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Tommy Dorsey
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{{Short description|American jazz trombonist and bandleader (1905–1956)}}{{about|trombonist and bandleader|the pianist and jazz and gospel composer|Thomas A. Dorsey}}{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2021}}







factoids
| birth_place = Shenandoah, Pennsylvania, U.S.19562611|19}}| death_place = Greenwich, Connecticut, U.S.Trombonecornet}}Big bandSwing music>swing|jazz}}Bandleaderconductor}}| years_active = 1921–1956RCA VictorBrunswick Records>BrunswickDecca Records>DeccaOKeh Records>OKehColumbia Records>Columbia}}The California RamblersJimmy Dorsey>Jean GoldkettePaul Whiteman>Frank SinatraThe Pied Pipers>Buddy DeFrancoBuddy Rich>Jo StaffordConnie Haines>Glenn MillerThe Boswell Sisters>Dick HaymesGene Krupa>Sy Oliver|Nelson Riddle}}}}Thomas Francis Dorsey Jr. (November 19, 1905 – November 26, 1956)BOOK,weblink Tommy Dorsey: Livin' in a Great Big Way, A Biography, Peter J., Levinson, 303, March 25, 2009, Hachette Books, 9780786734948, July 26, 2021, Google Books, was an American jazz trombonist, composer, conductor and bandleader of the big band era. He was known as the "Sentimental Gentleman of Swing" because of his smooth-toned trombone playing.NEWS,weblink Dorsey, Thomas Francis Jr. ("Tommy," "The Sentimental Gentleman of Swing"), Pennsylvania Center For The Book/Lisa A. Moore, n.d., date published unknown, October 20, 2009, May 15, 2013,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20130515191115weblink">weblink dead, His theme song was "I'm Getting Sentimental Over You". His technical skill on the trombone gave him renown among other musicians.WEB,weblink Jazz: A Film By Ken Burns: Selected Artist Biography - Tommy Dorsey, PBS, February 5, 2013, He was the younger brother of bandleader Jimmy Dorsey.NEWS,weblink Dorsey, James Francis 'Jimmy', Pennsylvania Center For The Book/Nicole DeCicco, n.d., date published unknown, October 20, 2009, May 15, 2013,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20130515193331weblink">weblink dead, After Dorsey broke with his brother in the mid-1930s, he led an extremely successful band from the late 1930s into the 1950s. He is best remembered for standards such as "Opus One", "Song of India", "Marie", "On Treasure Island", and his biggest hit single, "I'll Never Smile Again".

Early life

Born in Mahanoy Plane, Pennsylvania, Thomas Francis Dorsey Jr. was the second of four children born to Thomas Francis Dorsey Sr., a bandleader,Billboard, July 25, 1942, died July 13, 1942 and Theresa (née Langton) Dorsey.Dorsey, Thomas Francis Jr. ('Tommy,' 'The Sentimental Gentleman of Swing'). The family moved to Lansford shortly after his birth.
He and Jimmy, his older brother by slightly less than two years, became known as the Dorsey Brothers. The two younger siblings were Mary and Edward, who died young.BOOK, Livin' In A Great Big Way, Levinson, Peter, 2005, DaCapo, New York, 978-0-306-81111-1, 354,weblink Tommy Dorsey studied the trumpet with his father but later switched to trombone.
At age 15, Jimmy recommended Tommy to replace Russ Morgan in the Scranton Sirens, a territory band in the 1920s. Tommy and Jimmy worked in bands led by Tal Henry, Rudy Vallee, Vincent Lopez, and Nathaniel Shilkret. In 1923, Dorsey followed Jimmy to Detroit to play in Jean Goldkette's band and returned to New York in 1925 to play with the California Ramblers.WEB,weblink Dorsey, Tommy, Jazz.com, February 5, 2013, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20130409011631weblink">weblink April 9, 2013, In 1927, he joined Paul Whiteman. In 1929, the Dorsey Brothers had their first hit with "Coquette" for OKeh Records.NEWS,weblinkweblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20021226194510weblink">weblink dead, December 26, 2002, Tommy Dorsey, VH1/William Ruhlmann/All Music Guide, n.d., date published unknown, In 1934, the Dorsey Brothers band signed with Decca, having a hit with "I Believe in Miracles".NEWS, {{BillboardURLbyName, tommy dorsey, true, |title= Tommy Dorsey |publisher= Billboard }} Glenn Miller was a member of the Dorsey Brothers Orchestra in 1934 and 1935, composing "Annie's Cousin Fanny",NEWS,weblink Tuxedo Junction Tommy Dorsey, George Spink, 2009, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20100318055413weblink">weblink March 18, 2010, "Tomorrow's Another Day", "Harlem Chapel Chimes", and "Dese Dem Dose", all recorded for Decca,NEWS,weblink Dorsey Brothers Orchestra, Scott Alexander, October 27, 2009, January 26, 2019,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20190126082412weblink">weblink dead, for the band. Acrimony between the brothers led to Tommy Dorsey walking out to form his own band in 1935 as the orchestra was having a hit with "Every Little Moment".NEWS,weblink Encyclopedia of Jazz Musicians, Dorsey, Tommy, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20130409011631weblink">weblink April 9, 2013, Dorsey's orchestra was known primarily for its renderings of ballads at dance tempos, frequently with singers such as Jack Leonard and Frank Sinatra.

Band

In 2009, Buddy De Franco recalled recording "Opus One" with Dorsey in the 1940s, commenting on Dorsey's desire to be precise and exact.WEB, Myers, Marc, Interview: Buddy De Franco, Opus 1 - JazzWax,weblink www.jazzwax.com, March 18, 2020, July 9, 2009, Expanding on De Franco's opinions about Dorsey, writer Peter Levinson said, "He wanted things to be done his way."WEB, Peter Levinson, author of Tommy Dorsey: Livin' in a Great Big Way,weblink Jerry Jazz Musician, March 18, 2020, November 6, 2005, The band was popular almost from the moment it signed with RCA Victor for "On Treasure Island", the first of four hits in 1935. After his 1935 recording, however, Dorsey's manager dropped the "hot jazz" that Dorsey had mixed with his own lyrical style, and instead had Dorsey play pop and vocal tunes. Dorsey kept his Clambake Seven as a Dixieland group that played during performances. Dorsey became the co-host of The Raleigh-Kool Program on the radio with comedian Jack Pearl, then became the host.WEB, Tommy Dorsey,weblink Radio Hall of Fame, March 18, 2020, By 1939, Dorsey was aware of criticism that his band lacked a jazz feeling. He hired arranger Sy Oliver away from the Jimmie Lunceford band."Jazz Wax""When I moved from the Lunceford band to Tommy Dorsey, I didn't change my writing approach. He made the transition. The band that Dorsey had when I joined him was Dixieland-orientated {{sic}}, and my sort of attack was foreign to most of the fellows he had. We both knew that to be the case, but he wanted a Swing band—so he changed personnel until he got the guys that could do it." Sy Oliver. see WEB,weblink THE SY OLIVER STORY Part 1, October 20, 2009, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20090309060138weblink">weblink March 9, 2009, Sy Oliver's arrangements include "On the Sunny Side of the Street" and "T.D.'s Boogie Woogie"; Oliver also composed two of the new band's signature instrumentals, "Well, Git It" and "Opus One".NEWS,weblink The Sy Oliver Story, Part 1, Les Tomkins, 1974, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20090309060138weblink">weblink March 9, 2009, In 1940, Dorsey hired singer Frank Sinatra from bandleader Harry James.{{Pop Chronicles 40s|1|A}} Sinatra made eighty recordings from 1940 to 1942 with the Dorsey band.NEWS,weblink The Kennedy Center Biography of Frank Sinatra, The Kennedy Center, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20081206151943weblink">weblink December 6, 2008, Two of those eighty songs are "In the Blue of Evening" and "This Love of Mine".NEWS,weblink Sinatra The Complete Guide, Brett Wheadon, 1986, Sinatra achieved his first great success as a vocalist in the Dorsey band and claimed he learned breath control from watching Dorsey play trombone. Sy Oliver and Sinatra did a posthumous tribute album to Dorsey on Sinatra's Reprise records. I Remember Tommy appeared in 1961.MAGAZINE,weblink I Remember Tommy Album Reviews | Billboard.com, Billboard (magazine), Billboard, November 10, 2010,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20101110173147weblink">weblink July 26, 2021, November 10, 2010, Dorsey said his trombone style was heavily influenced by Jack Teagarden.WEB, Wilken, David, The Historical Evolution of the Jazz Trombone: Part Two,weblink trombone.org, August 31, 2018, Teagarden's technique had an enormous influence on trombonists after him. Tommy Dorsey, who was to become one of the most popular trombonists of the swing era, so respected Teagarden's playing that he refused to play a solo while Teagarden was in the same room., Among Dorsey's staff of arrangers was Axel StordahlSimon Says p. 297 who arranged for Sinatra in his Columbia and Capitol years. Another member of the Dorsey band was trombonist Nelson Riddle, who later had a partnership as one of Sinatra's arrangers and conductors in the 1950s and afterwards."Yes, the musical discipline of Tommy Dorsey, that was such an ingredient of everything he did, was something that Nelson grabbed on to. As an arranger, Dorsey knew what he wanted and Nelson had to deliver a high standard of arranging. As Bill Finegan pointed out to me, playing all of those Sy Oliver charts gave Riddle the sense of how to write very dynamic arrangements, which he did about ten years later for Sinatra." Another noted Dorsey arranger, who, in the 1950s, married and was professionally associated with Dorsey veteran Jo Stafford, was Paul Weston.NEWS,weblink Jo Stafford Biography, The University of Arizona College of Fine Art School of Music, October 12, 2009,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20100406194806weblink">weblink April 6, 2010, dead, Bill Finegan, an arranger who left Glenn Miller's civilian band, arranged for the Tommy Dorsey band from 1942 to 1950.NEWS,weblink Tommy Dorsey: Lonesome Road, Jazz.com, c. 2009, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20100211130717weblink">weblink February 11, 2010, The band featured a number of instrumentalists, singers, and arrangers in the 1930s and '40s, including trumpeters Zeke Zarchy,NEWS,weblink Ruben 'Zeke' Zarchy: Big Band Trumpeter, Los Angeles Times, April 17, 2009, Jon, Thurber, May 25, 2010, Bunny Berigan,NEWS,weblink Harvey Pekar, Tommy Dorsey - The Sentimental Gentleman of Swing, December 9, 2005, Ziggy Elman,NEWS,weblink Jazzed In Cleveland Part 117 Tommy Dorsey's Dance Caravan, Joe Mosbrook, 2007, WEB, Popa, Christopher, Big Band Library: Ziggy Elman: "Fralich in Swing",weblink Bigbandlibrary.com, August 31, 2018, Elman played a month with violinist Joe Venuti's band, then joined Tommy Dorsey's orchestra in August [1940], at a salary of $500 a week; other players might have been getting, say, $100. But he also had some extra responsibility, and became Tommy's right-hand man, acting as 'straw-boss', conducting rehearsals, filling in as director when Dorsey was momentarily off the bandstand during the course of a night, or, just for fun, when Tommy would play trumpet and Elman would play trombone., Doc Severinsen,NEWS,weblink Space Age Pop Doc Severinson, Spaceagepop, 2008, and Charlie Shavers,NEWS,weblink Legends of Big Band History, Swingmusic.net, 2004–2007, pianists Milt Raskin, Jess Stacy,NEWS,weblink Obituaries: Jess Stacy, Independent News and Media, January 4, 1995, London, May 25, 2010, clarinetists Buddy DeFranco,NEWS,weblink Buddy's Bio, BuddyDeFranco.com, Johnny Mince,Harvey Pekar and Peanuts Hucko.NEWS,weblinkweblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20100624104246weblink">weblink dead, June 24, 2010, Peanuts Hucko, Independent News and Media Limited, London, June 21, 2003, May 25, 2010, Others who played with Dorsey were drummers Buddy Rich,NEWS,weblink Buddy Rich, Drummerworld, n.d., Louie Bellson,NEWS,weblink Louie Bellson 1924-2009, Jazzwax, 2009, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20090709080804weblink">weblink July 9, 2009, Dave Tough saxophonist Tommy Reed, and singers Sinatra, Ken Curtis, Jack Leonard,NEWS,weblink Solid! Jack Leonard, Parabrisas, 1996–2005, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20091222142800weblink">weblink December 22, 2009, Edythe Wright,NEWS,weblink Legends of Big Band Music History Tommy Dorsey, Swingmusic.net, 2004–2007, Jo Stafford with the Pied Pipers, Dick Haymes,NEWS,weblink Solid! Dick Haymes, Parabrisas, 1996–2005, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20090203061033weblink">weblink February 3, 2009, and Connie Haines.NEWS,weblink Connie Haines: Performer who sang with Sinatra and Tommy Dorsey Band, Independent News and Media, October 5, 2008, In 1944, Dorsey hired the Sentimentalists, name with which he renamed the already known vocal band The Clark Sisters asking them not to reveal their identity. They replaced the Pied Pipers.Levinson 174–175 Dorsey also performed with singer Connee Boswell He hired ex-bandleader and drummer Gene Krupa after Krupa's arrest for marijuana possession in 1943.NEWS,weblink Biography [Gene Krupa], Shawn C. Martin, 1997–2001, In 1942, Artie Shaw broke up his band, and Dorsey hired the Shaw string section. As George T. Simon in Metronome magazine observed at the time: "They're used in the foreground and background (note some of the lovely obbligatos) for vocal effects and for Tommy's trombone."BOOK, Simons Says: The Sights and Sounds of the Big Band Era, Simon, George, 1971, Arlington House, New Rochelle, NY, 978-0-88365-001-1, 192, Dorsey made further business decisions in the music industry. He loaned money to Glenn Miller enabling him to launch his band of 1938,BOOK, Glenn Miller and His Orchestra, Simon, George, 1980, DaCapo, New York, 978-0-306-80129-7, 147,weblink {{Dead link|date=October 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} but Dorsey saw the loan as an investment, entitling him to a percentage of Miller's income. When Miller balked at this, the angry Dorsey got even by sponsoring a new band led by Bob Chester, and hiring arrangers who deliberately copied Miller's style and sound. Dorsey branched out in the mid-1940s and owned two music publishing companies, Sun and Embassy.Dorsey, Thomas Francis Jr. After opening at the Los Angeles ballroom, the Hollywood Palladium on the Palladium's first night, Dorsey's relations with the ballroom soured and he opened a competing ballroom, the Casino Gardens circa 1944. Dorsey also owned for a short time a trade magazine called The Bandstand.Tommy Dorsey disbanded his own orchestra at the end of 1946. Dorsey might have broken up his own band permanently following World War II, as many big bands did due to the shift in music economics following the war, but Tommy Dorsey's album for RCA Victor, "All Time Hits" placed in the top ten records in February 1947. In addition, "How Are Things in Glocca Morra?", a single recorded by Dorsey, became a top-ten hit in March 1947. As a result, Dorsey was able to re-organize a big band in early 1947. The Dorsey brothers were also reconciling. The biographical film The Fabulous Dorseys (1947) describes sketchy details of how the brothers got their start from-the-bottom-up into the jazz era of one-nighters, the early days of radio in its infancy stages, and the onward march when both brothers ended up with Paul Whiteman before 1935 when The Dorsey Brothers' Orchestra split into two.In the early 1950s, Tommy Dorsey moved from RCA Victor back to Decca."Tommy Dorsey" Billboard He was promised $2,000 if he switched to their label. However, he was reported to have collected $2,500 instead.BOOK, Walker, Leo, The Wonderful Era of the Great Dance Bands,weblink registration, Doubleday (publisher), Doubleday, 1972, Garden City, New York, 153, Jimmy Dorsey broke up his big band in 1953. Tommy invited him to join as a feature attraction. In 1953, the Dorseys focused their attention on television. On December 26, 1953, the brothers appeared with their orchestra on Jackie Gleason's CBS television show, which was preserved on kinescope and later released on home video by Gleason. The brothers took the unit on tour and onto their own television show, Stage Show, from 1954 to 1956. In January 1956, The Dorseys made rock music history introducing Elvis Presley on his national television debut. Presley, then a regional country singer, made six guest appearances on Stage Show promoting his first releases for RCA Victor several months before his more familiar visits to the Milton Berle, Steve Allen, and Ed Sullivan variety programs.WEB, Scotty Moore - CBS Studio 50 Ed Sullivan Theater,weblink Scottymoore.net, August 31, 2018,

Personal life

Dorsey was married three times. His first wife was 16-year-old Mildred "Toots" Kraft, with whom he eloped in 1922, when he was 17. The couple had two children, Patricia and Thomas F. Dorsey III (nicknamed "Skipper"). In 1935, they moved to "Tall Oaks", a {{convert|21|acres|adj=on}} estate in Bernardsville, New Jersey.Baratta, Amy. "Big band leader among owners of historic home in Bernardsville; Dorsey hosted Frank Sinatra, other celebrities", The Bernardsville News, April 20, 2012. Accessed June 6, 2016. "Known as 'the= sentimental gentleman of swing,' the musician purchased the 21-acre estate for $32,000 in 1935 and lived there with his first wife, Mildred 'Toots' Kraft, and their two children, Patricia and Tommy, for nearly a decade." They divorced in 1943 after Dorsey's affair with his former singer Edythe Wright.Levinson 148Dorsey's second wife was film actress Patricia Dane in 1943, and they were divorced in 1947,Levinson 211 but not before he gained headlines for striking actor Jon Hall when Hall embraced her. Finally, Dorsey married Jane Carl New on March 27, 1948, in Atlanta, Georgia. She had been a dancer at the Copacabana nightclub in New York City. Tommy and Jane Dorsey had two children, Catherine Susan and Steve.

Death and aftermath

Dorsey died on November 26, 1956, at his home in Greenwich, Connecticut, a week after his 51st birthday. He had begun taking sleeping pills regularly at this time, causing him to become heavily sedated; he choked to death in his sleep after eating a large meal.Levinson 299 Jimmy Dorsey led his brother's band until his own death from throat cancer the following year. At that point, trombonist Warren Covington became leader of the band with Jane Dorsey's blessing"Tommy died with no will and reportedly left only about $15,000[...]. Since [Dorsey's widow] Janie New continued to need money to support her family and because she legally owned the rights to Tommy's library of arrangements, she was naturally very interested when [Willard] Alexander approached her about creating a Tommy Dorsey band". Levinson 308-309 as she owned the rights to her late husband's band and name. Billed as the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra Starring Warren Covington, they reached #7 on the Billboard charts and earned a gold record in the fall of 1958 with the hit single "Tea for Two Cha-Cha".BOOK, Whitburn, Joel, The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits, Billboard Books, 2004, 0823074994, New York, 191, English, Levinson 309 The band was also fronted by Urbie Green after Dorsey's death in 1956.After Covington led the band, tenor saxophonist Sam Donahue led it from 1961, continuing until 1966.Levinson 309-310 Frank Sinatra Jr. made his professional singing debut with the band at Dallas Memorial Theater in Texas in 1963. Later, trombonist and bandleader Buddy Morrow led the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra from 1977 until his death on September 27, 2010. Jane Dorsey died of natural causes at the age of 79, in Miami, Florida, in 2003. Tommy and Jane Dorsey are interred together in Kensico Cemetery in Valhalla, New York.Jane Dorsey date of death and interment facts from Levinson 320File:1 Dorsey best 800.jpg|thumb|The grave of Tommy and Jane Dorsey in Kensico CemeteryKensico Cemetery

Number-one hits

Tommy Dorsey had a run of 286 Billboard chart hits.Levinson 308. The Dorsey band had seventeen number-one hits with his orchestra in the 1930s and 1940s including: "On Treasure Island", "The Music Goes 'Round and Around", "You", "Marie" (written by Irving Berlin), "Satan Takes a Holiday", "The Big Apple", "Once in a While", "The Dipsy Doodle", "Our Love", "All the Things You Are", "Indian Summer", and "Dolores". He had two more number one hits in 1935 when he was a member of the Dorsey Brothers Orchestra: "Lullaby of Broadway" (written by Harry Warren), number one for two weeks, and "Chasing Shadows", number one for three weeks. His biggest hit was "I'll Never Smile Again", featuring Frank Sinatra on vocals, which was number one for twelve weeks on the Billboard pop singles chart in 1940. "RCA Victor ... scored with 'There Are Such Things', which had a Sinatra vocal; it hit number one in January 1943, as did 'In the Blue of the Evening', another Dorsey record featuring Sinatra, in August, while a third Dorsey/Sinatra release, 'It's Always You,' hit the Top Five later in the year, and a fourth, 'I'll Be Seeing You', reached the Top Ten in 1944."Billboard pop singles chart in 1943 It should be added that these 1943 and 1944 Sinatra hits were older recordings reissued because the 1942–44 musicians' strike prevented Sinatra, now a popular singer, from recording new material. The website "Tommy Dorsey A Songwriter's Friend" says, "the orchestra had over 200 top twenty recordings including the No. 1 hits 'The Music Goes Round and Round' (1935), 'Alone' (1936) 'You' (1936), 'Marie' (1937), 'Satan Takes a Holiday' (1937), 'The Big Apple' (1937), 'Once in a While' (1937), 'The Dipsy Doodle' (1937), 'Music, Maestro, Please' (1938), 'Our Love' (1939), 'Indian Summer' (1939), 'All the Things You Are' (1939), 'I'll Never Smile Again' (1940), 'Dolores' (1941), 'There are Such Things' (1942), and 'In the Blue of the Evening' (1943)."WEB,weblink Songwriters Hall of Fame - Artists - Tommy Dorsey, April 2, 2016,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20160402210548weblink">weblink April 2, 2016,

Songs written by Tommy Dorsey

  • 1929: "You Can't Cheat a Cheater" with Phil Napoleon and Frank SignorelliTommy Dorsey at Red Hot Jazz
  • 1932: "Three Moods"; NB. Dorsey recorded two takes of this song for OKeh Records, on August 6, 1932, in New York City.WEB,weblink Tommy Dorsey, Redhotjazz.com,
  • 1937: "The Morning After"
  • 1938: "Chris and His Gang" with Fletcher and Horace HendersonWEB,weblink Catalog of Copyright Entries: Musical compositions, March 19, 2018, Library of Congress, Copyright Office, March 19, 2018, Google Books, BOOK, Chris and his gang, March 19, 2018, 497842832, WEB,weblink A Selection of Big Band Stock Arrangements (Performing Arts Reading Room, Music Division, Library of Congress), Loc.gov, March 19, 2018,
  • 1938: Tommy Dorsey wrote the song "Peckin' With Penguins" for a 1938 Frank Tashlin-directed Porky Pig cartoon, "Porky's Spring Planting" for the studio Warner Bros.
  • 1939: "To You""To You" appears as part of a medley by Glenn Miller, paired with "Stairway to the Stars" both sung by Ray Eberle for the Glenn Miller Orchestra's performance at Carnegie Hall on October 6, 1939. See "Solid! – The Glenn Miller Carnegie Hall Concert" at WEB,weblink Solid! -- Glenn Miller: The Carnegie Hall Concert, October 21, 2009, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20090219221114weblink">weblink February 19, 2009, Glenn Miller recorded "To You" for Bluebird Records on May 9, 1939, released as Bluebird 10276-B, with the "A" side, "Stairway to the Stars" both sung by Ray Eberle. See Moonlight Serenade: A Bio-discography, John Flower, Arlington House, New Rochelle, 1972, p. 63 {{ISBN|978-0-87000-161-1}}
  • 1939: "This Is No Dream"
  • 1939: "You Taught Me to Love Again"WEB,weblink The Sarah Vaughan Discography, michaelminn.com, March 19, 2018, BOOK, Sarah Vaughan A Discography, Brown, Denis, 1991, Greenwood Press, Westport, CT, 978-0-313-28005-4, 10,weblink
  • 1939: "In the Middle of a Dream"
  • 1939: "Night in Sudan"WEB,weblink Catalog of Copyright Entries: Musical compositions, March 19, 2018, Library of Congress, Copyright Office, March 19, 2018, According to the Tsort.info database
  • 1939: "This Is No Dream" reached No. 9 on the Billboard singles chart in 1939, while "To You" reached No. 10 on the same chart, both staying on the chart for seven weeks. "In the Middle of a Dream" reached No. 7 on the Billboard chart in 1939, staying on the charts for ten weeks.
  • 1939: "Dark Laughter" with Juan TizolWEB,weblink Catalog of Copyright Entries: Musical compositions, March 19, 2018, Library of Congress, Copyright Office, March 19, 2018,
  • 1945: "Fluid Jive"
  • 1946: "Nip and Tuck"
  • 1947: "Trombonology"Levinson 214 Levinson refers to the 1947 recording of Dorsey's composition as the band's "one important recording of that year." "Trombonology" was recorded July 1, 1947, and was released on an RCA Victor. Information taken from the liner notes to the 1993 compact disc The Post-War Era, Bluebird/RCA written by Loren Schoenberg.
Written with Fred Norman
  • "Bunch of Beats"
  • "Mid Riff"
  • "Candied Yams"

Awards and honors

In 1982, the 1940 Victor recording "I'll Never Smile Again" was the first of a trio of Tommy Dorsey recordings to be inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame."I'll Never Smile Again" was recorded February 17, 1941, with vocals by Frank Sinatra and the Pied Pipers. see the liner notes to the compact disc The Best of Tommy Dorsey by Mort Goode, 1991. Bluebird/RCA 51087-2. According to Peter Levinson in Livin In A Great Big Way, "I'll Never Smile Again" was recorded May 23, 1940. "I'll Never Smile Again" had the catalogue number for its initial 78rpm release as Victor 26628. Tommy Dorsey and/or RCA Victor also released the song as a V-Disc, V-Disc 582. See the website "Songs By Sinatra" atweblink for discographical information about that V-Disc. His theme song, "I'm Getting Sentimental Over You" was inducted in 1998, along with his recording of "Marie" written by Irving Berlin in 1928.NEWS,weblink Grammy Hall of Fame Award, The Recording Academy, 2009, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20110122042616weblink">weblink January 22, 2011, In 1996, the U.S. Postal Service issued a Tommy Dorsey and Jimmy Dorsey commemorative postage stamp.Tommy Dorsey was posthumously inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame, which is a special Grammy award established in 1973 to honor recordings that are at least 25 years old and that have "qualitative or historical significance".{| class=wikitable Tommy Dorsey: Grammy Hall of Fame AwardsHTTP://WWW.GRAMMY.ORG/RECORDING-ACADEMY/AWARDS/HALL-OF-FAME>ARCHIVE-URL=HTTPS://WEB.ARCHIVE.ORG/WEB/20110122042616/HTTP://WWW.GRAMMY.ORG/RECORDING-ACADEMY/AWARDS/HALL-OF-FAMETITLE=GRAMMY HALL OF FAME DATABASE, January 22, 2011, ! Year recorded! Title! Genre! Label! Year inducted! Notes align=center| 1940| "I'll Never Smile Again"| Jazz (single)| Victor| 1982| align=center| 1936| "I'm Getting Sentimental Over You"| Jazz (single)| Victor| 1998| align=center| 1937| "Marie"| Jazz (single)| Victor| 1998|

Discography

{{Div col|colwidth=40em}}
  • Up Swing (Victor Records, 1944)
  • Tommy Dorsey Plays Tchaikovsky Melodies for Dancing (RCA Victor, 1947)
  • Tommy Dorsey (RCA Victor, 1949)
  • Tommy Dorsey Plays Cole Porter for Dancing (RCA Victor, 1950)
  • Tommy Dorsey's Dixieland for Dancing (RCA Victor, 1950)
  • The Later Tommy Dorsey Volume 2 (Ajaz, 1950)
  • Ecstasy (Decca, 1951)
  • Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey with the California Ramblers (Riverside, 1955)
  • That Sentimental Gentleman (RCA Victor, 1957)
  • The Golden Age of the Dance Bands (Somerset, 1957)
  • The Dorsey Touch (Riviera, 1959)
  • Tribute to Tommy Dorsey (Broadway, 1959)
  • The One And Only Tommy Dorsey (RCA Camden, 1961)
  • Tommy Dorsey's Dance Party (Ace of Hearts, 1961)
  • Dedicated to You (RCA Camden, 1964)
  • A Man and His Trombone (Colpix, 1966)
  • Here are Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey at Their Rare of All Rarest Performance Vol. 1 (Kings of Jazz, 1975)
  • Tommy Dorsey On Radio/Eddie Condon's Jazz Concert (Radiola, 1975)
  • Tommy Dorsey (1937 – 1941) (AMIGA, 1976)
  • One Night Stand (Sandy Hook, 1976)
  • Frank Sinatra & Tommy Dorsey (Durium, 1976)
  • The Dorsey/Sinatra Sessions (RCA, 1982)
  • The Tommy Dorsey/Frank Sinatra Radio Years and the Historic Stordahl Session (RCA, 1983)
  • The End of the Big Band Era! (Sandy Hook, 1983)
  • Ship Ahoy/Las Vegas Nights (Hollywood Soundstage, 1983)
  • A Tribute (Star Line Productions, 1987)
  • All-Time Greatest Dorsey/Sinatra Hits, Vol. 1-4 (RCA, 1988)
  • Plays Sweet & Hot (Tax, 1989)
  • Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra/And His Clambake Seven (LaserLight, 1990)
  • Tea for Two (Jazz Collection, 1990)
  • Yes Indeed! (Bluebird/RCA, 1990)
  • Music Goes Round and Round (Bluebird/RCA, 1991)
  • Stop, Look and Listen (ASV/Living Era, 1994)
  • Kings of Trombone (Hallmark, 1995)
  • Dorsey-itis (Drive Archive, 1996)
  • Saturday Afternoon at the Meadowbrook 1940 (Jazz Band, 2000)
  • This Is Tommy Dorsey & His Orchestra, Vol. 1 (Collectables, 2001)
  • (Tommy Dorsey: The Early Jazz Sides: 1932 – 1937|The Early Jazz Sides 1932–1937) (Jazz Legends, 2004)
  • It's D'Lovely 1947–1950 (Hep, 2004)
{{div col end}}

Filmography

  • Segar Ellis and His Embassy Club Orchestra (1929)WEB, SEGER ELLIS AND HIS EMBASSY CLUB ORCHESTRA,weblink 2023-09-09, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA,
  • Alice Bolden and Her Orchestra (1929)In the "Filmography" portion of the website "Thomas (Tommy) Dorsey 1905-1956"weblink, two movies are listed for 1929 that suggest that Tommy Dorsey appears in them. They are Segar Ellis and His Embassy Club Orchestra and Alice Boulden and Her Orchestra. Dorsey biographer Peter Levinson confirms that Tommy Dorsey appears in Alice Bolden and Her Orchestra and considers it to be mediocre. See Levinson 34
Tommy Dorsey and his Orchestra appear in the following films for Paramount, MGM, Samuel Goldwyn, Allied Artists, and United Artists:see individual films and their references for the studio that produced which movie

Notes

{{Reflist|30em}}

References

  • Peter J. Levinson, Tommy Dorsey: Livin' in a Great Big Way: a Biography (Cambridge, MA: Da Capo Press, 2005) {{ISBN|978-0-306-81111-1}}
  • Robert L. Stockdale, Tommy Dorsey: On the Side (Metuchen, NJ: The Scarecrow Press, 1995) {{ISBN|978-0-8108-2951-0}}

External links

{{Commons category|Tommy Dorsey}}STEREO FILM RECORDINGS (1942–44): ADDITIONAL LINKS {{Tommy Dorsey}}{{Authority control}}

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