH IT."
842
01:06:41,117 --> 01:06:44,666
WELL,
JAZZ DEFINITELY IS ABOUT THE POSSIBILITIES OF OUR--
843
01:06:44,791 --> 01:06:46,377
INHERENT IN OUR SYSTEM,
844
01:06:46,545 --> 01:06:51,220
BECAUSE WHEN A BAND PLAYS,
THEY'RE DEALING WITH A NEGOTIATION.
845
01:06:51,346 --> 01:06:53,893
THE THING ABOUT JAZZ
IS IT'S A HEALING,
846
01:06:54,018 --> 01:06:58,276
BUT NOT BY RUNNING.
847
01:06:58,401 --> 01:07:00,949
IT'S THE TYPE OF HEALING
OF THE ENGAGEMENT.
848
01:07:01,074 --> 01:07:02,284
IT'S LIKE, WELL,
849
01:07:02,409 --> 01:07:05,123
UH, WE HAVE A--
WE HAVE A PROBLEM.
850
01:07:05,248 --> 01:07:07,712
BUT WE'RE GOING TO HEAL IT
WITH SOME SOUL.
851
01:07:07,837 --> 01:07:10,969
BUT IN ORDER FOR US TO HEAL IT,
WE HAVE TO DEAL WITH IT.
852
01:07:11,094 --> 01:07:12,639
AND WE CAN'T RUN FROM IT.
853
01:07:12,764 --> 01:07:46,497
AND THE MORE WE RUN FROM IT,
THE MORE WE RUN INTO IT.
854
01:07:46,623 --> 01:07:48,501
IN 1935,
855
01:07:48,627 --> 01:07:52,009
DUKE ELLINGTON ASKED A MOSTLY
UNKNOWN 19-YEAR-OLD SINGER
856
01:07:52,134 --> 01:08:11,965
TO APPEAR IN A SHORT FILM
CALLED "SYMPHONY IN BLACK."
857
01:08:12,091 --> 01:08:16,767
♪♪ SADDEST TALE ON LAND OR SEA ♪
858
01:08:16,892 --> 01:08:22,152
♪♪ WAS WHEN MY MAN WALKED OUT
ON ME ♪♪
859
01:08:22,277 --> 01:08:25,575
HER NAME WAS BILLIE HOLIDAY
860
01:08:25,743 --> 01:08:29,375
AND SHE HAD ALREADY BEEN LIVING
THE KIND OF HARD LIFE
861
01:08:29,500 --> 01:08:31,420
SHE PORTRAYED IN THE FILM.
862
01:08:31,546 --> 01:08:37,432
♪♪ MY MAN'S GONE,
I FEELS ALONE ♪♪
863
01:08:37,558 --> 01:08:43,111
♪♪ I'VE GOT THOSE
LOST MY MAN BLUES ♪♪
864
01:08:43,278 --> 01:08:46,159
♪♪ HE DIDN'T TREAT ME FAIR ♪♪
865
01:08:46,284 --> 01:08:49,123
♪♪ IT'S MORE THAN I CAN BEAR ♪♪
866
01:08:49,248 --> 01:08:54,633
♪♪ I'VE GOT THOSE
LOST MY MAN BLUES ♪♪
867
01:08:54,759 --> 01:08:57,849
♪♪ I'VE GOT THOSE LOST MY MAN ♪♪
868
01:08:57,974 --> 01:09:06,302
♪♪ CAN'T GET HIM BACK AGAIN
BLUES ♪♪
869
01:09:06,329 --> 01:09:10,165
SHE HAD BEEN BORN
ELEANORA FAGAN IN 1915
870
01:09:10,290 --> 01:09:12,969
AND WAS BROUGHT UP IN BALTIMORE.
871
01:09:13,036 --> 01:09:14,915
HER PARENTS NEVER MARRIED,
872
01:09:15,040 --> 01:09:17,252
AND SHE YEARNED
ALL OF HER CHILDHOOD
873
01:09:17,378 --> 01:09:18,923
FOR HER MOSTLY ABSENT FATHER,
874
01:09:19,090 --> 01:09:20,483
CLARENCE HOLIDAY,
875
01:09:20,508 --> 01:09:25,435
A GUITARIST WHO ONCE PLAYED
WITH FLETCHER HENDERSON.
876
01:09:26,104 --> 01:09:30,947
HER FATHER'S FLASHY EXAMPLE
HELPED LURE HER INTO THE MUSIC BUSINESS,
877
01:09:31,072 --> 01:09:34,997
BUT HIS HUSTLING WAYS
WERE MIRRORED IN MANY OF THE PREDATORY MEN
878
01:09:35,122 --> 01:09:41,522
TO WHOM SHE WOULD BE ATTRACTED
ALL HER LIFE.
879
01:09:41,569 --> 01:09:44,073
SHE WAS MOLESTED AND ABUSED
AS A CHILD,
880
01:09:44,240 --> 01:09:46,077
AND BY THE AGE OF 12,
881
01:09:46,202 --> 01:09:50,085
SHE WAS WORKING AS A PROSTITUTE
IN A WATERFRONT WHOREHOUSE.
882
01:09:50,453 --> 01:09:52,374
SHE EARNED EXTRA MONEY
883
01:09:52,399 --> 01:09:55,070
SINGING ALONG WITH THE VICTROLA
IN THE PARLOR--
884
01:09:55,454 --> 01:09:58,460
THE MUSIC OF LOUIS ARMSTRONG
AND BESSIE SMITH.
885
01:10:04,786 --> 01:10:06,998
AT 13, SHE WAS IN NEW YORK,
886
01:10:07,509 --> 01:10:09,606
SINGING FOR TIPS
AT RENT PARTIES
887
01:10:09,631 --> 01:10:11,133
AND SMALL HARLEM CLUBS,
888
01:10:11,616 --> 01:10:13,495
SINGING FOR FUN AT JAM SESSIONS,
889
01:10:13,520 --> 01:10:17,737
AND EVENTUALLY RENAMING HERSELF
BILLIE HOLIDAY,
890
01:10:17,762 --> 01:10:19,406
AFTER HER ABSENT FATHER.
891
01:10:23,611 --> 01:10:25,490
ONE EVENING IN 1933,
892
01:10:25,615 --> 01:10:28,496
SHE WAS SINGING IN A CLUB
CALLED MONETTE'S
893
01:10:28,621 --> 01:10:36,845
WHEN THE JAZZ CRITIC
AND PROMOTER JOHN HAMMOND HAPPENED TO DROP BY.
894
01:10:36,971 --> 01:10:39,851
HE WAS DAZZLED BY
THE WAY SHE LOOKED...
895
01:10:39,977 --> 01:10:42,356
AND BY THE WAY SHE SANG.
896
01:10:47,659 --> 01:10:52,042
♪♪ A FINE ROMANCE ♪♪
897
01:10:52,167 --> 01:10:56,050
♪♪ WITH NO KISSES ♪♪
898
01:10:56,175 --> 01:10:59,891
♪♪ A FINE ROMANCE ♪♪
899
01:11:00,017 --> 01:11:02,564
♪♪ MY FRIEND, THIS IS ♪♪
900
01:11:02,689 --> 01:11:05,235
ALTHOUGH SHE HAD
A TINY VOCAL RANGE--
901
01:11:05,402 --> 01:11:07,574
JUST OVER AN OCTAVE--
902
01:11:07,699 --> 01:11:11,080
HOLIDAY WAS ABLE TO MAKE
EACH SONG HER OWN,
903
01:11:11,205 --> 01:11:22,144
IN PART BY SINGING
JUST BEHIND THE BEAT.
904
01:11:22,269 --> 01:11:27,154
SHE PHRASED THE MELODIES
IN THE MANNER OF JAZZ INSTRUMENTALISTS...
905
01:11:27,279 --> 01:11:30,118
AND CONSIDERED HERSELF
A MUSICIAN
906
01:11:30,243 --> 01:11:34,126
BEFORE SHE WAS A SINGER.
907
01:11:34,251 --> 01:11:39,971
♪♪ I MIGHT AS WELL PLAY BRIDGE
WITH MY OLD MAID AUNT ♪♪
908
01:11:40,097 --> 01:11:43,478
♪♪ I HAVEN'T GOT A CHANCE ♪♪
909
01:11:43,604 --> 01:11:50,702
♪♪ THIS IS A FINE ROMANCE ♪♪
910
01:11:50,827 --> 01:11:53,999
HAMMOND EVENTUALLY ARRANGED FOR A SERIES OF RECORDING SESSIONS
911
01:11:54,125 --> 01:11:57,297
LED BY TEDDY WILSON.
912
01:11:57,423 --> 01:12:03,686
BENNY GOODMAN SOMETIMES
SAT IN, TOO.
913
01:12:03,811 --> 01:12:07,694
♪♪ A FINE ROMANCE ♪♪
914
01:12:07,819 --> 01:12:11,702
♪♪ MY GOOD FELLOW ♪♪
915
01:12:11,827 --> 01:12:15,375
♪♪ YOU TAKE ROMANCE ♪♪
916
01:12:15,500 --> 01:12:18,506
♪♪ I'LL TAKE JELL-O ♪♪
917
01:12:18,632 --> 01:12:20,762
♪♪ YOU'RE CALMER THAN... ♪♪
918
01:12:20,887 --> 01:12:24,226
BILLIE HAD
THAT STRANGE SCRATCH.
919
01:12:24,351 --> 01:12:32,034
SHE HAD THAT ASTONISHING TIMING
AHEAD OF NOTES, BEHIND NOTES.
920
01:12:32,159 --> 01:12:34,748
WHEN YOU LISTEN TO
THE EARLY RECORDS,
921
01:12:34,873 --> 01:12:41,260
THE BLUES FEELING,
WHICH ALWAYS SUGGESTS A CERTAIN MELANCHOLY,
922
01:12:41,385 --> 01:12:48,776
LET'S SAY, YOU KNOW, IT SUGGESTS
THAT LIFE IS GOING TO PLAY SOME, SOME HARD TRICK ALONG THE WAY,
923
01:12:48,901 --> 01:12:53,117
IT IS PERFECTLY BALANCED
BY THIS KIND OF INSOUCIANCE.
924
01:12:53,243 --> 01:12:54,578
SHE'S TERRIBLY WITTY.
925
01:12:54,704 --> 01:12:57,125
LISTEN TO HER SINGA FINE ROMANCE
926
01:12:57,251 --> 01:12:58,963
OR ANY SUCH THING.
927
01:12:59,088 --> 01:13:02,971
SHE'S PRACTICALLY EBULLIENT WHEN
SHE SOUNDS IN THOSE EARLY THINGS LIKE A HORN,
928
01:13:03,096 --> 01:13:05,308
SHE'S HAVING THE TIME
OF HER LIFE.
929
01:13:05,433 --> 01:13:11,864
♪♪ I'VE NEVER MUSSED THE CREASE
IN YOUR BLUE SERGE PANTS ♪♪
930
01:13:11,989 --> 01:13:15,830
♪♪ I NEVER GET NO CHANCE ♪♪
931
01:13:15,955 --> 01:13:24,513
♪♪ THIS IS A FINE ROMANCE ♪♪
932
01:13:24,639 --> 01:13:28,354
HOLIDAY WAS
FIERCELY INDEPENDENT.
933
01:13:28,479 --> 01:13:31,360
A WOMAN WHO HAD KNOWN HER
SINCE CHILDHOOD SAID,
934
01:13:31,485 --> 01:13:34,575
"SHE WAS JUST DON'T CARE-ISH."
935
01:13:36,537 --> 01:13:39,878
BILLIE HOLIDAY WOULD REMAIN
DON'T CARE-ISH ALL HER LIFE,
936
01:13:40,003 --> 01:13:43,384
CURSING, DRINKING, BRAWLING,
937
01:13:43,509 --> 01:13:45,890
PURSUING PARTNERS OF BOTH SEXES,
938
01:13:46,015 --> 01:13:48,729
LEADING A LIFE
SO CLOSE TO THE EDGE
939
01:13:48,896 --> 01:13:54,031
THAT IT WAS A WONDER
TO HER FRIENDS THAT SHE MANAGED TO SURVIVE.
940
01:13:54,156 --> 01:13:58,081
BUT OUT OF ALL OF IT,
SHE MADE UNFORGETTABLE ART
941
01:13:58,206 --> 01:14:02,130
AND WOULD EVENTUALLY
BECOME THE MOST IMPORTANT FEMALE VOCALIST
942
01:14:02,255 --> 01:14:06,932
IN THE HISTORY OF JAZZ.
943
01:14:07,057 --> 01:14:15,407
♪♪ OH, EVERY TIME IT RAINS,
IT RAINS PENNIES FROM HEAVEN ♪♪
944
01:14:15,532 --> 01:14:18,287
WHEN YOU HEAR
BILLIE HOLIDAY SING,
945
01:14:18,413 --> 01:14:21,627
YOU HEAR THE SPIRIT
OF BESSIE SMITH
946
01:14:21,753 --> 01:14:23,631
AND LOUIS ARMSTRONG
947
01:14:23,799 --> 01:14:26,262
TOGETHER IN A PERSON.
948
01:14:26,387 --> 01:14:30,270
SO YOU HAVE THAT FIRE
OF THE BLUES SHOUTER,
949
01:14:30,395 --> 01:14:34,278
YOU HAVE THE INTELLIGENT CHOICE
OF NOTES LIKE A GREAT JAZZ MUSICIAN, LIKE LOUIS ARMSTRONG.
950
01:14:34,403 --> 01:14:39,288
♪♪ BE SURE THAT YOUR UMBRELLA ♪♪
951
01:14:39,413 --> 01:14:44,380
♪♪ IS UPSIDE DOWN ♪♪
952
01:14:44,393 --> 01:14:46,022
BUT YOU HAVE A--
WITH HER,
953
01:14:46,147 --> 01:14:52,786
A VERY PROFOUND SENSITIVITY
TO THE HUMAN CONDITION.
954
01:14:52,911 --> 01:14:57,928
SHE TELLS YOU SOMETHING ABOUT
THE PAIN OF THE BLUES,
955
01:14:59,575 --> 01:15:00,842
OF LIFE...
956
01:15:02,346 --> 01:15:06,772
BUT INSIDE OF THAT PAIN
IS A TOUGHNESS,
957
01:15:06,897 --> 01:15:09,276
AND THAT'S WHAT
YOU'RE ATTRACTED TO.
958
01:15:09,401 --> 01:15:13,117
♪♪ THERE'LL BE
PENNIES FROM HEAVEN ♪♪
959
01:15:13,243 --> 01:15:33,032
♪♪ FOR YOU AND ME ♪♪
960
01:15:41,499 --> 01:15:44,046
DO YOU REMEMBER
WHAT IT WAS LIKE?
961
01:15:44,172 --> 01:15:45,717
MAYBE YOU DO.
962
01:15:45,842 --> 01:15:47,553
MAYBE YOU WERE THERE.
963
01:15:47,721 --> 01:15:49,892
MAYBE YOU WERE THERE IN NEW YORK
964
01:15:50,058 --> 01:15:52,313
2/3 OF THE WAY
THROUGH THE 1930s
965
01:15:52,438 --> 01:15:55,569
WHEN THERE WERE
SO MANY GREAT BANDS PLAYING.
966
01:15:55,737 --> 01:15:59,118
YOU COULD GO TO
THE MANHATTAN ROOM OF THE HOTEL PENNSYLVANIA,
967
01:15:59,243 --> 01:16:02,082
WHERE BENNY GOODMAN WAS PLAYING
WITH HIS GREAT BAND,
968
01:16:02,208 --> 01:16:04,420
COMPLETE WITH GENE KRUPA.
969
01:16:04,587 --> 01:16:07,426
MAYBE YOU'D RATHER GO TO
SOME OTHER HOTEL ROOM,
970
01:16:07,593 --> 01:16:09,848
LIKE THE PALM ROOM
OF THE COMMODORE
971
01:16:09,973 --> 01:16:14,273
FOR RED NORVO
AND MILDRED BAILEY AND THEIR SOFT, SUBTLE SWING,
972
01:16:14,440 --> 01:16:19,116
OR TO THE GRILL ROOM OF
THE LEXINGTON FOR BOB CROSBY AND HIS DIXIELAND BOB CATS.
973
01:16:19,283 --> 01:16:23,458
AND THEN
974
01:16:23,625 --> 01:16:26,005
THE ROSELAND WITH WOODY HERMAN
975
01:16:26,130 --> 01:16:29,721
AND THE SAVOY WITH CHICK WEBB.
976
01:16:29,847 --> 01:16:33,813
GEORGE T. SIMON, METRONOME.
977
01:16:33,938 --> 01:16:37,486
THE SAVOY BALLROOM, AT
140th STREET AND LENOX AVENUE,
978
01:16:37,611 --> 01:16:42,204
WAS STILL HARLEM'S HOTTEST SPOT.
979
01:16:42,329 --> 01:16:43,833
AND CHICK WEBB,
980
01:16:43,958 --> 01:16:46,741
WHO HAD BEEN ONE OF THE FIRST
BANDLEADERS TO PLAY SWING,
981
01:16:46,766 --> 01:16:49,146
WAS STILL IN CHARGE.
982
01:16:50,005 --> 01:16:52,523
CHICK WEBB IS A--
A PHENOMENON.
983
01:16:52,548 --> 01:16:55,522
THERE'S NEVER BEEN
ANYONE LIKE HIM, NEVER WILL BE AGAIN.
984
01:16:55,647 --> 01:16:57,234
HE WAS A HUNCHBACK DWARF,
985
01:16:57,359 --> 01:17:00,867
SUFFERED FROM
A SPINAL DISFIGUREMENT FROM HIS CHILDHOOD.
986
01:17:00,992 --> 01:17:02,453
AN ABSOLUTELY BRILLIANT DRUMMER.
987
01:17:05,000 --> 01:17:08,590
HERE'S THIS LITTLE GUY SITTING
BEHIND A FULL-SIZE DRUM SET
988
01:17:08,715 --> 01:17:12,222
AND YET THEY HAD TO NAIL IT DOWN
TO THE STAGE
989
01:17:12,348 --> 01:17:14,602
BECAUSE THE FORCE
OF HIS FOOT PEDAL
990
01:17:14,727 --> 01:17:17,232
WOULD HAVE KICKED THE BASS DRUM
RIGHT OFF.
991
01:17:23,078 --> 01:17:27,113
CHICK WEBB WAS
MY FIRST HERO THAT I EVER SAW.
992
01:17:28,060 --> 01:17:30,523
AND I WALKED IN,
MY OLD MAN TOOK ME THERE--
993
01:17:30,649 --> 01:17:32,763
I WAS...MUST HAVE BEEN
12 YEARS OLD, TO THE THEATER--
994
01:17:32,797 --> 01:17:34,676
AND I'M LOOKING FOR
A REAL, LIKE A DRUMMER
995
01:17:34,801 --> 01:17:36,680
AND ALL I SEE IS
A GIGANTIC BASS DRUM
996
01:17:36,805 --> 01:17:39,101
WITH A HEAD STICKING
OVER THE TOP OF IT
997
01:17:39,226 --> 01:17:42,758
AND THESE TWO--
TWO ARMS FLAILING AROUND,
998
01:17:43,031 --> 01:17:45,238
PLAYING THE GREATEST STUFF
I EVER HEARD IN MY LIFE.
999
01:17:50,905 --> 01:17:53,171
ON MAY 11, 1937,
1000
01:17:53,297 --> 01:17:56,135
BENNY GOODMAN VENTURED UPTOWN
TO CHALLENGE WEBB
1001
01:17:56,260 --> 01:18:01,479
IN WHAT WAS BILLED AS
THE "MUSIC BATTLE OF THE CENTURY."
1002
01:18:01,605 --> 01:18:04,485
"FELLAS, THIS IS MY HOUR,"
WEBB TOLD HIS MEN,
1003
01:18:05,083 --> 01:18:09,196
"ANYBODY MISSES NOTES--
DON'T COME BACK TO WORK!"
1004
01:18:14,344 --> 01:18:17,266
4,000 FANS JAMMED
INTO THE BALLROOM,
1005
01:18:17,698 --> 01:18:20,573
AND MOUNTED POLICEMEN
AND FIREMEN HAD TO BE CALLED
1006
01:18:20,598 --> 01:18:22,943
TO CONTROL
THE CROWD OF 5,000 MORE
1007
01:18:23,043 --> 01:18:26,170
WHO COULDN'T GET IN
AND REFUSED TO GO HOME.
1008
01:18:27,069 --> 01:18:28,635
AMONG THOSE WHO DID GET IN
1009
01:18:28,847 --> 01:18:31,492
WERE NORMA MILLER
AND FRANKIE MANNING,
1010
01:18:31,823 --> 01:18:33,368
PROFESSIONAL LINDY HOPPERS NOW,
1011
01:18:33,393 --> 01:18:39,614
WHO HAD BEEN TAKING ON
ALL COMERS IN DANCE CONTESTS AROUND THE WORLD.
1012
01:18:39,639 --> 01:18:41,559
THEY HAD COME HOME TO THE SAVOY
1013
01:18:41,685 --> 01:18:45,818
TO SEE THEIR HERO FACE
HIS MOST CELEBRATED CHALLENGER.
1014
01:18:52,848 --> 01:18:56,398
THE NIGHT THAT BENNY GOODMAN
CAME TO PLAY AGAINST CHICK WEBB...
1015
01:18:56,423 --> 01:18:57,100
Woman: 1938.
1016
01:18:57,125 --> 01:18:59,000
THIS WAS
AN ELECTRICAL NIGHT,
1017
01:18:59,313 --> 01:19:02,692
THIS WAS, I MEAN,
WITH THE, THE AIR
1018
01:19:02,799 --> 01:19:05,451
OF BEING AROUND
THE SAVOY BALLROOM.
1019
01:19:05,551 --> 01:19:08,651
HERE'S BENNY GOODMAN,
THE KING OF SWING, AND HERE'S--
1020
01:19:08,676 --> 01:19:09,771
CHICK WEBB,
THE KING OF SWING.
1021
01:19:09,796 --> 01:19:11,885
THE KING OF SWING.
1022
01:19:11,910 --> 01:19:13,650
YOU KNOW, AS FAR AS WE
ARE CONCERNED, YOU KNOW,
1023
01:19:13,675 --> 01:19:17,631
THERE'S CHICK WEBB
GOING UP AGAINST BENNY GOODMAN.
1024
01:19:21,082 --> 01:19:22,836
YOU KNOW,
GOODMAN WAS A GIANT
1025
01:19:22,961 --> 01:19:24,549
BECAUSE THEY CALLED HIM
"THE KING OF SWING" AT THAT TIME.
1026
01:19:24,574 --> 01:19:27,469
AND ANY BAND
THAT PLAYED SWING,
1027
01:19:27,494 --> 01:19:28,309
WE WOULD BUY
THEIR RECORDS.
1028
01:19:28,334 --> 01:19:30,986
SO WE WE KNEW--
WE KNEW ABOUT BENNY GOODMAN.
1029
01:19:32,171 --> 01:19:34,217
A LOT OF PEOPLE
MAY NOT REALIZE
1030
01:19:34,434 --> 01:19:38,366
THAT A LOT OF
THE ARRANGEMENTS THAT BENNY GOODMAN HAD,
1031
01:19:38,533 --> 01:19:41,172
CHICK WEBB HAD
THE SAME ARRANGEMENTS.
1032
01:19:44,853 --> 01:19:47,566
AND WHEN
THEY GET ON A BANDSTAND,
1033
01:19:47,733 --> 01:19:51,574
NOW THIS IS WHEN YOU
CAN KNOW WHICH BAND IS THE BEST,
1034
01:19:51,741 --> 01:19:55,290
BY LISTENING TO THEM
PLAY THE SAME ARRANGEMENT.
1035
01:20:37,666 --> 01:20:39,002
TO ME,
1036
01:20:39,509 --> 01:20:42,457
CHICK WEBB OUTSWUNG
BENNY GOODMAN THAT NIGHT.
1037
01:20:42,482 --> 01:20:44,059
I SAY
THE SAME THING, YEAH.
1038
01:20:44,185 --> 01:20:45,262
THAT WAS MY FEELING.
1039
01:20:45,287 --> 01:20:46,899
I'M NOT SAYING THIS
BECAUSE--
1040
01:20:47,024 --> 01:20:48,360
NOT BEING PREJUDICED.
1041
01:20:48,527 --> 01:20:49,456
YEAH, BECAUSE
IT'S CHICK WEBB
1042
01:20:49,481 --> 01:20:51,026
OR BECAUSE
I'M BEING PREJUDICED.
1043
01:20:51,176 --> 01:20:55,596
BUT TO ME, I FEEL THAT
CHICK WEBB OUTSWUNG BENNY GOODMAN
1044
01:20:55,621 --> 01:20:57,355
THAT NIGHT, YOU KNOW,
1045
01:20:57,480 --> 01:21:01,857
BECAUSE I SAW GUYS ON
BENNY GOODMAN'S BAND-- BANDSTAND
1046
01:21:01,964 --> 01:21:03,383
WHEN CHICK WEBB
WAS PLAYING...
1047
01:21:03,508 --> 01:21:06,419
I SEEN GUYS ON THERE,
THEY'D STAND UP THERE AND SAY...
1048
01:21:06,473 --> 01:21:09,979
THEY JUST
SHOOK THEIR HEADS.
1049
01:21:10,104 --> 01:21:12,686
THE GOODMAN BAND WAS ROUTED.
1050
01:21:12,709 --> 01:21:16,717
GENE KRUPA BOWED DOWN IN TRIBUTE
1051
01:21:16,842 --> 01:21:20,571
CHICK WEBB, HE SAID,
HAD "CUT ME TO RIBBONS."
1052
01:21:22,394 --> 01:21:25,108
"NOBODY," ONE OF WEBB'S MEN
REMEMBERED,
1053
01:21:25,233 --> 01:21:29,529
"COULD HAVE TAKEN IT AWAY
FROM CHICK THAT NIGHT."
1054
01:21:48,781 --> 01:21:51,661
DESPITE ITS
OVERWHELMING POPULARITY,
1055
01:21:51,787 --> 01:21:55,001
SWING MUSIC HAD NOT CAPTURED
THE HEART OF EVERY MUSICIAN--
1056
01:21:55,127 --> 01:21:57,673
OR EVERY JAZZ FAN.
1057
01:21:57,799 --> 01:22:02,516
SOME FOUND BIG BANDS TOO STIFF,
TOO REGIMENTED.
1058
01:22:02,683 --> 01:22:07,192
JOHN HAMMOND, WHO HAD HELPED
BUILD THE BENNY GOODMAN BAND,
1059
01:22:07,317 --> 01:22:10,825
NOW CHARGED THAT SWING
HAD BECOME TOO COMMERCIAL,
1060
01:22:10,950 --> 01:22:13,705
THAT IT STIFLED FREEDOM
AND SELF-EXPRESSION,
1061
01:22:13,831 --> 01:22:19,550
TOOK JAZZ IN
THE WRONG DIRECTION.
1062
01:22:19,717 --> 01:22:22,389
THERE WAS
A PRESSURE ON EVEN THE BEST OF THE JAZZ BAND LEADERS.
1063
01:22:22,514 --> 01:22:25,103
NOT ALL OF THEM FELL
TO THAT PRESSURE,
1064
01:22:25,228 --> 01:22:27,734
BUT BENNY GOODMAN ON
A TYPICAL RECORDING SESSION
1065
01:22:27,901 --> 01:22:29,863
WOULD MAKE TWO GREAT
JAZZ INSTRUMENTALS
1066
01:22:29,988 --> 01:22:32,326
AND THEN TWO POP VOCALS
AT THE SAME SESSION.
1067
01:22:32,451 --> 01:22:35,917
SO THERE WAS ALWAYS THIS--
THIS PRESSURE TO BE COMMERCIAL,
1068
01:22:36,042 --> 01:22:38,756
TO REACH THE POPULAR AUDIENCE,
1069
01:22:38,881 --> 01:22:41,552
TO BREAK THE GLEN MILLER
BARRIER, AS IT WERE.
1070
01:22:41,677 --> 01:22:45,812
♪♪ DRIFTING THROUGH THE SKY ♪♪
1071
01:22:45,937 --> 01:22:50,278
♪♪ WHILE I WONDER WHY MY LOVE ♪♪
1072
01:22:50,403 --> 01:22:56,792
♪♪ EVER SAID GOOD-BYE ♪♪
1073
01:22:56,917 --> 01:23:00,131
ONE SNOWY NIGHT IN 1936,
1074
01:23:00,257 --> 01:23:04,515
JOHN HAMMOND GREW TIRED OF
LISTENING TO BENNY GOODMAN PERFORM HIS FAMILIAR HITS
1075
01:23:04,640 --> 01:23:06,352
AT THE CONGRESS HOTEL
IN CHICAGO.
1076
01:23:06,477 --> 01:23:08,356
HAMMOND WENT OUTSIDE,
1077
01:23:08,481 --> 01:23:11,696
GOT INTO HIS CAR,
AND TURNED ON THE RADIO,
1078
01:23:11,822 --> 01:23:15,495
HOPING TO HEAR SOMETHING NEW,
SOMETHING DIFFERENT,
1079
01:23:15,620 --> 01:23:20,005
SOMETHING LESS PREDICTABLE.
1080
01:23:20,130 --> 01:23:22,175
HE CAME ACROSS
AN EXPERIMENTAL STATION
1081
01:23:22,301 --> 01:23:25,892
BROADCASTING LIVE
FROM KANSAS CITY.
1082
01:23:26,017 --> 01:23:28,313
IT WAS 1:00 IN THE MORNING.
1083
01:23:28,438 --> 01:23:30,860
THE NIGHTLY BROADCAST
BY THE COUNT BASIE BAND
1084
01:23:31,027 --> 01:23:32,989
FROM THE RENO CLUB
WAS JUST BEGINNING.
1085
01:23:36,872 --> 01:23:52,904
I COULDN'T BELIEVE MY EARS.
1086
01:23:53,029 --> 01:23:55,910
JOHN HAMMOND
1087
01:23:56,035 --> 01:23:59,918
TO BRING COUNT BASIE
AND THE SOUND OF KANSAS CITY
1088
01:24:00,043 --> 01:24:03,800
TO THE REST OF THE COUNTRY.
91541
Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.