[78-L] Alvino Rey and The Kings

Dan Van Landingham danvanlandingham at yahoo.com
Wed Apr 21 16:35:05 PDT 2010


I had that album on Hindsight.Heider was an acquaintance of mine.He gave me some background on Radio
Recorders.He had a label in Portland,Oregon called "First Heard".I had a Boyd Raeburn LP on that label
back in 1976.The band dated from 1944 and featured Johnny Bothwell,Dizzy Gillespie and a good,Ben W-
ebster Styled tenor player to good advantage.The reverse featured Raeburn's 1946 band with Tony Rizzi
on guitar,Nelson Shalledy on trumpet and several others which included Jackie Mills on drums and Dodo
Marmarosa on piano.



________________________________
From: Jeff Sultanof <jeffsultanof at gmail.com>
To: 78-L Mail List <78-l at klickitat.78online.com>
Sent: Tue, April 20, 2010 9:18:01 PM
Subject: Re: [78-L] Alvino Rey and The Kings

I loved the all-reed orchestra. I've never forgotten an interview that Dick
Haymes gave where he discussed this band and thought it was terrible,
claiming that the intonation was awful. He might have been describing some
of the early gigs the band did. The instrumentation invited tuning problems,
and I can imagine that it took some time for the band to really sound right.
Arranging for this band required a whole new approach; a call and response
style a la Goodman or even Miller was simply not right.

I remember a Hindsight album of transcriptions that was never issued on CD
that I will track down one of these days. Fields gave an interview later
saying that he was particularly proud of this band because of its
musicality; he knew that the rippling rhythm was a gimmick, the reed
orchestra real music.

Thank you for reminding me of this ensemble, Geoffrey. Your taste is
excellent!

Jeff Sultanof

On Tue, Apr 20, 2010 at 11:04 PM, Geoffrey Wheeler <dialjazz at verizon.net>wrote:

> Speaking of Alvino Rey, Al simmons says:“Good band..good charts. He
> opened with "The Strip Polka"  Hot stuff. Next number "The Major and
> The Minor"
>
> Earl Bostic made an excellent recording of his and Redd Evans tune “The
> Major and the Minor” for Majestic. The sound is “boxy,” as though it
> were recorded in a closet. The Alvino Rey Bluebird recording of the
> tune is also excellent. Both recordings should be better known.
>
> A surprising band of the early Forties was Shep Fields’ reeds orchestra
> that recorded for Bluebird. The recordings feature wonderful
> arrangements and playing, and the band swings nicely. When he was
> featured, Charlie Shavers generally took excellent solos that made him
> a distinctive sound and stylist. He could just about blow everybody
> else off the stand. He was also a standout with the Raymond Scott
> Orchestra on CBS stateside and short-wave broadcasts.
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