- Jimmie Lunceford
James Melvin "Jimmie" Lunceford (
June 6 ,1902 –July 12 ,1947 ) was an Americanjazz altosaxophonist andbandleader of theswing era .Lunceford was born in
Fulton, Missouri , but attended school inDenver and earned aBachelor of Arts degree atFisk University .In 1927, while teaching high school in
Memphis, Tennessee , he organized a student band, theChickasaw Syncopators , whose name was changed to theJimmie Lunceford Orchestra when it began touring. The orchestra made its first recording in 1930. After a period of touring, the band accepted a booking at the prestigiousHarlem nightclub,The Cotton Club in 1933. The Cotton Club had already featuredDuke Ellington andCab Calloway , who won their first widespread fame from their inventive shows for the Cotton Club's all-white patrons. Lunceford's orchestra, with their tight musicianship and often outrageous humor in their music and lyrics made an ideal band for the club, and Lunceford's reputation began to steadily grow. [cite book |title=Rhythm Is Our Business: Jimmie Lunceford and the Harlem Express |last=Determeyer |first=Eddy |year=2006 |publisher=University of Michigan Press |isbn=978-0-472-11553-2 |pages=344 ]Comedy and
vaudeville played a distinct part in Lunceford's presentation. Songs such as "Rhythm Is Our Business", "I'm Nuts about Screwy Music", "I Want the Waiter (With the Water)", and "Four or Five Times" displayed a playful sense of swing, often through clever arrangements bySy Oliver and bizarre lyrics. Lunceford's stage shows often included costumes, skits, and obvious jabs at mainstream white jazz bands, such asPaul Whiteman 's andGuy Lombardo 's.Despite the band's comic veneer, Lunceford always maintained professionalism in the music befitting a former teacher; this professionalism paid off and during the apex of swing in the 1930s, the Orchestra was considered the equal of
Duke Ellington 's,Earl Hines ' orCount Basie 's. This precision can be heard in such pieces as "Wham (Re-Bop-Boom-Bam)", "Lunceford Special", "For Dancers Only", "Uptown Blues", and "Stratosphere". Arranger and trumpeterSy Oliver gave the orchestra its trademark two-beat rhythm. The band's noted saxophone section was lead by alto sax player Willie Smith. Lunceford often used aconducting baton to lead his band.The Orchestra began recording for the Decca label and later signed with the Columbia subsidiary Vocalion in 1938. They toured
Europe extensively in 1937, but had to cancel a second tour in 1939 because of the outbreak ofWorld War II . Columbia dropped Lunceford in 1940 because of flagging sales. (Oliver departed the group before the scheduled European tour to take a position as an arranger forTommy Dorsey ). Lunceford returned to the Decca label.The orchestra appeared in the 1941 movie "Blues in the Night".
In 1947, while playing in
Seaside, Oregon , Lunceford collapsed and died fromcardiac arrest during an autograph session. Allegations and rumors circulated that Jimmie had been poisoned by a fish-restaurant owner who was unhappy at having to serve a "Negro" in his establishment.Legacy
Band members, notably
Eddie Wilcox and Joe Thomas kept the band going for a time but finally had to break up the Jimmie Lunceford Orchestra in 1949.In 1999, band-leader Robert Veen and a team of musicians set out to acquire permission to use the original band charts and arrangements of the Jimmie Lunceford canon. "The Jimmie Lunceford Legacy Orchestra" official debuted in July 2005 at the
North Sea Jazz Festival .The Jimmie Lunceford Jamboree Festival was founded in 2007 by Ron Herd II a.k.a. R2C2H2 Tha Artivist and Artstorian, with the aim of increasing recognition of Lunceford's contribution to jazz, particularly in
Memphis, Tennessee elected discography
Prior to Lunceford's success on Decca (September, 1934 on), he made the following recordings:
*"In Dat Mornin'"/"Sweet Rhythm" (Victor V-38141)- recorded Memphis, June 6, 1930
*"Flaming Reeds and Screaming Brass"/"While Love Lasts" (Columbia tests - not issued until the late 1960s on LP) - recorded New York, May 15, 1933
*"Jazznocracy"/"Chillen", Get Up (Victor 24522)
*"White Heat"/"Leaving Me" (Victor 24586) - both recorded New York, January 26, 1934*"Breakfast Ball"/"Here Goes" (Victor 24601)
*"Swingin' Uptown"/"Remember When" (Victor 24669) - both recorded New York, March 20, 1934The Decca recordings
*"Stomp it Off" (1934-1935 Decca recordings) (GRP CD)
*"Swingsation" (1935-1939 Decca recordings) (1998 GRP CD)
*"Lunceford Special" (1939 Columbia recordings) (ca 1975 Columbia LP)
*"Rhythm is Our Business" (1933-1940, both periods and record companies, successively) (ASV CD)
*"For Dancers Only" (GRP/Decca) (1994)
*"Jukebox Hits: 1937-1947" (Acrobat) (2005)
*"Life is Fine" or "Quadromania" (Membran/Quadromania Jazz) (2006)Trivia
* The Chickasaw Syncopators made a single 78 record on December 13, 1927 in Memphis (but without Lunceford); it was issued on Columbia 14301-D.
References
External links
* [http://www.backroadsofamericanmusic.com/archive/2007/09/24/jimmie-lunceford-s-memphis.aspx Lunceford's Memphis home and gravesite]
* [http://www.swingmusic.net/Big_Band_Music_Biography_Jimmie_Lunceford.html Lunceford biography on swingmusic.net]
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* [http://www.jimmieluncefordjam.blogspot.com The Jimmie Lunceford Jamboree Festival Official Site]
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