Albert Omega Sears better known as “Big Al Sears” (February 21, 1910 – March 23, 1990) was an American jazz tenor saxophonist and bandleader.
Big Al Sears, who was born in Macomb, Illinois, had a remarkable career as a musician and businessman. While only in his mid-teens, he had a brief gig playing saxophone with Fats Waller in Harlem. Several years later, at the age of eighteen, he replaced Johnny Hodges in Chick Webb’s band and played in the Savoy Ballroom in Harlem. During that same year, 1928, he joined a road show entitled Keep Shufflin’, which was financed by Arnold Rothstein, a gangster who was reputed to have fixed the 1919 World Series. Funding ran out while the show was in Chicago, but Sears soon found a job in 1929 with Zack Whyte’s Jazz Orchestra in Cincinnati.
During the early 1930s he played in various cities (Cincinnati, Buffalo, New York) and in various bands (including Elmer Snowden’s). Eventually he came to the notice of John Hammond, the illustrious promoter of jazz who is credited with discovering the likes of Benny Goodman, Billie Holliday, Count Bassie, Robert Johnson, Bessie Smith and Aretha Franklin, among others. By 1937, Hammond had become virtually a manager for Sears and obtained recording dates for him with Harry James. (Frank Sinatra recorded with the James band on one of those days.)
Harlem’s Renaissance Ballroom |
A job with the Vernon Andrade dance band gave him steady employment in New York City, where he played regularly during the late 1930s at Harlem’s Renaissance Ballroom. At that stage of his career, he usually played alto sax in the dance band until midnight and then jammed on the tenor sax during the wee hours at a jazz club. From around 1941, he concentrated on the tenor sax, and played that instrument in Andy Kirk’s band, the “Twelve Clouds of Joy.”
During 1942 and 1943, soon after the U.S. entered World War II, Hammond helped arrange for Sears to lead a very talented band on a USO tour of military bases and camps. The favourable publicity from that tour helped Sears get two subsequent gigs, first with Lionel Hampton’s band and then with the Duke Ellington Orchestra. Replacing Ben Webster, Sears was Ellington’s principal tenor saxophonist from mid-1944 until about the end of 1948. His solos on recordings made by that fabulous band in the mid-to-late 1940s are still greatly admired by jazz aficionados.
After leaving the Ellington Orchestra, Sears became a leading member of the Johnny Hodges Band, which enjoyed success in the early 1950s. Sears was the lead player on the hit recording of a jump tune that he composed entitled “Castle Rock.” In that stage of his career he was gravitating towards rhythm and blues, and he had a noteworthy influence on that genre as it gained popularity. After leaving the Hodges Band, he worked as a session player on many rhythm and blues records. Having business acumen, he also built up his own music publishing enterprise – Sylvia Music Company, named after his daughter.
During the mid-1950s, Sears went on to play a role in the emergence of rock-and-roll. When Alan Freed, the famous deejay and promoter, started staging big rock and roll shows, he featured Sears several times. Popularly known as Big Al Sears, he led the band that Freed formed for those shows, and he teamed up with his friend Jesse Stone to write one of Alan Freed’s theme songs: “Right Now, Right Now.” Those were prosperous years for Sears, but he soon faded from view as a performer when Freed’s career went into a steep decline in 1957. Freed’s Big Beat TV show was cancelled–in part because he refused to stop using black performers. (The ABC network wanted only white acts for national broadcasts that included the segregated South.)
After the end of his rock-and-roll heyday, Sears continued in the music publishing business. Indeed, he was an important executive in ABC Paramount and had noteworthy success in battling for fairer financial compensation for black recording artists such as Ray Charles.
Although Sears played less often, he continued to play very well. Moving back to jazz, he recorded a fine album of danceable music entitled “Swing’s the Thing” in 1960. That marked the end of his recording career, but he occasionally performed into the 1980s. Reacting to a performance at a jazz club in 1985, a New York Times critic wrote: “His playing . . . was just as strong, full-toned and expressive as it was when he played in the Duke’s series of Carnegie Hall concerts in the 1940s.” That appearance in the mid-1980s was, incidentally, over 60 years after his youthful gig with Fats Waller.
Al Sears died in St’ Albans, New York during 1990, at the age of 80.
(Sourced from an article by Sterling Kernek’ @ Western Illinois Museum)
6 comments:
For “BIG AL SEARS - Goin' Uptown - The R&B Years (2020) go here:
https://krakenfiles.com/view/48d92b9c65/file.html
1. AL SEARS & THE SPARROWS - 125TH STREET, NEW YORK
2. AL SEARS & ALL STAR RHYTHM SECTION - SEARSY
3. COUSIN JOE WITH LEONARD FEATHER'S HIPTET - JUST ANOTHER WOMAN
4. JOHNNY HODGES & HIS ORCHESTRA - CASTLE ROCK
5. AL SEARS & THE SPARROWS - SHAKE HANDS
6. ERNESTINA - DON'T YOU EVER LET ME GO
7. JOHNNY HODGES & HIS ORCHESTRA - SOMETHING TO PAT YOUR FOOT TO
8. HERBIE COOPER WITH BIG AL SEARS & HIS ORCHESTRA - COME A RUNNIN'
9. AL SEARS & HIS ORCHESTRA - SEAR-IOUSLY
10. JAY HAWKINS - WELL, I TRIED
11. AL SEARS & HIS ORCHESTRA - MARSHALL PLAN
12. JOHN GREER & HIS RHYTHM ROCKERS - RIDE PRETTY BABY
13. MELVIN SMITH - I DON'T HAVE TO HUNT NO MORE
14. AL SEARS SWINGS - VO-SA
15. THE HEARTS WITH AL SEARS' ORCHESTRA - OO-WEE
16. BIG AL SEARS & HIS ORCHESTRA - RIGHT NOW, RIGHT NOW
17. JIMMY WITHERSPOON - ALL RIGHT MISS MOORE
18. AL SEARS & HIS ROCK 'N' ROLLERS - TWEEDLE DEE
19. JOE TURNER & HIS BLUES KINGS - HIDE AND SEEK
20. ROY HAMILTON - I'M GONNA SIT RIGHT DOWN AND CRY (Over You)
21. BIG AL SEARS & HIS ORCHESTRA - TINA'S CANTEEN
22. CHARLES CALHOUN & THE FOUR STUDENTS - JAMBOREE
23. BIG AL SEARS & HIS ORCHESTRA - TOM, DICK 'N' HARRY
24. CHARLES CALHOUN - MY PIGEON'S GONE
25. THE THRILLERS - 'LIZABETH
26. AL SEARS & HIS ROCK 'N' ROLLERS - GOIN' UPTOWN
27. BARBIE GAYE - MY BOY LOLLYPOP
28. BIG AL SEARS - SO GLAD
29. ROY GAINES - YOU'RE RIGHT, I'M LEFT
30. NAPPY BROWN - BABY-CRY-CRY-CRY-BABY
A colossus in every way possible, Big Al Sears was a giant of the tenor saxophone who played with the most popular bands of the swing era before meeting the rhythm & blues onslaught head-on and assisting Alan Freed to give birth to rock 'n' roll.
Here are thirty great cuts of prime sax honking and rockin'. Examples of the best of his unique style from his heyday in the 1950s, including the smash hit 'Castle Rock'. This is a must have for fans of cool sax playing, r&b and rock 'n' roll alike. (Jasmine notes)
Critics say they could only play three notes; but they were the right notes! Thanks, boppinbob.
Hi!
Thanx for this one. Know the artist but should be some "new" hears here. LUV Swing/Jump Blue/early R&B.
Cheers!
Ciao! For now.
rntcj
Many thanks for this one.
Bonjour Bob. Je sais que j'arrive un peu tard aussi le lien ne fonctionne plus .Y aurait-il une petite chance de le réactiver ? Si c'est possible merci d'avance . Amitiés musicales . Georges
Bonjour Georges, oui c'est possible!
https://mega.nz/file/BmwQHQTJ#VHV1JKCHfO2mMho4timN4xBw24b7XCHtNkM000oZOWY
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