Tuesday 14 April 2020

Shorty Rogers born 14 April 1924


Milton "Shorty" Rogers (April 14, 1924 – November 7, 1994) was a trumpeter, bandleader and arranger and a principal creators of West Coast jazz  He  was also one of the earliest jazz musicians to use the flugelhorn.

Born Milton Rajonsky in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, he began as a bugler with the Furriers Post of Jewish War Veterans Boy Scout drum and bugle corps in The Bronx, and attendance at the famed New York city high school of music and arts. By 16 he was a professional, playing trumpet in the bands of Will Bradley and the vibraphonist Red Norvo, who later married Mr. Rogers's sister, Eve.

After a World War II stint in the Army, he worked extensively with Woody Herman's First and Second Herds (1945-1946 and 1947-1949) and began to attract attention as an arranger. 
Rogers & Kenton 1950 
From 1950 to 1951, Stan Kenton hired him away from Herman and Rogers' compositions and arrangements for Kenton made him as much of a star as any of Kenton's soloists. 

Rogers left Kenton and pulled together a small group that included Art Pepper, Shelley Manne, Jimmy Giuffre, and Hampton Hawes to record Modern Sounds for Capitol where his tight and innovative arrangements on this recording are considered by many to be as influential as Gil Evans' for Miles Davis' small group on Birth of the Cool. Much of the music he recorded with 

Giuffre showed his experimental side, resulting in an early form of avant-garde jazz. He also made notable recordings with Art Pepper and Andre Previn, among others.

Rogers had with his Orchestra including Johnny "Guitar" Watson, perform for the famed ninth Cavalcade of Jazz concert held at Wrigley Field in Los Angeles which was produced by Leon Hefflin, Sr. on June 7, 1953. Also featured that day were Roy Brown and his Orchestra, Don Tosti and His Mexican Jazzmen, Earl Bostic, Nat "King" Cole, and Louis Armstrong and his All Stars with Velma Middleton.


Here’s “Powder Puff” from  Shorty Rogers And His Giants 1953

                           

From 1953 through 1962, Rogers recorded a series of albums for RCA Victor (later reissued on RCA's Bluebird label), as well as a series of albums for Atlantic Records with his own group, Shorty Rogers and His Giants, including Shorty Courts the Count (1954), 
The Swinging Mr. Rogers (1955), and Martians Come Back (1955), the album title alluding to the tune "Martians Go Home" which Rogers had composed and performed on The Swinging Mr. Rogers, earlier the same year. These albums incorporated some of his more avant-garde music. To some extent they could be classified as "cool" jazz; but they also looked back to the "hot" style of Count Basie, whom Rogers always credited as a major inspiration.

Rogers & Sinatra
Rogers was a dramatic character but a thoroughly professional musician, and he moved to the financial security of writing for television and movies when the West Coast jazz scene began to fade in the early 1960s. During this period, Rogers continued to work occasionally on pop and jazz recordings, but primarily as an arranger. He and Claus Ogerman split arranging duties on Mel Torme's 1962 hit album, "Coming Home, Baby." Late in the 1960s, he was responsible for Bobby Bryant's "The Jazz Excursion into 'Hair'".

He pops up as arranger in a variety of places, from Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass' Christmas album to Bud Shank's mellow album of Lovin' Spoonful covers for Liberty, to Frances Faye's now sounds album, "Go Go Go." One of his ignominious credits is the arrangement for Wayne Newton's cover of "These Boots are Made for Walking." He played both the trumpet and flugelhorn, and participated in Monkees recording sessions from 1967 to 1969. Perhaps his most famous Monkees arrangement is for the group's 1967 #1 single, "Daydream Believer."

He was a prolific contributor to television and to a lesser extent
films through the 1980s. Among the series he scored or wrote incidental music for were "The Partridge Family," "The Mod Squad," "The Rookies," "Starsky and Hutch," and "The Love Boat." His tune "Chelsea Memorandum" shows up in the midst of Lalo Schifrin's cuts on the second "Mission: Impossible" soundtrack album. He also composed and conducted the music for a number of the innovative UPA cartoons featuring the work of Theodore Geissel (Dr. Seuss) and Stan Freberg.

Finally, in 1982, he was persuaded to pick up his trumpet and return, playing first with Britain’s National Youth Jazz Orchestra and soon with Bud Shank and others. In the 1990s he formed a Lighthouse All Stars group along with Shank, Bill Perkins and Bob Cooper. Although Rogers own playing was not quite as strong as previously, he remained a welcome presence both in clubs and recordings but sadly he died during KLON's West Coast Jazz festival.

Shorty Rogers died of melanoma in 7 November 1994, at Valley Presbyterian Hospital in Van Nuys, California, at the age of 70. Bud Shank said that Mr. Rogers had had a recurring problem with internal bleeding for at least eight years.    

(Edited from Wikipedia, Spaceagepop, NY Times & AllMusic)


Here’s Shorty Rogers and His Giants on Jazz Scene USA (1962)
Hosted by Oscar Brown Jr. Shorty Rogers- Flugelhorn.
Lou Levy - Piano. Gary Peacock - Bass.
Larry Bunker - Drums. Gary Lefebvre - Woodwinds 

7 comments:

boppinbob said...

Shorty Rogers: Four Classic Albums (The Big Shorty Rogers Express / Shorty Rogers And His Giants / Wherever The Five Winds Blow / Chances Are It Swings) (2CD)

CD1 Here: https://pixeldrain.com/u/Z2KJJTbP

1-12: ‘The Big Shorty Rogers Express’

1. Blues Express
2. Pink Squirrel
3. Coop De Graas
4. Infinity Promenade
5. Short Stop
6. Boar- Jibu
7. Pay The Piper
8. Home With Sweets
9. Tale Of An African Lobster
10. Contours
11. Chiquito Loco
12. The Sweetheart Of Sigmund Freud

13-24: ‘Shorty Rogers And His Giants’

13. Morpo
14. Bunny
15. Powder Puff
16. Mambo Del Crow
17. Joycycle
18. The Lady Is A Tramp
19. The Pesky Serpent
20. Diablo’s Dance
21. Pirouette
22. Indian Club
23. The Goof And I
24. My Little Suede Shoes

CD2 Here: https://pixeldrain.com/u/RLUwEfLj

1-5: ‘Wherever The Five Winds Blow’

1. Hurricane Carol
2. Breezin’ Along In The Trades
3. Marooned In A Monsoon
4. The Chinook That Melted My Heart
5. Prevailing On The Westerlies

6-17: ‘Chances Are It Swings’

6. Chances Are
7. No Such Luck
8. It’s Not For Me To Say
9. Lilac Chiffon
10. I Just Don’t Know
11. Who Needs You
12. Everybody Loves A Lover
13. Come To Me
14. My Very Good Friend In The Looking Glass
15. You Know How It Is
16. A Very Special Love
17. Teacher, Teacher

A big thank you to Mike1985 @ Jazz’n’Blues Club for original post.

AVID Jazz here presents four classic Shorty Rogers on a finely re-mastered and low priced double CD.

“The Big Shorty Rogers Express”-Shorty Rogers & His Giants……….Here we find the famed arranger and trumpeter Shorty Rogers moving away from the small group format and into the big band field. Shorty and his fellow musicians Art Pepper, Bud Shank, Jimmy Giuffre, Marty Paich to name but a few, bring a fresh West Coast spirit to the traditional big band swing ethic!

“Shorty Rogers & His Giants”………………Shorty is once again joined by many fine players including Milt Bernhart on trombone, Hampton Hawes on piano, John Grass on French horn alongside stalwarts Art Pepper, Jimmy Giuffre, and Shelly Manne for a combination of swing and small group numbers.

“Wherever The Five Wind Blows”…………Jimmy Giuffre, Lou Levy, Ralph Pena and Larry Bunker join Shorty in a meteorlogical blowing journey where the band swings with its usual tasteful and mellifluous style. We encounter monsoons, hurricanes and prevailing Westerlies while the music remains beautifully explanatory and the band, all rightfully famous, are on top form!

“Chances Are It Swings”…………Billed as Shorty Rogers & His Orchestra this 1958 recording date finds Shorty in fine and plentiful company in the form of the likes of Pete & Conte Candoli, Bud Shank, Barney Kessell, Red Norvo and Paul Horn. Here Shorty collaborates with song writer Robert Allen producing a “happy combination of brilliant arranging and hit songs”
All four albums have been digitally re-mastered for probably the finest sound quality ever!

boppinbob said...

A big thank you to all original up-loaders for this selected discography

* The Blues That Jazz
** Zoplat @ Only Instrumental Music
*** Jazz.ru
**** espaciostoxicos1.blog

Al Cohn & Shorty Rogers - East Coast - West Coast Scene (1954)***

https://my-files.su/Save/varmz5/Al%20Cohn%20_%20Shorty%20Rogers%20-%20East%20Coast%20-%20West%20Coast%20Scene%20(1954).rar

Shorty Rogers with His Orchestra and Giants – Short Stops (1954)**

https://mega.nz/file/rBtxHRzK#wr_UWD0P4T_BAOpk-AaStxV4CfOg58B6OVpQQydbPpk

Pérez Prado & Shorty Rogers - Voodoo Suite (1954)****

https://mega.nz/file/j0pxnLbB#9-jiJTrF3HZNWx_3NkgXDeumrhcQZIRM_EMOPjnZyZs

Shorty Rogers His Giants – The Swinging Mr.Rogers (1955)**

https://mega.nz/file/CV8mkSLZ#ykVOg7NuaXIJoq3LaE7zNc5oc-tcnQ7B_pewIlPMyTU

Shorty Rogers & His Giants - Bossa Nova (1962)*

http://www.mediafire.com/file/v7uk0bza339t6a6/SRaHG-BN62.zip/file

Shorty Rogers - Jazz Waltz (1962)*

http://www.mediafire.com/file/ym73da7p6aifdcp/ShrtRgrs-JW62.zip/file


Shorty Rogers - Shorty Rogers Quintet With Jeri Southern (1962)*

http://www.mediafire.com/file/syn5gk9st9lf43m/SRrQwJS62.zip/file

Shorty Rogers-Bud Shank Quintet, Vic Lewis & His Big Band - Back Again (1984)***

https://rapidgator.net/file/a60942ae02e0b3fe7a1d78116d8a7149/Shorty_Rogers,_Bud_Shank_With_Vic_Lewis_And_His_Big_Band,_Bud_Shank_Quintet_%E2%80%8E%E2%80%93_Back_Again_(1984).rar.html

Gill said...

Thanks for this treasure trove of links! Be Well!

egroj.jazz said...

Great trumpeter, many thanks Bob

styles said...

Shorty Rogers, the greatest, thank you, boppinbob !

RiCK SAUNDERS said...

Hi Bob- Any chance of a re-up on your Shorty Rogers albums?

Huge thanks to the original posters of the other albums.

Thanks as always, Bob!

-Rick

boppinbob said...

Hello Rick, Firstly here's the new link for "Four Classic Albums"

https://www.imagenetz.de/g6XYL

Regarding the selected discography list, at the time of posting all I did, was to find these albums and check that the links were working. I never downloaded them myself. I forgot to mention the fact and that once links were dead then the were gone. Fortunately, I checked them all just now and found all but two albums are still available. The two unavailable are East Coast West Coast Scene (1954) & Back Again (1984) Regards, Bob.
PS As they are not my links please scan before opening!