Sold Date:
May 19, 2021
Start Date:
April 19, 2021
Final Price:
£25.00
(GBP)
Seller Feedback:
13139
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THIS IS A VERY GOOD PLAYING COPY OF THE CLASSIC
" IN THE MOOD "
FROM GLENN MILLER AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Alton Glenn Miller was born in
Clarinda, Iowa on March 1, 1904. But it was in North Platte, Nebraska, several
years later that Glenn actually got his musical start when, one day, his father
brought home a mandolin. Glenn promptly traded it for an old battered horn,
which he practiced every chance he got. In fact his mother worried, "It got to
where Pop and I used to wonder if he'd ever amount to anything."
In 1923,
Miller entered the University of Colorado, although he spent more time traveling
to auditions and playing where and whenever he could. After flunking three of
his five courses one semester, Glenn dropped out to concentrate on his career as
a professional musician.
He toured with several orchestras and ended up
in Los Angeles where he landed a spot in Ben Pollack's group, a band that
included a guy named Benny Goodman. Here, Miller also got the chance to write
some arrangements. Arriving in New York City, he soon sent for, and married his
college sweetheart, Helen Burger in 1928, and for the next three years, earned
his living as a free-lance trombonist and arranger.
Miller played and
recorded with the likes of Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey (who on several of their
records, featured an up-and-coming singer by the name of Bing Crosby), Gene
Krupa, Eddie Condon and Coleman Hawkins. In addition, during that time, Glenn
cut 18 sides for Goodman, and also worked for radio studio conductors like
Victor Young, Carl Fenton and Jacques Renard. In 1934, Miller became the musical
director of the Dorsey Band, and later went on to organize The Ray Noble
Orchestra, which included such players as Charlie Spivak, Peewee Erwin, Bud
Freeman, Johnny Mince, George Van Eps and Delmar Kaplan, among
others.
In April 1935, Glenn Miller recorded, for the first time, under
his own name. Using six horns, a rhythm section and a string quartet, he
recorded "Moonlight on the Ganges" and "A Blues Serenade" for Columbia. But
selling only a few hundred records, he continued his position with the Noble
Orchestra.
In 1937, Glenn Miller stepped out to form his own band. There
were a few recordings -- one for Decca and one for Brunswick -- a couple of
week-long stints in New Orleans and Dallas, and many one-nighters, but it was
not to be. Though the group would play one more date several days later in
Bridgeport, Connecticut, Glenn gave his men their final notice on New Year's Eve
at the Valencia Ballroom in York, Pennsylvania. Broke, depressed and having no
idea what he was going to do, he returned to New York City.
It is said
that Miller could never remember precisely the moment he decided to emphasize
his new reed section sound. But it was during this disheartening interim, that
he realized the unique sound -- produced by the clarinet holding the melodic
line while the tenor sax plays the same note, and supported harmonically by
three other saxophones -- just might be the individual and easily recognizable
style that would set his band apart from all the rest.
Formed in March
1938, the second Glenn Miller Orchestra -- which would later include the likes
of Tex Beneke, Marion Hutton, Ray Eberle, Paul Tanner, Johnny Best, Hal
McIntyre, and Al Klinck -- soon began breaking attendance records all up and
down the East Coast. At the New York State Fair in Syracuse it attracted the
largest dancing crowd in the city's history. The next night it topped Guy
Lombardo's all-time record at the Hershey Park Ballroom in Pennsylvania. The
Orchestra was invited by ASCAP to perform at Carnegie Hall with three of the
greatest bands ever -- Paul Whiteman, Fred Waring and Benny Goodman -- and
created more of a stir than any of them.
There were record-breaking
recordings, as well, such as "Tuxedo Junction", which sold 115,000 copies in the
first week. "In the Mood", and "Pennsylvania 6-5000",
all appearing on the RCA Victor Bluebird label. In early 1940, Down Beat
Magazine announced that Miller had topped all other bands in its Sweet Band
Poll, and capping off this seemingly sudden rise to the top, there was, of
course, Glenn Miller's "Moonlight Serenade" radio
series for Chesterfield cigarettes which aired three times a week over CBS. In
1941, it was off to Hollywood where the band worked on its first movie, "Sun
Valley Serenade", which introduced the song -- and soon-to-be million selling
record --"Chattanooga Choo Choo", and featured the Modernaires and the Nicholas
Brothers. Then came "Orchestra Wives". But the war was starting to take its toll
on many of the big bands as musicians, and the rest of the country's young men,
began receiving draft notices.
On October 7, 1942, Alton Glenn Miller
reported for induction into the Army and was immediately assigned to the Army
Specialist Corps. His appointment as a Captain came after many months of
convincing the military higher-ups that he could modernize the army band and
ultimately improve the morale of the men. His training complete, he was
transferred into the Army Air Corps, where he ultimately organized the Glenn
Miller Army Air Force Band. Miller's goal of entertaining the fighting troops
took another year to be realized, but in late 1943 he and the band were shipped
out to England.
There, in less than one year, the Glenn Miller Army Air
Force Band engaged in over 800 performances. Of these, 500 were broadcasts heard
by millions. There were more than 300 personal appearances including concerts
and dances, with a gross attendance of over 600,000. But Glenn was not to
participate in the final six months of these activities.
In the Fall of
1944, the band was scheduled to be sent on a six-week tour of Europe and would
be stationed in Paris during that time. Miller decided to go ahead, in order to
make the proper arrangements for the group's arrival. And so, on December 15th,
Glenn Miller boarded a transport plane to Paris, never to be seen
again.
RECORD DETAILS:
UK HMV BD 5565 10" 78 rpm SHELLAC
A SIDE: IN THE MOOD
B SIDE: OUT OF SPACE
CONDITION - RECORD = V+/E-
SEVERAL VARIANTS ISSUED SO LABELS MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE STOCK PHOTOS SHOWN
THE CLASSIC GLENN MILLER 78!
DON'T MISS IT - BUY NOW!