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Artie Shaw
Artie ShawArtie Shaw grew up in New Haven, Connecticut, where in the summer of 1925 he joined Johnny Cavallaro''s dance band as an alto saxophonist. While touring with Cavallaro the following year, he took up the clarinet, which later became his principal instrument. From 1926 to 1929, he worked in Cleveland and established a lasting reputation as music director and arranger for an orchestra led by the violinist Austin Wylie. He then toured as a tenor saxophonist with Irving Aaronson''s band, and while in Chicago in 1929 played in jam sessions with several local musicians. At the same time, he discovered the music of Debussy and Stravinsky; both influences were important in his musical development. Later that year, Shaw traveled with Aaronson to New York, where he played in Harlem jam sessions and came under the influence and tutelage of Willie "the Lion" Smith. From 1931 to 1935, he worked as a freelance studio musician, and in 1936 he formed his first group for a concert at the Imperial Theater. Shaw''s unorthodox band, consisting of a string quartet, three rhythm instruments, and clarinet, created a sensation by performing his chamber composition  Interlude in B Flat. Adding two trumpets, trombone, saxophone, and a singer, he signed a recording contract with Brunswick and led a band at New York''s Lexington Hotel. However, the public remained indifferent to the group''s unusual style and instrumentation, and Shaw was forced to disband in March 1937. One month later, Shaw formed a conventional swing band with a new library of music by Jerry Gray, trombonist Harry Rogers, and himself, and later adding pieces by the best popular song composers of the day. With this group, which briefly included Billie Holiday, he recorded his first big hit in 1938, Cole Porter''s Begin the Beguine. This marked a breakthrough to public fame and established Shaw as a rival to Benny Goodman. Constitutionally and emotionally unequal to his role as a matinee idol, however, Shaw withdrew from public view in November 1939, a move which served only to provoke the publicity he sought to avoid. In early 1940, Shaw worked in Hollywood on the film Second Chorus and recorded his next big hit, Frenesi, using a studio orchestra with a large string section. The success of this recording forced him on tour again with a big band augmented by nine strings. From within this group Shaw organized the Gramercy Five, including Johnny Guarnieri (harpsichord) and Billy Butterfield (trumpet), and recorded one of his best-known compositions, Summit Ridge Drive, in 1940. Despite high critical acclaim, Shaw again dissolved his band a few months later, settling in New York to record with studio groups and to study orchestration. His last pre-war band, organized in September 1941, included Hot Lips Page, Max Kaminsky, Georgie Auld, and Guarnieri.After enlisting in the US Navy in January 1942, Shaw was asked to form a band, which he then led throughout the Pacific war zone in 1943. Following his discharge and convalescence, he organized a new group in 1944, which was by all accounts his best jazz band. One of its recordings, Little Jazz in 1945 with Roy Eldridge, became a classic. He also continued to perform and record with a small group drawn from the members of the big band under the name Gramercy Five. During the next decade, Shaw organized two more big bands, appeared at Carnegie Hall, and issued recordings on several labels. He assembled his last Gramercy Five in October 1953 and after recording with the group in February and March 1954, he retired. 
 


The Complete Gramercy Five Sessions
Many swing big-band leaders featured small groups out of their orchestra as added attractions, ... more ..
Rca Label
Catalog No: RCA7637

On Sale $12.95


The Essential
The Essential Artie Shaw collects 38 tracks recorded between 1938 and 1953 for Bluebird. The ... more ..
Sony Music Label
Catalog No: SNY69239

On Sale $24.95
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