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BIG BAND NEWS They wore me out . . . I couldn’t take that much work. We hardly ever had a night off. Oh boy! I got so I couldn’t sleep in a bed, I could only sleep on a bus.” - Ray McKinley on leading The Glenn Miller Orchestra A special issue devoted to Glenn Miller’s music in time for the 41st annual “Glenn Miller Birthplace Festival” being held June 9-12 in Clarinda, Iowa. Compiled by Music Librarian Christopher Popa June 2016 It was 60 years ago this month that an authorized Glenn Miller Orchestra began making public appearances again, after having been restarted by drummer-vocalist Ray McKinley at the request of Miller’s widow, Helen, and band booker Willard Alexander. In April, 1956, Miller Estate attorney David Mackay had organized Glenn Miller Productions, Inc. as a New York corporation to, in part, organize and manage a new Glenn Miller Orchestra. In the new setup, the Miller Estate and Mackay became partners, while McKinley and the sidemen were employees. Alexander explained that the billing of the unit would be “The Glenn Miller Orchestra under the direction of and featuring Ray McKinley.” Auditions and rehearsals for the new band were held in April and May and Ray McKinley told me that their first job was on Wednesday, June 6, 1956 at Washington and Lee University in Lexington, Virginia. The band personnel that day was as follows - Ray McKinley (d/voc) directing: Don Ellis, John Glasel, Paul Mathias, Bill Spano (tp), Leonard Barton, Dick Brady, Charles Loper, Tom Parker (tb), Lenny Hambro, Louis Fratture (as), Ray Black, Phil Manning (ts), Jodie Lyons (bar), Bob Weiner (p), Dick Garcia (g/vo), Jim Thorpe (b), Larry Callahan (d), and Marilyn Mitchell (vo). According to an article in Billboard magazine, the band quickly “chalked up some healthy one-nighter grosses” on the road. For example, they did the “best business of the season” on Saturday, June 9, 1956 at Hershey Park in Hershey, PA. They broke a box office record at Port Stanley, Ontario, Canada on Friday, June 15, 1956 (and were booked back there that August). On Saturday, June 23rd, 1956 they pulled 3,775 admissions at Lesourdesville Lake Park in Middletown, Ohio. The Summer Gardens in Porter Dover, Ontario, Canada had its biggest advance sale of tickets in 36 years when the band played there on Wednesday, June 27, 1956. And the following day, the band did tremendous business at Castle Gardens in Allentown, PA, too. GLENN MILLER ( 1904—1944 )

BIG BAND NEWSbigbandlibrary.com/bbnjune2016pdf.pdf · 2016. 6. 17. · Pete Candoli, b.June 28, 1923. Trumpeter Miller Orch-Beneke ‘47-’49. THIS MONTH’S ITINERARY FOR THE GLENN

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  • BIG BAND NEWS

    “They wore me out . . . I

    couldn’t take that much

    work. We hardly ever had

    a night off. Oh boy! I got

    so I couldn’t sleep in a

    bed, I could only sleep on

    a bus.”

    - Ray McKinley on leading The

    Glenn Miller Orchestra

    A special issue devoted to Glenn Miller’s music in time for the 41st annual “Glenn Miller Birthplace Festival” being held June 9-12 in

    Clarinda, Iowa.

    Compiled by Music Librarian Christopher Popa June 2016

    It was 60 years ago this month that an authorized Glenn Miller Orchestra began making public appearances again,

    after having been restarted by drummer-vocalist Ray McKinley at the request of Miller’s widow, Helen, and band

    booker Willard Alexander. In April, 1956, Miller Estate attorney David Mackay had organized Glenn Miller

    Productions, Inc. as a New York corporation to, in part, organize and manage a new Glenn Miller Orchestra. In

    the new setup, the Miller Estate and Mackay became partners, while McKinley and the sidemen were employees.

    Alexander explained that the billing of the unit would be “The Glenn Miller Orchestra under the direction of and

    featuring Ray McKinley.” Auditions and rehearsals for the new band were held in April and May and Ray McKinley

    told me that their first job was on Wednesday, June 6, 1956 at Washington and Lee University in Lexington,

    Virginia. The band personnel that day was as follows - Ray McKinley (d/voc) directing: Don Ellis, John Glasel,

    Paul Mathias, Bill Spano (tp), Leonard Barton, Dick Brady, Charles Loper, Tom Parker (tb), Lenny Hambro, Louis

    Fratture (as), Ray Black, Phil Manning (ts), Jodie Lyons (bar), Bob Weiner (p), Dick Garcia (g/vo), Jim Thorpe (b),

    Larry Callahan (d), and Marilyn Mitchell (vo). According to an article in Billboard magazine, the band quickly

    “chalked up some healthy one-nighter grosses” on the road. For example, they did the “best business of the

    season” on Saturday, June 9, 1956 at Hershey Park in Hershey, PA. They broke a box office record at Port

    Stanley, Ontario, Canada on Friday, June 15, 1956 (and were booked back there that August). On Saturday,

    June 23rd, 1956 they pulled 3,775 admissions at Lesourdesville Lake Park in Middletown, Ohio. The Summer

    Gardens in Porter Dover, Ontario, Canada had its biggest advance sale of tickets in 36 years when the band

    played there on Wednesday, June 27, 1956. And the following day, the band did tremendous business at Castle

    Gardens in Allentown, PA, too.

    GLENN MILLER ( 1904—1944 )

  • Original Miller Music Recorded in the Month of June

    June 9, 1937— I Got Rhythm, Sleepy Time Gal, Community Swing, Time On My

    Hands (Brunswick)

    June 2, 1939— Guess I’ll Go Back Home (This Summer), I’m Sorry for Myself,

    Back to Back, Slip Horn Jive (Bluebird)

    June 27, 1939— The Day We Meet Again, Wanna Hat with Cherries, Sold

    American, Pagan Love Song (Bluebird)

    June 13, 1940— When the Swallows Come Back to Capistrano, A Million Dreams

    Ago, Blueberry Hill, A Cabana in Havana, Be Happy, Angel Child (Bluebird)

    June 25, 1941— Under Blue Canadian Skies, The Cowboy Serenade (While I’m

    Rollin’ My Last Cigarette), You and I, Adios (Bluebird)

    June 17, 1942— That’s Sabotage, Conchita, Marquita, Lolita, Pepita, Rosita,

    Juanita Lopez, The Humming-Bird, Yesterday’s Gardenias (Victor)

    Latest Glenn Miller Orchestra Releases

    includes many big hits, as well as I Got Rhythm, Let’s All Sing Together,

    and Yes, My Darling Daughter. Meanwhile, the fifth volume of the

    “Complete” Beneke-Miller Orchestra has the instrumental Chango and a

    vocal by Mary Mayo, It Was Lovely Knowing You, both previously-

    unissued, among its selections.

    “It’s Glenn Miller

    Time: Live in

    Concert,” recorded

    in Europe by The

    Glenn Miller

    Orchestra directed

    by Wil Salden,

  • A Job Well Done!

    To the average person,

    the initials GMA likely mean

    the ABC-TV show “Good

    Morning America.” But for

    big band fans, GMA could

    only be the Glenn Miller

    Archive at the University of

    Colorado-Boulder.

    With input from a

    number of Miller collectors,

    Dennis Spragg, Senior

    Consultant with the

    Archive, has created an

    interesting 105-page,

    single-sided report about

    the first Miller movie, “Sun

    Valley Serenade,” which

    was filmed 75 years ago.

    Historical text, vintage

    images, memorabilia, and

    much other documentation

    about the film has been

    included.

    It’s the latest example of

    the amazing care and

    extreme thoroughness

    being taken with Miller’s

    legacy at the Archive, and

    shows what can be

    achieved when dedicated

    and caring fans unite.

    Jimmy Stewart

    [ r. ] in a gag

    photo reading

    the book Glenn

    Miller’s Method

    for Orchestral

    Arranging,

    published in

    1943 by Mutual

    Music.

  • Remembering Former Miller Sidemen Born in June

    Zeke Zarchy, b.June 12, 1915. Trumpeter ‘40 / ‘43-’45 (AAF).

    Ray McKinley, b.June 18, 1910. Drummer ‘43-’45 (AAF), leader of Miller Orch ‘56-’66.

    Babe Russin, b.June 18, 1911. Tenor saxophonist ‘41.

    Jerry Jerome, b. June 19, 1912. Tenor saxophonist ‘37.

    Pete Candoli, b.June 28, 1923. Trumpeter Miller Orch-Beneke ‘47-’49.

    THIS MONTH’S ITINERARY FOR

    THE GLENN MILLER ORCHESTRA DIRECTED BY NICK HILSCHER

    June 3, Tibbets Opera House, Coldwater, MI

    June 4, Lexington Village Theatre, Lexington, MI

    June 6, Derby Dinner Playhouse, Clarksville, IN

    June 7, Artcraft Theatre, Franklin, IN

    June 9, Coralville Center, Coralville, IA

    June 10-11, Clarinda High School Clarinda, IA

    June 12, Wilder Park Main Pavilion, Allison, IA

    June 13, El Riad Temple, Sioux Falls, SD

    June 16, Lake County Playhouse, Mineola, TX

    June 17, Arabia Shrine Center, Houston, TX

    June 18, Strange Brew, Austin, TX

    June 19, Levitt Pavilion for Performing Arts, Arlington, TX

    June 21, Tobin Center, San Antonio, TX

    June 23, Spellman Amphitheatre, Forney, TX

    June 26, Lyric Theatre, Harrison, AR

    June 29, Buttermilk Performance Center, Fond du Lac, WI

    June 30, Calumet Theatre, Calumet, MI