Monday 3 May 2021

Yank Lawson born 3 May 1911


John Rhea "Yank" Lawson (May 3, 1911 – February 18, 1995) was an American jazz trumpeter known for Dixieland and swing music. With his appealing tone and strong melodic ideas, Lawson was a popular attraction on the Dixieland scene for decades. 

Lawson was born in Trenton, Missouri. He started playing music on saxophones and piano before settling on the trumpet as a teenager. Lawson played in the University of Missouri Dance Band, was soon offered a job with Slatz Randall’s group (with whom he made his recording debut on “Mom” in 1932), and dropped out of college. He also had a stint with Wingy Manone before being hired to join Ben Pollack in late 1933.

When Lawson joined Pollack, the 22-year-old became part of a very promising band that already included such long-time associates as clarinetist Matty Matlock, tenor-saxophonist Eddie Miller, guitarist-singer Nappy Lamare, and drummer Ray Bauduc. Other members included Benny Goodman’s brother Harry Goodman on bass, lead trumpeter Charlie Spivak, and trombonist-singer Joe Harris. 

Ben Pollack

This group had plenty of potential and should have quickly become one of the top jazz big bands of the time, competing with the Casa Loma Orchestra, the Dorsey Brothers, Jimmie Lunceford, and Chick Webb, but there was one major problem. Ben Pollack was in love with Doris Robbins and was convinced that the singer could become a famous Hollywood actress. He neglected the band and emphasized dance music over jazz; the only instrumental recorded among ten selections in 1934 was a rhumba. 

The musicians staged a mutiny later in the year, resulting in the orchestra breaking up. After searching for a new leader (their first choice, Jack Teagarden, was unavailable due to signing a five-year contract with Paul Whiteman), they settled on Bob Crosby, Bing’s younger brother, a genial personality who was a decent singer. The nucleus of the band stayed together but since Harry Goodman had joined his brother’s band, a new bassist was needed. Bob Haggart was hired. Lawson was featured on many records, both with the big band and Bob Crosby's Bobcats during 1935-1938. He was with Tommy Dorsey during 1938-1939 and had plenty of solo space with Dorsey's Clambake Seven., then returned to Bob Crosby’s band. 

Benny Goodman

Due to World War II, Bob Crosby broke up his orchestra after 1942 and joined the Marines. Suddenly Yank Lawson and Bob Haggart were at liberty but neither was unemployed for long. Lawson had a short stint with Benny Goodman and then became a studio musician in New York, working on radio and (by the 1950s) television while continuing to play jazz. 


                             

Lawson and Haggart came back together for some Bob Crosby reunions and then in 1951 they formed the Lawson/Haggart Jazz Band. The sextet, which originally also included trombonist Lou McGarity, clarinetist Bill Stegmeyer, pianist Lou Stein, and drummer Cliff Leeman, gave the co-leaders an opportunity to escape from the studios and be heard more prominently. 

During the next four years they recorded such albums for Decca as Play Jelly Roll’s Jazz, Play King Oliver’s Jazz, College Fight Songs, Blues On The River, Ragtime Jamboree, Windy City Jazz, South Of The Mason-Dixon Line, and Louis’ Hot 5’s and 7’s. The albums are now a bit hard-to-find and have long deserved to be reissued. 

Beyond their group, Lawson and Haggart stayed active in both the studios and the Dixieland scene throughout the 1950s and ’60s. Lawson was particularly proud of playing lead trumpet in the style of King Oliver on part of Louis Armstrong’s four-album retrospective Satchmo. He and Haggart often performed on the Steve Allen Show and on Allen’s projects. 

Yank, who recorded with everyone from Teresa Brewer to Clancy Hayes, released an album called The Carpetbaggers Play Dixieland With A Twist, and some records of his own (which often included Haggart), was a regular at Eddie Condon’s club during 1966-68. 


In 1968, he and Haggart put together the World's Greatest Jazz Band, an all-star Dixieland group that was together for ten years. Yank Lawson’s power and endurance gradually declined but his sound and drive were always intact. His final recordings were made in early 1991 (the album With A Southern Accent which naturally included Haggart) other than two songs from an Arbors Records jazz party in 1994. Lawson was in semi-retirement by then but had planned to go on a Japanese tour when he passed away in Indianapolis, Indiana,on February 18, 1995 at the age of 83. (Edited from Syncopated Times, Wikipedia & AllMusic)

2 comments:

boppinbob said...

Although by now you may have realized I don’t particularly like mp3 albums, but it seems that they are the norm in today’s digital age. Again “Simple Pleasure” is a mash up of various albums of differing recording dates and personnel, of which (as usual) no information is given at all, but it’s all I could muster from the web. I was going to search through Lawson’s discography to find the albums and dates but I have limited pc time, but be rest assured these are mainly Lawson – Haggart Jazz Band recordings from the 50’s & 60’s.

https://www.upload.ee/files/13110471/Yank_Lawson_-_Simple_Pleasure.rar.html


Yank Lawson - Simple Pleasure (MP3 Album Nagel Heyer Records 2018)

1. Beale Street Blues 2:46
2. That's a Plenty 3:03
3. Sunday 2:58
4. Riverboat Shuffle 2:30
5. Yank's Blues 2:33
6. Old Fashioned Love 2:55
7. Memphis Blues 2:38
8. Basin Street Blues 2:53
9. I Made You Happy When You Made Me Cry (voc. Connee Boswell) 2:41
10. Wolverine Blues 2:55
11. Double Clarinet Blues 2:51
12. Gulf Coast Blues 3:04
13. Rose of the Rio Grande 2:27
14. The Wang-Wang Blues 3:01
15. Singin' the Blues (voc. Connee Boswell) 3:01
16. Squeeze Me 2:55
17. The Sheik of Araby 2:52
18. Too Many Times 3:07
19. While We Danced at the Mardi Gras 2:06
20. St. Louis Blues 2:47
21. Jeepers Creepers 2:56
22. Davenport Blues 3:10
23. Down by the Riverside 2:52
24. Wabash Blues 3:24
25. Way Down Yonder in New Orleans 2:27
26. Missouri Waltz 2:18
27. Stumbling 3:14
28. Two Car Garage 2:30

Patonofun said...

Thank you for your good job.