Wednesday, 12 April 2023

Frankie Masters born 12 April 1904

Frankie Masters (born Frank E. Masterman; April 12, 1904 – October 28, 1990) was a big band leader. Elected to the American Federation of Musicians, Local 10 in Chicago, on February 13, 1924, Masters's performance career endured through the 1970s. 

Born in St. Marys, West Virginia, to Alice (née Evans) and William Masterman, Masters graduated from Robinson High School in southern Illinois. He attended Indiana University, where he majored in Commerce and led a band that performed at college dances, playing the banjo. During the summer, he found work as a guitarist with the orchestra on the cruise ship S.S. President Madison as it headed for Asia. When he returned, he joined a big band led by Benny Krueger at the Tivoli Theatre in Chicago. There, they would accompany silent films and be featured as on on-stage band between screenings. 

He signed with Victor Records in 1927 and began his recording career, but didn't achieve much success until he switched to Vocalion Records in 1939. There he recorded what would become his theme song, "Scatter-Brain," written by Masters and band members Carl Bean and Kahn Keene, with lyrics by Johnny Burke. It was a number one hit for eight weeks in 1939, becoming the #28 song overall on the pop charts that year. Many of these hits incorporated what Masters called "bell tone music," an arrangement gimmick in which chords were staggered, creating, for the time, a trademark sound. 

                                            
                      

From the mid-1930s through the remainder of his career, Masters largely led hotel house bands in Chicago and New York City that focused on dinner shows and dancing. Although the bands employed several vocalists, Masters, with a pleasant and melodious voice, provided the vocals on the majority of songs. Notable among his vocalists were Marion Francis (née Marion Francis Charlesworth; 1917–2011) and Phyllis Miles (aka Myles), later to become his wife. On occasion, several band members would be employed as a vocal chorus, billed variously as 'The Swing Masters' or "The Masters Voices."

Frankie Masters and his Orchestra recorded extensively, producing 124 sides on Vocalion, Okeh, and Columbia between 1939 and 1942, During that same time, they cut several hundred songs for World and Lang-Worth transcription services that provided music to radio stations on a subscription basis and were not released for purchase by the general public.

It was also during this period that the Music Corporation of America (now MCA Inc.) organized a sponsored radio show for the Masters orchestra. It was broadcast first via WBBM, later WMAQ and was called It Can Be Done Also featured each week was poet-journalist Edgar Guest. The show, according to saxophonist Buddy Shaw, who played with Masters's band at the time, featured stories about people who achieved success through adversity. Masters and company also made several movie shorts, which were shown in theaters nationally.

He and wife Phyllis Miles hosted the television show Lucky Letters on WBKB. Later that year and into early 1951, they had a weekly program called Walgreen's Open House. Then in the fall of 1974, when the Empire Room of the Palmer House reopened for the season, the Frankie Masters Orchestra became the new house band, replacing Ben Arden and his band, which had been appearing there since 1957. 

The Empire Room was a homecoming of sorts for Masters and his musicians because they were doing what they did best—accompany acts—many of them very big names from Las Vegas and Hollywood. They remained in the black green and gold room until 1975 when, finally feeling the economic squeeze of costlier and costlier acts, the Palmer House closed its venerable showroom after 42 years. That was the last major location job for Frankie and his musicians, but the band continued to job sporadically until the early 1980s. 


A resident of Cary, Illinois, he died Oct 28th 1990 in the Good Shepherd Hospital in Barrington from acute myocardial infarction.  His colourful career spanned almost 60 years and extended from the 1920’s cabarets with their chorus lines and numerous acts, through the stage band shows,to the dance bands and came around full circle to the Empire Room and finally jobbing.

(Edited from Wikipedia, Chicago Federation of Musicians Big Band Library & AllMusic)

9 comments:

  1. A big thank you goes to Hit Parade who suggested today’s birthday band leader.

    I’ve started the ball rolling with a home-made anthology of 50 Frankie Masters recordings from 1939 up to 1942 put together from a few of my own digital mp3’s, but mainly 78rpm transfers from the Internet Archive & Jazz-On-Line. Quality varies from scratchy to quite good and bitrate is variable, but where else will you get this gem of a collection! All are in year order but not actual date of recording, plus I haven’t had time to credited any of the vocalists. This is followed by 2 digital download albums which should be of better quality.

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  2. For “Frankie Masters – Scatter-Brain 1939 – 1942 (2023 From the Vaults) go here:

    https://www.imagenetz.de/bHAhm

    01) All the Things You Are
    02) Baby Me
    03) Back To Back
    04) Butch, The Beach Boy
    05) Confucius Say
    06) Down in the Alley and Over the Fence
    07) Happy Birthday to Love
    08) Hello Mr. Kringle
    09) Holy Smoke (Can't Ya Take A Joke)
    10) I Didn't Know What Time It Was
    11) I Live To Recognize The Tune
    12) I Wanna Wrap You Up (And Take You Home With Me)
    13) If I Only Had a Brain
    14) I've Got My Eyes on You
    15) Scatter-Brain (Theme Song)
    16) Take Me out to the Ball Game
    17) That Lucky Fellow
    18) The Merry Old Land of Oz
    19) The Parade of the Little White Mice
    20) When Winter Comes
    21) A Lover's Lullaby
    22) Alice Blue Gown
    23) Charming Little Faker
    24) Ferry Boat Serenade
    25) Fools Fall In Love
    26) Hear My Song, Violetta
    27) I Walk With Music
    28) Irene
    29) It's A Lovely Day Tomorrow
    30) Meet the Sun Half-Way
    31) My! My!
    32) Polka Dots And Moonbeams
    33) Say It (Over and over Again)
    34) The Breeze and I
    35) The Pessimistic Charachter (With the Crab Apple Face)
    36) The Same Old Story
    37) Watching The Clock
    38) You’ve Got Me This Way
    39) Aurora
    40) Braggin'
    41) Daddy
    42) Elmer's Tune
    43) Goodbye Mama (I'm Off to Yokohama)
    44) In Apple Blossom Time
    45) In the Hush of the Night
    46) Oh! Look At Me Now
    47) The Sun Will Soon Be setting
    48) Why Don't We Do This More Often
    49) Zumbi (Ethiopian Double Talk)
    50) We're the Couple in the Castle

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  3. For “Frankie Masters And His Orchestra – Accentuate The Positive (2000 Golden Era)” go here:

    https://www.imagenetz.de/eMLYh

    1. Hold Me (Vocals – Frankie Masters) 2:27
    2. Flamingo 3:17
    3. The Sunshine Of Your Smile (Vocals – Frankie Masters) 1:57
    4. Opus #3 3:29
    5. The Object Of My Affection (Vocals – Frankie Masters) 2:29
    6. It's Love, Love, Love (Vocals – Frankie Masters, Phyllis Myles) 2:28
    7. Amor 2:41
    8. Riverside Jump 2:43
    9. Please Don't Say No (Vocals – Frankie Masters) 2:33
    10. Accentuate The Positive (Vocals – Frankie Masters, Phyllis Myles) 2:43
    11. Afternoon Of A Faun 3:01
    12. Zone 28 2:13
    13. Don't You Know I Care (Vocals – F. Masters, P. Myles) 3:20
    14. Tuxedo Junction 2:28

    =================================================

    For ”Frankie Masters And His Orchestra – 1947 (1999 Circle)” go here:

    https://www.imagenetz.de/cn77Y

    1 Love And The Weather
    2 Mam'selle
    3 On The Other End Of A Kiss
    4 Fun And Fancy Free
    5 A Girl That I Remember
    6 I Gotta A Gal I Love
    7 Sweet And Low
    8 Wait Till I Get My Sunshine In The Moonlight
    9 You'll Always Be The One I Love
    10 Necessity
    11 Hora Staccato
    12 When I Write My Song
    13 If This Isn't Love
    14 People Like You
    15 Misirlou
    16 It's Kind Of Lonesome Out Tonight
    17 The Little Old Mill
    18 Uncle Fud
    19 When I'm Not Near The Girl I Love
    20 Naughty Angeline
    21 The Echo Said, "No"
    22 You're Breaking In A New Heart
    23 If You're Ever Down In Texas (Look Me Up)
    24 Swing Low, Sweet Chariot
    25 Moonlight And You

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  4. Thanks to Hit Parade for the suggestion and you Bob for filling an apparently big hole in my collection.

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  5. Hi Bob, could you re-up the 3 links? Thank you.

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  6. Bob,
    Could you please reup the three liks above, thanks.

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  7. Hi HP here's the new links.....And sorry to Destroyer 1985, your request seemed to have slipped through the net, but I hope it was worth the wait!

    Scatter-Brain 1939 – 1942

    https://www.imagenetz.de/f8Kri

    Accentuate The Positive

    https://www.imagenetz.de/mxKk3

    1947

    https://www.imagenetz.de/aCL6h

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  8. That's allright, @boppinbob, the links are here. I thought the same that you wrote when I received the message asking for the three links, thanks to @Hitparade. And thank you too. I will ask something else I've missed soon. Greetings!

    ReplyDelete