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Larry Elgart - New Sounds At The Roosevelt

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Larry Elgart - New Sounds at the Roosevelt
RCA Victor
LSP-2045
Stereo
1959
Vinyl



Larry Elgart was born in 1922 in New London, Connecticut, four years younger than his brother, Les. Their mother was a concert pianist; their father played piano as well, though not professionally. Both brothers began playing in jazz ensembles in their teens, and while young Larry played with jazz musicians such as Charlie Spivak, Woody Herman, Red Norvo, Freddie Slack, and Tommy Dorsey.

In the mid-1940's, Les and Larry started up their own ensemble, hiring Nelson Riddle, Bill Finegan, and Ralph Flanagan to arrange tunes for them. Their ensemble was not successful, and after a few years they scuttled the band and sold the arrangements they had commissioned to Tommy Dorsey. Both returned to sideman positions in various orchestras.

In 1953, Larry met Charles Albertine and recorded two of his experimental compositions, Impressions of Outer Space and Music for Barefoot Ballerinas. Released on 10" vinyl, these recordings became collector's items for fans of avant-garde jazz, but they were not commercially successful at the time. Larry and Albertine put together a more traditional ensemble and began recording them using precise microphone placements, producing what came to be known as the "Elgart sound". This proved to be very commercially successful, and Larry enjoyed a run of successful albums and singles in the 1950's.

In 1954, the Elgarts left their permanent mark on music history in recording Albertine's "Bandstand Boogie," for the legendary television show originally hosted by Bob Horn, and two years later, Dick Clark. Clark took the show national, to ABC-TV, in 1956 and remained host for another 32 years. Variations to the original surfaced as the show's theme in later years. Les and Larry reunited in 1963, but it would not last long; soon after, Les retired from performing altogether, while Larry continued to perform and record regularly for decades.

Larry's biggest exposure came in 1982, with the smash success of a recording called "Hooked on Swing". The instrumental was a medley of swing jazz hits - "In the Mood", "Cherokee", "American Patrol", "Sing, Sing, Sing", "Don't Be That Way", "Little Brown Jug", "Opus #1", "Zing Went the Strings of My Heart", and "String of Pearls" - that became so popular it even cracked the US Billboard Pop Singles chart (at #31) and Adult Contemporary chart (#20). Billed as "Larry Elgart and His Manhattan Swing Orchestra", the LP from which the tune was taken hit #24 on the US charts. The follow-up, Hooked on Swing 2, debuted at #89 on the album charts, and soon after Larry was back to the jazz touring circuit. He continued to tour internationally and record into the 2000's.
Source: Wikipedia
Also see: Space Age Pop


This is some great swinging, jazzy, Big Band sounds. Found this in the bargain bin and thought the cover was awesome...the music is much better. A companion Big Band piece is available to the friends of Licorice Pizza. Log in and get the twofer.

Side A
01 - Let My People Swing
02 - Yearning Just For You
03 - You Should Have Told Me
04 - I Cried For You
05 - Honey Suckle Rose
06 - If Love Is So Good To Me
07 - Mountain Greenery

Side B
08 - Cool-Aid
09 - Sleepy Time Gal
10 - Lagonda
11 - April
12 - Wabash Blues
13 - Blue Thursday
14 - Walkin'

New Sounds

Claus Ogerman - Watusi TrumpetsWalter Wanderley - Organized

Comments

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Luis writes:

I thank you for this album. I never saw it before!

Luis

By anonymous user, # 31. December 2007, 21:07:55

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Hector writes:

Gotta say that I am sure glad that I got this. What a great album. I was going to pass but the Aston Martin sucked me in. This is some great music. Thanks for this. Keep up the great posts and Happy New Year to you, Mr. Pizza

By anonymous user, # 31. December 2007, 21:54:40

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My pleasure fellers! We're going to use the title of this album to kick off the New Year. New Sounds at Licorice Pizza. Just pulled up from there hiding place, 3 crates of vinyl I collected back in the 1980's. (The olden days.) There are a few OOP albums in there that are not anything like what we have been seeing here. Stay tuned! LP

By Licorice Pizza, # 31. December 2007, 21:57:54

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K4C writes:

Thanks this is a great surprise

By anonymous user, # 1. January 2008, 14:28:40

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Ashish writes:

Thanks a lot for this great album. Now i'm expecting somemore good music from you.
Cheers!!

By anonymous user, # 3. January 2008, 08:58:55

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Esther writes:

Hey there!

Just stopping in to wish you a Happy New Year! Looking forward to more of your great posts this year!

Esther at Stax o' Wax
www.stax-o-wax.blogspot.com

By anonymous user, # 4. January 2008, 00:29:57

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John Wells writes:

Now talk about coincidence! This past Sunday afternoon, I was listening to a couple different versions of Rodgers and Hart's "Mountain Greenery" performed by Roger Wolfe Kahn and by Ella Fitzgerald. I just happened to surf on by to your site, and there it is again! What a great find; thank you for sharing this LP with us. Best wishes for a happy, healthy 2008.

By anonymous user, # 4. January 2008, 02:14:40

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Francois writes:

This is an absolutely great album! Thank you so much for sharing this...

By anonymous user, # 9. January 2008, 00:46:45

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Thomas E. writes:

Many thanks for this album.
Maybe you also have his 'Impressions from Outer Space' album? Would be great if you could post it.

By anonymous user, # 13. January 2008, 10:51:32

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I don't. That's a pretty rare one for sure. Keep us posted if you find it somewhere. Glad you liked this one. LP

By Licorice Pizza, # 14. January 2008, 00:32:07

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