Friday, 15 January 2021

Jerry Wald born 15 January 1918


Jerry Wald (January 15, 1918 – September 1, 1973) was an American clarinetist and band leader. 

Jervis Wald was born in Newark, New Jersey and started on soprano saxophone at the age of seven, later taking up alto sax and clarinet. His role model was "the king of the clarinet", Artie Shaw. This reflected strongly in his playing and led to comparisons being drawn, which Jerry eventually came to resent. In 1941, he formed his own orchestra in New York, enjoying lengthy residencies at the Lincoln Hotel and at the Panther Room of the Hotel Sherman in Chicago. 

The band's theme song was "Call of the Wild". A number of good arrangements were provided by Ray Conniff and Jerry Gray. Sidemen included several illustrious former Shaw alumni, notably saxophonist Les Robinson, guitarist Art Ryerson, bassist Sid Weiss and trumpeter Bernie Privin. A good swinging outfit, Wald's 15-piece band adopted a more progressive sound by the late 1940's. Recording contracts were with Decca, Majestic and Columbia. Moreover, Wald was featured on the Robert Q. Lewis radio show. 

Jerry Wald’s orchestra never made the big time. Nonetheless, he had several notable vocalists on his roster during its existence. A reviewer gave the name of Wald’s vocalist during his first Roseland engagement in 1942 as Francis Wayne. Wayne, who later sang for Woody Herman and married Neal Hefti, was still an unknown at the time. Anita Boyer had joined the band by mid-​1942, however, and was Wald’s most notable canary. 

She stayed until December, when Lillian Lane replaced her. Lane remained until at least February of 1943. Betty Bonney was singing by July 1943 and stayed through at least November of that year. Ginnie Powell had replaced Bonney by December. Male vocalist Dick Merrick remained with Wald for many years, though he left for the McFarland Twins’ band in late 1942, returning to Wald in May 1943. Johnny Bond replaced him in the interim. 


In 1944, Wald changed his sound and added a six-​piece string section to his orchestra. Powell served as female vocalist until she left in October of that year. By 1945, though, Wald was back to his old sound. Vocalists were Merrick, who sang ballads, and Kay Allen, who handled pop tunes. The pair of singers fell in love and later married. 


                             

Wald also briefly had a major asset in Billie Rogers. This female trumpet player and vocalist had formerly played with Woody Herman and then led her own band, joined Wald in March 1945. One of the very few women to play in a male band, Rogers’ sensational trumpet playing and bluesy vocal style were highlights of Wald’s 1945 group. Rogers only stayed a few months however, leaving in October to front her own combo. 

Jean Porter with Jerry Wald 

In 1946, Wald’s band began a noticeable decline. April reviews panned vocalist Anne Russell. Merrick left that month as well, replaced by Bill Raymond. Mary Nash also sang in 1946. Wald disbanded his jump orchestra in November of that year during the big band bust, when many notable leaders hung up their batons, and formed a sweet orchestra. Vocalist was Nick Delano. Jimmy Vanni had replaced him by June. The band appeared in four movies and one short, including "Little Miss Broadway" (a 1947 Columbia Pictures film, not the 1938 Shirley Temple 20th Century-Fox feature). The new group struggled, and in January 1949 Wald formed a short-​lived bop orchestra before opening a night club. 

Jerry Wald (left) with Gordon MacRae, Mel Tormé ,
Marion Hutton, and Jerry Jerome 1947

In May 1950, Wald formed a new sixteen-​piece orchestra in Los Angeles with Carolyn Grey, ex-​Woody Herman vocalist, joining the group in March 1951. In 1952, Chris Connors was female vocalist and recorded 6 sides for Decca. In 1953, Wald did a 10-inch "Tops in Pops" LP for an MGM subsidiary, Lion.  In 1955 Kapp records  released "Listen to the Music of Jerry Wald and His Orchestra."  He finished off his recording career with some 45s for smaller companies, Todd (Moon Over Miami / Sheba) and his own Waldork label (The Creeper / Nightmare) in 1958. 

He later moved back to New York and worked in both radio and television. He died on 1st September, 1973 (age 55) in Las Vegas, Nevada. He was buried in Woodlawn Cemetery.   

(Edited mainly from Bandchips  & IMDb)

Date of death sourced from h**ps://adp.library.ucsb.edu/index.php/mastertalent/detail/108248/Wald_Jerry 

4 comments:

  1. Here’s a compilation of 34 Jerry Wald recordings from1942 to 1953 taken from various sources with variable bit rates, so quality may vary. The playlist will not all fit on one standard CDR, but will as a mp3 disc.

    For “Jerry Wald – Clarinet High Jinks” go here:

    https://www.upload.ee/files/12768818/Jerry_Wald.rar.html

    01 He Wears a Pair of Silver Wings - Jerry Wald And His Orchestra (1942)
    02 Strictly Instrumental - Jerry Wald And His Orchestra
    03 Trains In The Night - Jerry Wald And His Orchestra
    04 Mad About Him, Sad Without - Jerry Wald And His Orchestra
    05 Shoo Shoo baby - Jerry Wald And His Orchestra (1943)
    06 Crazy Blues - Jerry Wald And His Orchestra
    07 Poinciana (Song Of The Tree) - Jerry Wald And His Orchestra (Ginny Powell, vocal)
    08 Mississippi Dream Boat - Jerry Wald And His Orchestra
    09 And So Little Time - Jerry Wald And His Orchestra (1944)
    10 Silver Wings In The Moonlight - Jerry Wald And His Orchestra
    11 `Two Heavens - Jerry Wald And His Orchestra
    12 Since You Went Away - Jerry Wald And His Orchestra
    13 Jerry Wald - Candy (Kay Allen, vocal) (1945)
    14 Laura – Jerry Wald and his Orchestra (Dick Merrick)
    15 He's Home for a Little While - Jerry Wald and his Orchestra
    16 The More I See You - Jerry Wald and his Orchestra
    17 Clarinet High Jinks - Jerry Wald and his Orchestra
    18 A Friend Of Yours - Jerry Wald and his Orchestra
    19 Can't You Read Between The - Jerry Wald and his Orchestra
    20 Clarinet Boogie Blues - Jerry Wald and his Orchestra
    21 Someone To Watch Over Me - Jerry Wald and his Orchestra
    22 The Continental - Jerry Wald and his Orchestra
    23 Laughing on the Outside (Crying On The Inside) - Jerry Wald and his Orchestra (1946)
    24 They Say It's Wonderful - Jerry Wald and his Orchestra
    25 Lazy Lullaby - Jerry Wald and his Orchestra (1947)
    26 Your Conscience Tells You So - Jerry Wald and his Orchestra
    27 Diga Diga Doo - Jerry Wald and his Orchestra (1946)
    28 Rumba Fantasy - Jerry Wald Quintette (1946)
    29 Bahn Du Dah - Jerry Wald and his Orchestra (1949)
    30 Rumbalero - Part 1 - Jerry Wald and his Orchestra
    31 Rumbalero - Part 2 - Jerry Wald and his Orchestra
    32 You're the Cream in My Coffee - Jerry Wald and His Orchestra (1952)
    33 Terremoto - Jerry Wald His Orchestra (1953)
    34 The Thrill Is Gone - Jerry Wald And His Orchestra

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  2. Great. Always an adventure stopping by.

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  3. The file can not be opened. Can you send another link. Thanks for sharing this great music!

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  4. Hello David, Here's jerry...

    https://www.upload.ee/files/14948350/Jerry_Wald_-_Clarinet_High_Jinks.rar.html

    ReplyDelete