Monday, 23 May 2022

Scatman Crothers born 23 May 1910


Benjamin Sherman Crothers (May 23, 1910 – November 22, 1986), known professionally as Scatman Crothers, was an American actor and musician. He performed on drums and piano in several bands. He also recorded many solo albums as well as singles. Crothers won the Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance in ‘The Shining.’ 

He began his musical career as a teenager. He sang and was self-educated on guitar and drums. He was in a band that played in speakeasies in Terre Haute, Indiana. Among the people he performed for was notorious gangster, Al Capone. Crothers. During the 1930s, he formed a band, spent eight years living in Akron, Ohio, and performed five days a week on a radio show in Dayton, Ohio. The station manager thought he needed a catchier name, so Crothers suggested "Scatman" for his scat singing. He married Helen, a native of Steubenville, Ohio, in 1937. In the 1940s, the couple moved to California. 

Slim Gaillard with Crothers & Bam Brown

In 1946, Crothers took over from Leo Watson as drummer of Slim Gaillard's Trio in 1946 after settling in Los Angeles. Made a bunch of records starting in 1947, in 1948 Crothers was introduced to Phil Harris, a radio star and regular on Jack Benny's program. He and Harris--like Crothers a native of Indiana--immediately hit it off. Together Crothers and Harris recorded a song called "Chattanooga Shoeshine Boy," which they introduced on Harris's NBC radio show The Phil Harris--Alice Faye Show. Crothers recorded two more hits later that year: "On the Sunny Side of the Street" and "Dead Man's Blues." He became a regular guest on Harris's show, and the pair continued to collaborate on records and in films for years to come. 


                             

In 1948, he brought his combo to Los Angeles and became the first black featured on Los Angeles television, in a show titled ''Dixie Showboat.'' He also performed in Las Vegas, and at the Apollo Theater in Harlem, New York City. Capitol released several of his singles: "I'd Rather Be a Hummingbird", "Blue-eyed Sally", and "Television Blues". High Fidelity Records released his album Rock and Roll with Scatman Crothers. He went on USO tours with Bob Hope. According to the jacket notes of the Let Freedom Sing CD set, Crothers was part of the music group The Ramparts, who sang "The Death of Emmett Till" (1955), a song by A. C. Bilbrew. 

Crothers made his debut in the movie Meet Me at the Fair (1953). He then appeared in the movies ‘East of Sumatra’, ‘Johnny Dark’, ‘Tarzan and the Trappers’ and ‘Porgy and Bess’. From 1961 to 1969, the actor did several films out of which only ‘The Sins of Rachel Cade’ and ‘The Patsy’ got him acting credits. He had roles in the film musicals Hello Dolly! (1969) and The Great White Hope (1970) before providing the voice of "Scat Cat" in the animated film The Aristocats (also 1970). 

He appeared in four films with Jack Nicholson: The King of Marvin Gardens (1972), The Fortune (1975), One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975), and The Shining (1980). He had the part of a fable-telling convict in the animated film Coonskin (1975), a train porter in Silver Streak (1976), a liveryman in The Shootist (1976), Mingo in Roots (1977), a ringmaster in Bronco Billy (1980), a baseball coach in Zapped! (1982), and angels in Two of a Kind (1983) and Twilight Zone: The Movie (1983). He was awarded a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6712 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California on April 8, 1981. 

After The Aristocats in the 1970s, he found voice acting jobs as Meadowlark Lemon in the Harlem Globetrotters cartoon series and as the title character in Hong Kong Phooey. For four years he played the role of Louie the garbage man on Chico and the Man. During his appearance on Sanford and Son he joined Redd Foxx for two musical numbers. One was a version of the standard "All of Me" in which he accompanied Foxx on tenor guitar. In 1966, Hanna-Barbera aired an animated special called The New Alice in Wonderland (or What's a Nice Kid like You Doing in a Place like This?), an updated version of the Lewis Carroll story featuring Sammy Davis Jr. as a cool Cheshire cat. The special was followed by an audio adaptation for HB Records, but since Davis was signed to Reprise, Crothers provided the cat's voice for the album. 

Crothers with Richard Pryor & Gene Wilder

Crothers had many guest roles on television shows, such as Alfred Hitchcock Presents in 1958, Dragnet in 1967, Bewitched and McMillan & Wife in 1971, Adam-12 in 1972 (as "George Strothers"), Kojak and Ironside in 1973, Kolchak: The Night Stalker and Sanford and Son in 1974, Starsky and Hutch in 1977, Charlie's Angels and The Love Boat in 1978, Magnum, P.I. in 1980, Benson in 1982, and Taxi in 1983. Also in 1980, he was on two episodes of Laverne & Shirley as a porter. In the 1980s, he provided the voice of the Autobot Jazz on the television series The Transformers. He starred in three short-lived 1980s television series: One of the Boys (1982), Casablanca (1983), and Morningstar/Eveningstar (1986). 

On November 22, 1986, Crothers died at the age of 76 at his home in Van Nuys, California, after struggling with lung cancer for nearly four years. He is buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Los Angeles.           (Edited from Wikipedia & IMDb)

11 comments:

boppinbob said...

For”THE SCAT MAN CROTHERS R&B LEGACY 1944-1956 (2-CD)
(Fresh Sound Records 2022)” go here:

https://mega.nz/file/g2xgjBLa#zfpJu5MhiSeSGOMZP0W-4tJuYVZtAo41HuPkBAfP_sY

CD 1
01. Fine (Benjamin Crothers) 2:20
02. Shoo Shoo Baby (Phil Moore) 2:43
03. One O'Clock Jump (Count Basie) 1:14
04. Riff’s Blues (Riff Charles) 2:55
05. The Thing (Riff Charles) 3:06
06. Mabel the Lush (Riff Charles) 2:39
07. Dead Man's Blues (Riff Charles) 3:09
08. Have You Got the Gumption (To Make the Assumption) (Austin-Smith) 2:55
09. Just Lookin' (Austin-Smith) 3:06
10. Blue-Eyed Sally (Bernard-Robinson) 2:28
11. I'm the Only Man (The Buscuit Song) (Billy Charles) 2:47
12. Do Something (Green-Stept) 2:48
13. I'd Rather Be a Hummingbird (Riff Charles) 3:14
14. Chattanoogie Shoe-Shine Boy (Stone-Stapp) 3:15
15. Wondering (Carruthers) 2:43
16. Exactly Like You (Fields-McHugh) 2:12
17. It's You (Carruthers) 2:40
18. Keep It Hot (Benjamin Crothers) 3:03
19. Unemployment Blues (Virgil Phemister) 3:15
20. Shuffleboard Blues (Reed-Phemister) 3:04
21. I'd Rather Be a Rooster (With a Flock of Chicks) (Gomez-Vance) 2:54
22. Television Blues (Jones-Vilia) 2:54
23. Beale Street on a Saturday Night (Crothers-Moffet) 2:48
24. King Berman's Stomp (Joe Greene) 2:41
25. A-Gruntin' and A-Groanin' (TheWrestler’s Song) (Joe Greene) 2:16
26. Free Samples (Joe Greene) 2:18
27. Just Like Two Drops ofWater (Joe Greene) 2:23

CD 2
01. Elaine (Benjamin Crothers) 2:24
02. Man, Have I Got Troubles (Wynonie Harris) 2:47
03. It's a Sin to Tell a Lie (Mayhew-Smith) 3:20
04. Hot Rod Harry (The Coolest Cat In Town) (Darensbourg-Medley) 2:27
05. Hot Rod Cowboy (Darensbourg-Medley) 2:57
06. Saturday Night Drag Race, Part 1 (Darensbourg-Medley) 2:43
07. Saturday Night Drag Race, Part 2 (Darensbourg-Medley) 2:44
08. Papa (I Don't Treat That Little Girl Mean) (Jacques) 2:36
9. I Like Your Mother Better (Cameron-Dolphin) 2:46
10. Easy Money (Benjamin Crothers) [Mastertake] 2:45
11. Easy Money (Benjamin Crothers) [Alternate take] 2:19
12. Waiting for My Baby (Benjamin Crothers) 2:43
13. Beale Street on Saturday Night (Benjamin Crothers) 2:57
14. Walkin' My Baby Back Home (Turk-Ahlert-Richman) 2:55
15. Honeysuckle Rose (Waller-Razaf) 2:31
16. On The Sunny Side of the Street (McHugh-Fields) 3:08
17. A Smile Will Go a Long Way (Davis-Akst) 2:16
18. Keep That Coffee Hot (Adams-Corelli) 2:48
19. Dearest One (Benjamin Crothers) 2:08
20. Pork 'N' Beans (Charles Embree) 2:36
21. When OhWhen (Benjamin Crothers) 2:40
22. Do You Love Me? (Stan Freberg) 2:41
23. Sweet Lips (Jazz Lips) (Robin-Armstrong) 2:19
24. Waitin' for My Baby (Savoy Blues) (Ory-Robin) 2:54
25. The Death of Emmett Till, Part 1 (A.C. Bilbrew) 2:24
26. The Death of Emmett Till, Part 2 (A.C. Bilbrew) 2:23

Scat Man Crothers' early recorded works are presented here for the first time, in his unique and personal Swing, Blues and R&B-tinged style. Enjoy his important but largely forgotten contribution to music history!

boppinbob said...

Personnel on CD 1 [1944-1951]:

Tracks #1-3: SCAT MAN CROTHERS and His Orchestra
Recorded at NBC Studios, Hollywood, March 1944

Tracks #4-7: SCAT MAN CROTHERS with RIFF CHARLES and Friends, featuring VIC DICKENSON’S Trombone. Recorded in Los Angeles, February 18, 1948

Tracks #8 & 9: SCAT MAN CROTHERS
Scat Man Crothers (vocals); Lucky Thompson (tenor sax); unknow tp, tb, p, g, b, d.
Recorded in Los Angeles, August 25, 1948

Tracks #10-13: SCAT MAN CROTHERS
Recorded in Los Angeles, January 10, 1949

Track #14: PHIL HARRIS and His Orchestra
Scat Man Crothers (announcing himself as “Scat Man Ralph”), speech with Phil Harris (vocalsRecorded in Los Angeles, Spring 1949

Tracks #15-18: SCAT MAN CROTHERS
Recorded in Los Angeles, June 8, 1949

Tracks #19 & 20: SCAT MAN CROTHERS Cosmo Combo
Recorded in Los Angeles, November 1949

Tracks #21 & 22: SCAT MAN CROTHERS with Orchestral Accompaniment
Recorded in Los Angeles, January 1950

Track #23: CALVIN BOZE with MAXWELL DAVIS Orchestra
Scat Man Crothers (speech); ensemble (vocals).
Recorded in Los Angeles, January 15, 1951

Tracks #24-27: SCAT MAN CROTHERS with RED CALLENDER’s Sextet
Recorded in Los Angeles, April 16, 1951

Personnel on CD 2 [1951-1956]:

Tracks #1 & 2: SCAT MAN CROTHERS
Recorded in Los Angeles, 1951

Track #3: SCAT MAN CROTHERS & The JIMMY WILSON Band
Recorded in San Francisco, 1951

Tracks #4-7: SCAT MAN CROTHERS with JOE DARENSBOURG and his Flat Out Five
Recorded in Los Angeles, November 1952

Tracks #8-13: SCAT MAN CROTHERS -Music by RED CALLENDER Sextette
Recorded in Los Angeles, January 29, 1952; and February 19 (#4), 1953

Tracks #14-17: SCAT MAN CROTHERS with MATTY MATLOCK and His All-Stars
Recorded in Los Angeles, September 8, 1953

Tracks #18-21: SCAT MAN CROTHERS & The Mellow Men with BENNY CARTER’s Orchestra (#18, 20, 21)
SCAT MAN CROTHERS with HENRY RUSSELL’s Orchestra (#19)
Recorded in Los Angeles, circa January 1955

Track #22: ALVINO REY, His Talking Steel Guitar and Orchestra with SCAT MAN
Recorded in Los Angeles, December 13, 1955

Tracks #23 & 24: SCAT MAN CROTHERS with MATTY MATLOCK and His Orchestra
Recorded in Los Angeles, 1956

Tracks #25 & 26: THE RAMPARTS
Recorded in Los Angeles, 1956

bluesjumper33 said...

Much appreciated Bob ! Fresh Sounds do very little advertising so we sometimes are not aware of some of the goodies they re-issue !

Crab Devil said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
rntcj said...

Hi!

Thanx for these. Know artist but most should be "new" hears here.

Cheers!
ciao! For now.
rntcj

varenna45 said...

Wow, I thought I had an extensive Scatman collection but I missed out so many...Thanks a lot. Best wishes and regards

Bob Mac said...

Many thanks for this historical collection.

thanksloads said...

great post thank you

rev.b said...

I always figured Crothers had career before his later TV and film successes, but I hadn't been lucky enough to hear much of his earlier work before now. Much appreciated BB!

Dj Diego MC said...

Bien detallada la información, se agradece. Un saludo

egroj.jazz said...

GReat!