Tommy Dorsey
Wikimp3 information about the music of Tommy Dorsey. On our website we have 70 albums and 70 collections of artist Tommy Dorsey. You can find useful information and download songs of this artist. We also know that Tommy Dorsey represents Jazz genres.
Biography
[Edit]Though he might have been ranked second at any given moment to Benny Goodman, Artie Shaw, Glenn Miller, or Harry James, Tommy Dorsey was overall the most popular bandleader of the swing era that lasted from 1935 to 1945. His remarkably melodic trombone playing was the signature sound of his orchestra, but he successfully straddled the hot and sweet styles of swing with a mix of ballads and novelty songs. He provided showcases to vocalists like Frank Sinatra, Dick Haymes, and Jo Stafford, and he employed inventive arrangers such as Sy Oliver and Bill Finegan. He was the biggest-selling artist in the history of RCA Victor Records, one of the major labels, until the arrival of Elvis Presley, who was first given national exposure on the 1950s television show he hosted with his brother Jimmy.
Dorsey was 21 months younger than Jimmy and thus the second son of Thomas Francis Dorsey, Sr., a music teacher and band director, and Theresa Langton Dorsey. Both brothers received musical instruction from their father. Tommy focused on the trombone, though he also played trumpet, especially early in his career. The brothers played in local groups, then formed their own band, Dorsey's Novelty Six, in 1920. By 1922, when they played an engagement at a Baltimore amusement park and made their radio debut, they were calling the group Dorsey's Wild Canaries. During the early and mid-'20s, they played in a series of bands including the Scranton Sirens, the California Ramblers, and orchestras led by Jean Goldkette and Paul Whiteman, sometimes apart, but usually together. Eventually, they settled in New York and worked as session musicians. In 1927, they began recording as the Dorsey Brothers Orchestra for OKeh Records, using pickup bands, and they first reached the charts with "Coquette" in June 1928. In the spring of 1929, they scored a Top Ten hit with "Let's Do It (Let's Fall in Love)," which featured Bing Crosby on vocals.
The Dorseys finally organized a full-time band and signed to Decca Records in 1934. Hiring Bing Crosby's younger brother Bob Crosby as their vocalist, they scored a Top Ten hit with "I Believe in Miracles" in the late winter of 1935, quickly followed by "Tiny Little Fingerprints" (vocal by Kay Weber) and "Night Wind" (vocal by Bob Crosby). They then enjoyed successive number one hits with "Lullaby of Broadway" (vocal by Bob Crosby) and "Chasing Shadows" (vocal by Bob Eberly, Bob Crosby's replacement). The Dorsey Brothers Orchestra was poised to become the biggest band in the country in the spring of 1935 and might have been remembered for launching the swing era, but at the end of May the brothers, whose relationship was always volatile, disagreed, and Tommy left the band (which nevertheless scored another Top Ten hit with "Every Little Movement" that summer). Jimmy Dorsey continued to lead the band, which eventually was billed as Jimmy Dorsey and His Orchestra and went on to considerable success. But while the Dorseys stumbled, Benny Goodman achieved national success and was dubbed "the King of Swing."
Tommy Dorsey took over the remnants of the Joe Haymes band in founding his own orchestra in the fall of 1935. Signing to RCA Victor Records, he scored an immediate success with "On Treasure Island" (vocal by Edythe Wright), which topped the charts in December 1935, one of four Dorsey records to peak in the Top Ten before the end of the year. Dorsey was back at number one in January 1936 with "The Music Goes Round and Round" (vocal by Edythe Wright) and topped the charts again in February with "Alone" (vocal by Cliff Weston). "You" (vocal by Edythe Wright) gave him his third number one in 1936, to which can be added eight other Top Ten hits during the year. Dorsey was even more successful in 1937, a year in which he scored 18 Top Ten hits, among them the chart-toppers "Marie" (vocal by Jack Leonard), "Satan Takes a Holiday" (an instrumental), "The Big Apple," "Once in a While," and "The Dipsy Doodle" (vocal by Edythe Wright). Dorsey earned his own radio series, which ran for nearly three years. His 15 Top Ten hits in 1938 included the number one "Music, Maestro, Please" (vocal by Edythe Wright), and he had another 11 Top Ten hits in 1939, among them "Our Love" (vocal by Jack Leonard), which hit number one.
Notwithstanding his commercial success, Dorsey made important changes in his band in late 1939, particularly in his vocalists. Jack Leonard left the band in November, and Dorsey hired Frank Sinatra away from Harry James. Longtime female singer Edythe Wright also departed, replaced by Connie Haines, and the vocal quartet the Pied Pipers, featuring Jo Stafford, also joined Dorsey. The success only continued with the new members. Dorsey scored ten Top Ten hits in 1940, among them the chart-toppers "Indian Summer" and "All the Things You Are" (both with vocals by Leonard) as well as "I'll Never Smile Again" (with vocals by Sinatra and the Pied Pipers). For the year, he ranked second behind Glenn Miller as the top recording artist. He dropped to third place behind Miller and his brother Jimmy in 1941, a year in which he scored another ten Top Ten hits, eight of them featuring Sinatra, including the number one hit "Dolores" from the film Las Vegas Nights, released in March, in which the band appeared.
The year 1942 was a challenging one for Dorsey. The U.S. had entered World War II in December 1941, which put pressure on the big bands particularly in terms of changing personnel and travel difficulties. On August 1, 1942, the American Federation of Musicians called a strike that prevented musicians from entering recording studios. Frank Sinatra left the band in September to launch a solo career, and the Pied Pipers were gone by the end of the year. Nevertheless, Dorsey carried on, putting the band into a second motion picture, Ship Ahoy, which opened in June, and scoring four Top Ten hits, which, with his other chart entries, was enough to rank him fifth among the year's top recording artists. He earned the same ranking in the transitional year of 1943, despite being shut out of the recording studios, managing another four Top Ten hits, among them "There Are Such Things" and "In the Blue of the Evening," chart-toppers Sinatra recorded with the band before his departure. Meanwhile, Dorsey turned to film roles to keep active, appearing in three movies released during 1943: Presenting Lily Mars, DuBarry Was a Lady, and Girl Crazy.
By 1944, RCA Victor had exhausted its stockpile of unissued Dorsey recordings and had to resort to reissues, managing Top Ten hits with the 1938 instrumental "Boogie Woogie" and the 1940 recording "I'll Be Seeing You" with Sinatra on vocals. Dorsey remained in Hollywood, appearing in Broadway Rhythm, which opened in April. The settlement of the musicians' union strike in the fall allowed him to return to the recording studio, and he scored six Top Ten hits in 1945 as a result, also placing an album, Getting Sentimental, in the newly instituted album charts. In May, he appeared in the film Thrill of a Romance. Dorsey scored another Top Ten album with Show Boat, containing songs from the Broadway musical, in February 1946.
The big bands were in decline, and like some of his peers, Dorsey broke up his band in December 1946. But his All-Time Hits was in the Top Ten of the album charts in February 1947, and in March "How Are Things in Glocca Morra?" (vocal by Stuart Foster) entered the singles charts to become a Top Ten hit. Dorsey reorganized his band, and in May he played himself in a largely fictionalized film biography, The Fabulous Dorseys. Clambake Seven, an album of music by Dorsey's small group, reached the Top Ten in October 1948, the same month he appeared in the film A Song Is Born, and the following month he was back in the Top Ten of the singles charts with "Until" (vocal by Harry Prime). In the spring of 1949, he had a double-sided Top Ten hit with "The Hucklebuck" (vocal by Charlie Shavers)/"Again" (vocal by Marcy Lutes). The compilation album And the Band Sings Too was in the Top Ten in September, and Dorsey returned to the Top Ten of the album charts with Tommy Dorsey Plays Cole Porter in April 1950. His final film appearance came in Disc Jockey in September 1951.
Dorsey switched to Decca Records and continued to perform with his band in the early '50s. In May 1953, Jimmy Dorsey broke up his band and joined his brother's orchestra as a featured attraction; before long, the band was again being billed as the Dorsey Brothers Orchestra. While playing a residency at the Statler Hilton Hotel in New York, the brothers launched a television series, Stage Show, as a summer replacement program in the summer of 1954. It returned on an occasional basis during the 1954-1955 season and ran regularly once a week during the 1955-1956 season. Elvis Presley appeared on the show for six consecutive weeks starting in January 1956, his first nationally broadcast appearances. Sedated by sleeping pills following a heavy meal, Dorsey accidentally choked to death at the age of 51. His brother led his band briefly afterward, but Jimmy Dorsey died in 1957. Nevertheless, the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra continued to record and perform, and under the direction of Warren Covington it scored a final million-selling Top Ten hit in November 1958 with "Tea for Two Cha Cha."
Billed as "the sentimental gentleman of swing," Tommy Dorsey successfully combined the hot and sweet aspects of swing music while leading a band that consistently ranked among the top two or three orchestras in the U.S. from the mid-'30s to the mid-'40s, the entire swing era. His band was peopled with major jazz instrumentalists (including Bunny Berigan, Ziggy Elman, Pee Wee Erwin, Max Kaminsky, Buddy Rich, Charlie Shavers, and Dave Tough), arrangers (including Sy Oliver and Paul Weston), and singers (including Frank Sinatra and Jo Stafford) who went on to define popular music in the late '40s and early '50s. He was also an accomplished trombone player whose distinctive sound dominated his band and recordings. The bulk of those recordings were made for RCA Victor, though some later work was done for Decca and Columbia, and of course there are numerous airchecks, making for a large discography.
Title: The Ultimate Jazz Archive (Set 34: Big Band, Disc 2: Tommy Dorsey)
Artist: Tommy Dorsey
Genre: Jazz
Title: Warren Covington And The Tommy Dorsey Orchestra Blue Tango
Artist: Tommy Dorsey, Warren Covington
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Song Is You (Remastered)
Artist: Tommy Dorsey, Frank Sinatra
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz, Pop
Title: It's All So New
Artist: Frank Sinatra, The Tommy Dorsey Orchestra, Tommy Dorsey
Title: Falling In Love With Frank Sinatra & Tommy Dorsey
Artist: Tommy Dorsey, Frank Sinatra
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
Collections
Title: Let's Boogie Woogie
Genre: Blues
Title: Legends of Jazz
Genre: Jazz
Title: Something to Remember You By: Songs That Won the War
Genre: Jazz
Title: A Retrospective Hits of 1935
Genre: Pop
Title: And Now Halloween (The Best Classic Songs)
Genre: Pop
Title: It's Swing Time, Vol. 2
Genre: Jazz
Title: Big Band Remixed & Reinvented
Genre: Electronica, Jazz
Title: 100 Hits: Essential 30s & 40s Classics
Genre: Pop
Title: Retro Children's Songs
Genre: Kids
Title: The Home Front (Songs That Won the War)
Genre: Jazz
Title: 30's & 40's Era Halloween, Vol. 2
Genre: Jazz
Title: Hipster Heebie Jeebies
Genre:
Title: Hipster Halloween
Genre:
Title: The Greatest Hits of the Forties, Vol. 2
Genre:
Title: Hits Of The 30s & 40s Vol 2
Genre: Pop
Title: The Nelson Riddle Collection 1941-62, Vol. 1
Genre: Pop
Title: Original Hits: The Crooners
Genre: Jazz
Title: Hot Trumpets
Genre: Jazz
Title: Gimme That Old Fashion Jazz Ballad
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Old Good Times (1936)
Genre: World Music
Title: Songs from Woody Allen' Films, Vol. 2
Genre: Jazz
Title: Savage Rhythm
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Jazz
Title: The Ultimate Big Band Collection
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Hot 100 - Swing Jazz, Vol. 2
Genre: Jazz
Title: Rare Jazz Sessions - (1938-1944)
Genre: Jazz
Title: 100 Swing for Dance
Genre: Jazz
Title: Songs from Woody Allen' Films
Genre: Jazz
Title: Legends of Jazz, Vol. 3
Genre: Jazz
Title: Classic Hollywood Jazz Era
Genre: Jazz
Title: Essential Jazz Vocal Groups [Live]
Genre: Jazz
Title: Original Hits: Bands of Always
Genre: Jazz
Title: Call of Duty - Songs of Civil & World Wars
Genre: Jazz
Title: Let It Swing - Uptown Downbeat
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Golden Age of Hollywood
Genre: Pop, Theatre/Soundtrack
Title: Big Band Era (Digital Version)
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Best of the Big Bands
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Great Sweet Bands of the 40's
Genre: Jazz
Title: That Devilin' Tune: A Jazz History (1895-1950)
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Jazz Story - Close to Heaven
Genre: Jazz
Title: 40's Dance Party
Genre: Jazz
Title: Great Gatsby Christmas
Genre: Jazz
Title: Music of Cole Porter
Genre: Jazz
Title: 100 Hits Vintage Nº 3 / 100 Hits Vintage N? 3
Genre: Pop
Title: Legends of the Big Band Era
Genre: Alternative
Title: Legends of Big Band Swing
Genre: Jazz
Title: Legends of Big Band Swing
Genre: Jazz
Title: Flappers & Gangsters of the 1920's
Genre: Jazz
Title: 101 Big Bands Swing
Genre: Jazz
Title: 100 Hits Vintage Nº5 / 100 Hits Vintage N?5
Genre: Pop
Title: I Want a Hippopotamus for Christmas
Genre: Traditional Pop Music
Title: The Best Collection: Boogie Woogie
Genre: Jazz
Title: Gatsby's Greats
Genre: Pop
Title: Great Memories
Genre: Jazz
Featuring albums
Title: Victory Parade of Spotlight Bands - 1943-45 Wartime Broadcasts (Live)
Artist: Various Artists
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Soundtrack to Your Life: 1940 Hits
Artist: Various Artists
Genre: Classical, Easy Listening