Chuck Sagle (July 28, 1927 - April 13, 2015) was an American jazz trumpet and bass player, composer, arranger, and orchestra leader of space age pop. He worked in four of the nation’s key music centers: Chicago, New York, Los Angeles and Nashville and for such top record labels as Mercury, Epic, Reprise, Motown and ABC-Dot.
Born Charles H. Sagle in Aurora, Illinois, he excelled at trumpet and keyboards as a high-school student and entered the University of Illinois at age 16. He served in the Navy during World War II, entertaining the troops in the Pacific as a musician and bandleader. When the war ended, he returned to the University of Illinois, where he completed studies in music and advertising and graduated in 1950.
Chuck joined the Artists & Repertoire (A&R) department of Mercury Records, first in Chicago, then in New York. While with the company, he produced such “doo-wop” groups as The Dell-Vikings, The Danleers and The Diamonds (the 1957 No. 1 hit “Little Darlin’”). He also worked as a conductor for pop balladeer Joni James and r&b star Clyde McPhatter. Sagle apparently continued to do some freelancing, because he recorded a number album for Mercury as "Carl Stevens" and even "Karl von Stevens," a beer-hall band parody ala Fritz Guckenheimer. In 1958-59, he was the musical director for Don Kirshner’s Aldon Music. While there, he worked with Bobby Darin, Jack Keller and Barry Mann, among others. He arranged and conducted for Neil Sedaka (1959’s “Oh Carol” etc.) and discovered 17-year-old Carole King. He next worked in A&R at Epic Records in New York. He signed King to the label and arranged and/or produced records for her, Roy Hamilton, Jack Jones, Link Wray, Sal Mineo, Ersel Hickey, Lenny Welch and Tony Orlando. He also arranged and conducted on The Ed Sullivan Show and The Tonight Show. Sagle recorded his first solo LP, Ping Pong Percussion, in 1961.
Moving to Los Angeles in 1962, he joined Reprise Records as musical director. There, he arranged and/or produced records for the label’s Sammy Davis Jr., Dean Martin, Rosemary Clooney, Ethel Merman, Frank Sinatra, Soupy Sales, The Hi-Lo’s and Les Baxter. Among the first projects he produced for the label was his own album Splendor in the Brass. His tasteful arrangements skillfully juxtaposed various small instrumental combinations with each other and with the full orchestra, with deftly voiced French horns and saxophones revealing his fertile imagination and versatility. Garnishing these well-conceived performances are solos by such luminaries as Lou Levy, Shorty Sherock, Cappy Lewis, Buddy Collette, Bill Perkins and Emil Richards. This was followed by another Lp “Contrasts.”
He produced jazz great Chico Hamilton in 1963 and later did arrangements for pop legend Gene Pitney and r&b queen LaVern Baker. In 1968, he arranged and conducted “Valley of the Dolls” for the close-harmony quartet The Arbors. He was an arranger in 1971-72 for the stellar r&b vocal group The Manhattans, notably on their LPs With These Hands and A Million to One and the top-10 r&b hit “One Life to Live.” During the same period, he served a brief stint as an arranger for Motown Records.
Sagle moved to Nashville in 1972. He arranged music for ABC-Dot (Brian Collins, etc.) and for Starday-King Records and other labels. His first love was big-band music, and he returned to that in Music City by doing arrangements for The Establishment orchestra and Jack Daniel’s Silver Cornet Band. He returned to college around 1984 to study computer programming. Sagle worked in this field for the next decade retiring in 1994.
Chuck pursued many interests with diligence and intensity. He loved photography and read voraciously, especially biography, history, and science fiction. He enjoyed bridge and Scrabble. He taught a class on Jewish music at West End Synagogue and composed a musical for the synagogue choir. In 2008, at age 81, he arranged and conducted a concert in celebration of his son Jacob’s bar mitzvah at Sherith Israel Congregation.
He died at the age of 87on April 13, 2015 in Nashville, Tennessee from complications following a stroke.
(Edited from Music Row, Space Age Pop & Dignity obit.)
Here are five albums of Chuck Sagle who also recorded as Carl Stevens & Karl Von Stevens
ReplyDeleteThe first was found on the Internet Archive and the other four were found on the usual streamers @192
https://pixeldrain.com/u/Aum2Z2Rs
Karl Von Stevens And His Orchestra – In The Land Of Oom Pah Pah (1958 Mercury)
1. Lustig Und Zufrieden (Happy And Content)
2. Hi-Le-Hi-Lo
3. Bier Hier, Bier Hier! (Come On With The Beer)
4. Im Tiefen Keller Sitz Ich Hier - Lauterbach (In The Deep Wine Celler)
5. Trink Mer Noch A Tröpfche (Have Another Drink)
6. Nacht Leben (Night Life)
7. Happy Little Oom-Pah-Pah
8. Ei Du Schöne Schnitzelbank
9. O Susanna
10. Du, Du Liegst Mir Im Herzen (You, You)
11. Jolly Coppersmith
12. Du Kannst Nicht Treu Sein (You Can't Be True, Dear)
Carl Stevens – "Skin" And Bones (1958 Mercury)
1. Love For Sale 3:20
2. Walkin' Shoes 1:55
3. How Long Has This Been Going On 3:04
4. Long Ago And Far Away 1:51
5. Fascinating Rhythm 2:47
6. The Moon Was Yellow (And The Night Was Young) 2:12
7. It Had To Be You 2:17
8. Winter Dreams 2:20
9. Soon 2:19
10. Imagination 2:15
11. All Of You 2:28
Carl Stevens, His Trumpet And His Orchestra – Muted Memories (1959 Mercury )
1. I Concentrate On You 2:25
2. Jeepers Creepers 2:37
3. Witchcraft 2:27
4. A Handful Of Stars 2:59
5. Satin Doll 3:01
6. The Song Is You 2:25
7. That Old Feeling 1:47
8. Harlem Nocturne 2:40
9. You Belong To Me 2:33
10. Out Of This World 2:39
11. Younger Than Springtime 2:37
12. What's New 2:24
Chuck Sagle And His Orchestra – Ping Pong Percussion (1961Epic)*
1. Who's Sorry Now 2:20
2. The Sheik Of Araby 2:58
3. For Me And My Gal 2:26
4. How Come You Do Me Like You Do 2:14
5. My Honey's Lovin' Arms 2:41
6. When The Saints Go Marching In 2:20
7. Make Love To Me 2:39
8. Cuddle Up A Little Closer 2:36
9. Stars Fell On Alabama 2:52
10. Muskrat Ramble 1:55
11. Someday Sweetheart 2:30
12. High Society 2:09
*This was re-issued on the streamers in 2014 under the title “The Hip Star.”
Chuck Sagle And His Orchestra – Splendor In The Brass (1961 Reprise)
01. When Sunny Gets Blue (Segal-Fisher) 3:56
02. A Taste of Honey (Scott-Marlow) 3:20
03. Bernie's Tune (Bernie Miller) 2:43
04. Man with a Horn (DeLange-Lake-Jenny) 3:15
05. Playboys Theme (Coleman-Leigh) 4:03
06. On Green Dolphin Street (Kaper-Washington) 2:52
07. Love for Sale (Cole Porter) 2:48
08. A Night in Tunisia (Gillespie-Paparelli) 1:52
09. Easy Living (Rainger-Robin) 2:49
10. The Moon Was Yellow (Leslie-Ahlert) 2:01
11. Brassanctified (Chuck Sagle) 2:53
Carl Stevens & His Orchestra – High Society Twist (1962 Mecury)
1. Lazy River 2:27
2. In The Mood 2:31
3. Yellow Rose Of Texas 2:27
4. My Happiness 2:10
5. Tea For Two 2:30
6. Sentimental Journey 2:05
7. You Must Have Been A Beautiful Baby 2:08
8. Harbor Lights 2:22
9. Pretend 2:13
10. Margie 2:23
11. My Blue Heaven 1:59
12. Indian Love Call 2:29
Thank You, this musician was so obscure, you did even give this post a title :-)
ReplyDeleteHello Richard, I was in a hurry to catch a bus! Didn't realize I never entered the title.
ReplyDelete