[78-L] Surviving dance orchestra vocalists

DAVID BURNHAM burnhamd at rogers.com.invalid
Wed Sep 16 13:40:34 PDT 2015


Surely Doris Day belongs in this group!  I assume she's still alive.
db 


     On Wednesday, September 16, 2015 4:26 PM, Ray Kilcoyne <kil at roadrunner.com.invalid> wrote:
   

 
Would it not be fair to go by popularity trends.
Admittedly this is a small sample and just for the U.S. but you can draw 
your own conclusions.
This is the number of big band hits in the year end Top Ten.
1935 - 8 of 10.
1936 - 6 of 10.
1937 - 8 of 10.
1938 - 8 of 10.
1939 - 10 of 10.
1940 - 8 of 10.
1941 - 10 of 10.
1942 - 9 of 10.
1943 - 6 of 10.
1944 - 3 of 10.
1945 - 5 of 10.
1946 - 5 of 10.
1947 - 6 of 10.
1948 - 4 of 10.
1949 - 4 of 10.
RayK
>
Julian Vein wrote:
>> I was using 1939 as the cutoff point.
>
Kristjan Saag wrote:
> That's even more radical than Rust. Why?
>
Rust was using a discographical anomaly caused by the recording ban.
What do you suggest were the "dance band years"? Rust and Forbes's
"British Dance Band" discography used 1945 as the cutoff, presumably
because there was no recording band to cause a break in continuity.

I suggest it's only jazz and popular music enthusiasts who attach any
significance to 1942. Even in the States, would record buyers have
noticed that much difference in their buying habits other than
restrictions caused by the war effort?
      Julian Vein

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