Glenn Gray Knoblauch (June 7, 1900 – August 23, 1963), known professionally as Glen Gray, was an accomplished jazz saxophonist of early 20th Century who achieved success with the Casa Loma Orchestra and as a solo artist.
Gray was born to Lurdie P. and Agnes (Gray) Knoblauch in
Roanoka, IL. The whole Knoblauch family was musical, but never aspired to
anything beyond amateur status until Glen came along. He took up the piccolo as
a boy, and subsequently turned to the clarinet and the saxophone, and while
still in his teens organized his first band, a quintet called Spike's Jazz
Orchestra. Gray graduated from Roanoke High School, in 1917 where he played
basketball and acquired his nickname, "Spike". He is said to have
joined the army at seventeen and two years later he was living at home with his
family. He was employed as a bill clerk for the railroad. He attended Illinois
Wesleyan University but left to work for the Santa Fe Railroad.
Gray attended the American Conservatory of Music in 1921
but left during his first year to go to Peoria, Illinois, to play with George
Haschert's orchestra. From 1924, he played with several orchestras in Detroit,
Michigan. . Fate took a hand when he and his good friend, trombonist Pee Wee
Hunt, were hired as part of a septet called Goldkette's Orange Blossoms, under
trumpet man Hank Biagini, that was booked to play a new Toronto hotel called
the Casa Loma. They played an eight-month gig there but the place was so huge that
even the band's popularity couldn't pull in enough people to keep it from
closing.
They returned to Detroit in time to find Goldkette
rapidly approaching a state of insolvency. Luckily, the band had a few
prospects, mostly thanks to Cork O'Keefe, the agent who'd booked them into the
Casa Loma. He got them enough work to keep going, including an extended
engagement at the Roseland Ballroom in New York City. And, as the Goldkette
Orange Blossoms were history, they became the Casa Loma Orchestra. They did
well enough at that Roseland gig to get heard and signed up by a scout for OKeh
Records. All of this took place in the summer and early fall of 1929, just as
the American economy was about to dive into the Great Depression. (Indeed,
among the songs that Gray and company recorded at their first session -- which
took place on the day of the stock market crash in October of 1929 -- was,
rather ironically, "Happy Days Are Here Again.")
After cutting six sides for Okeh the group signed with
Brunswick. They were so popular however that Victor also signed them, and the
group ended up recording on both labels simultaneously. In the early 1930s, the
Casa Loma Orchestra was one of the bands that helped pave the way for the rise
in popularity of big band swing, gaining recognition especially with the college
age crowd, and wowing audiences at Yale, Dartmouth and other Ivy League
schools. It is said to have been the first white big band with a deliberate
Jazz policy. Although they played in a rather stiff and precise style, The Casa
Loma Orchestra helped spread the concept of big band jazz to a generation of
young white kids who were, at that time, still largely unaware of the great
black jazz orchestras.
The tune that eventually became the Casa Loma band’s
theme song, “Smoke Rings,” was composed in early 1932, and first recorded by
them for Brunswick on March 18, 1932. “Smoke Rings” fit perfectly as the
haunting, evocative melody heralding the Casa Loma band’s comings and goings on
The Camel Caravan, and became the band’s identifying calling card, opening and
closing all of its appearances.
In 1933 and 1934 the group was featured on the Camel
Caravan radio program, becoming the first swing band to appear on a commercial
radio series. They played both summers at the Glen Island Casino, where
frequent radio broadcasts helped boost their popularity across the country. The Casa Loma Orchestra began to be billed
under leader Glen Gray’s name in 1935, recording for Decca until 1942, and
later for Mercury until 1946.
While the early swing of Glen Gray’s Casa Lomans’ may
sound outdated today, the band’s late 1930s and early 1940s recordings like
Stompin’ Around, Come And Get It, Malady In F, Zig Zag, Swingtonic, and No Name
Jive are still great listens today. Two of the bands biggest records were
ballads; For You as sung by Kenny Sargent and the group's theme Smoke Rings.
They continued to remain popular, inaugurating the
Paramount Theater's stage band policy and settling in to a booking at the swank
Rainbow Room. By 1940, however, the Casa Loma Orchestra had begun to lose its
popularity although Glen Gray was one of the winning bandleaders in Down Beat’s
All American Musicians Poll. Major personnel changes followed. By 1947 the
group's popularity had tanked, and the onset of diabetes forced Gray to retire
from touring in 1950.
He was coaxed back into the studio to record some LPs for
Capitol Records which recreated the sounds of the big band era in stereo. The
reconstituted band made a limited number appearances live and on television and
recorded fifteen LP albums for Capitol. Sadly his health was on the decline and
his final LP, "Sounds of the Great Bands, Vol.7: Today's Best”, was
released only two weeks before his death
Gray died 23 August 1963 in Plymouth, Massachusetts of
lymphoma, aged 63. He was awarded a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for
Recording at 1709 Vine Street in Hollywood, California.
(Edited from Swing
Music Net, All Music & Wikipedia)
For “Glen Gray and The Casa Loma Orchestra - Swing Tonic 1939-46” go here:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.upload.ee/files/11837249/Glen_Gray_-_Swing_Tonic_1939-46.rar.html
1. PRELUDE IN C SHARP MINOR
2. IT'S FUNNY TO EVERYONE BUT ME
3. MEMORIES OF YOU
4. SOMETIMES I'M HAPPY
5. BREEZE
6. (THE) HOUR OF PARTING
7. SASSIN' THE BOSS
8. COME AND GET IT
9. UNDER A BLANKET OF BLUE
10. WATCHIN' THE CLOCK
11. BY THE RIVER SAINT MARIE
12. NO NAME JIVE PARTS 1
13. NO NAME JIVE PARTS 2
14. WHAT IS THIS THING CALLED LOVE
15. IN THE MOOD
16. LAST NIGHT'S GARDENIAS
17. LITTLE BROWN JUG
18. TUXEDO JUNCTION
19. BIG BAD BILL
20. YOU'VE GOT ME OUT ON A LIMB
21. JIMTOWN BLUES
22. MEET ME TONIGHT IN DREAMLAND
23. SOFT WINDS
24. ROCK ISLAND FLAG STOP
Disc 2
1. MIRAGE
2. HINDUSTAN
3. HIGH SOCIETY
4. SWING TONIC
5. FIFTH AVENUE SAX
6. BIRMINGHAM SPECIAL
7. BLACKBERRY JAM
8. DON'T TAKE YOUR LOVE FROM ME
9. FLAT THIRD JIVE
10. WHO RAY
11. MY HEART TELLS ME
12. SITTING ON A THIRD RAIL
13. FROM THE BLUE
14. THIS HEART OF MINE
15. ONE MORE TOMORROW
16. I WALKED IN
17. ROBIN HOOD
18. I DON'T CARE WHO KNOWS IT
19. MAYBE
20. IF I LOVE AGAIN
21. JUST AN OLD MANUSCRIPT
22. BLUE RHAPSODY
23. AFTER YOU'VE GONE
This 2007 Jasmine Glen Gray 2CD set contains many tracks from original 78 rpm discs which have previously not been available on CD before. Vocals are by Eugene Baird and Skip Nelson and trumpet solos by Red Nichols, Bobby Hackett & Sonny Dunham.
ReplyDeleteBelow is a selected discography from various blogs with active links. Please note only those marked (#4) are from my own library the rest belong to original up-loaders as credited to whom I give a big thank you.
(#1) georgy150 @ Sax and Trumpet blog
(#2) ludivico @ Entre Musica blog** (PASSWORD : ludovico)
(#3) John Burrows @ Heartbreak Hotel blog
(#4) From The Vaults
(#5) Intmusic.net blog
(#6) sanet.st blog
Smole Rings 1930 – 1943 (#4)
https://www.upload.ee/files/11839249/Glen_Gray_-_Smoke_Rings.rar.html
The transcription sessions Vol. 1, 1935 (#2)
https://dfiles.eu/files/0d0omdp3w
Live From Meadowbrook Ballroom (1940) (#2)
https://depositfiles.org/files/wwtj93cy3
Solo Spotlight (1959) (#4)
https://www.upload.ee/files/11838089/Glen_Gray_-_Solo_Spotlight.rar.html
Sounds Of The Great Bands! (1959) (#1)
https://yadi.sk/d/esWiBCRX3ZUuiy
Sounds Of The Great Bands! Vol. 2 (Vinyl rip) (1959) (#2)
https://dfiles.eu/files/7mgmjr2c4
Swingin' Decade (1960) (#2)
https://dfiles.eu/files/tsm47fdg0
They All Swung The Blues (Sounds Of The Great Bands - Vol. 5) (1962) (#1)
https://yadi.sk/d/R9hW89ot3ZUuo8
Shall We Swing (1962) (#6)
https://nitroflare.com/view/E7357C30AE8F703/sanet.st_2_1_2020_110030_V5Wc6pa3F8_mp3.rar/free
More Of Today’s Best (Sounds Of The Great Bands - Vol. 8) (1963) (#3)
https://od.lk/fl/OV8xNTUzMzMyN18
Sounds Of The Great Bands In Latin (vol,9) (1964) (#6)
https://nitroflare.com/view/C50EBAA06E1BE8B/DownloadNitroFlaremp3.rar
The World Is Waiting For The Sunrise (1967 Picwick comp of capitol tracks) (#2)
https://dfiles.eu/files/nf70tg5mf
Another child of the Central Illinois prairie done good. When I saw he was from Roanoke, I was surprised. Talk about a small town boy.
ReplyDelete