All language subtitles for Jazz.S01E05.Pure.Pleasure.1935.to.1937.1080p.AMZN.WEB-DL.DDP2.0.H.264-Kitsune_track3_[eng]

af Afrikaans
ak Akan
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bem Bemba
bn Bengali
bh Bihari
bs Bosnian
br Breton
bg Bulgarian
km Cambodian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
chr Cherokee
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
ee Ewe
fo Faroese
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gaa Ga
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
gn Guarani
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ia Interlingua
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
rw Kinyarwanda
rn Kirundi
kg Kongo
ko Korean
kri Krio (Sierra Leone)
ku Kurdish
ckb Kurdish (Soranî)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Laothian
la Latin
lv Latvian
ln Lingala
lt Lithuanian
loz Lozi
lg Luganda
ach Luo
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mfe Mauritian Creole
mo Moldavian
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
sr-ME Montenegrin
ne Nepali
pcm Nigerian Pidgin
nso Northern Sotho
no Norwegian
nn Norwegian (Nynorsk)
oc Occitan
or Oriya
om Oromo
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt-BR Portuguese (Brazil)
pt Portuguese (Portugal)
pa Punjabi
qu Quechua
ro Romanian
rm Romansh
nyn Runyakitara
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
sh Serbo-Croatian
st Sesotho
tn Setswana
crs Seychellois Creole
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhalese
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish
es-419 Spanish (Latin American)
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
tt Tatar
te Telugu
th Thai
ti Tigrinya
to Tonga
lua Tshiluba
tum Tumbuka
tr Turkish
tk Turkmen
tw Twi
ug Uighur
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
wo Wolof
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:32,717 --> 00:00:35,652 I THINK IT'S TERRIBLY IMPORTANT THAT 2 00:00:35,778 --> 00:00:39,201 JAZZ IS PRIMARILY DANCE MUSIC. 3 00:00:39,326 --> 00:00:42,540 SO, YOU MOVE WHEN YOU HEAR IT, 4 00:00:42,666 --> 00:00:49,555 AND IT ALWAYS MOVES IN A DIRECTION OF ELEGANCE, 5 00:00:49,680 --> 00:00:54,857 WHICH IS THE MOST CIVILIZED THING THAT A HUMAN BEING CAN DO. 6 00:00:54,982 --> 00:01:04,000 THE ULTIMATE EXTENSION, ELABORATION, AND REFINEMENT OF EFFORT 7 00:01:04,126 --> 00:01:10,639 IS ELEGANCE WHERE JUST DOING IT GIVES PLEASURE OF ITSELF. 8 00:01:10,764 --> 00:01:15,774 THAT'S ABOUT AS FAR AS WE CAN GET WITH LIFE. 9 00:01:15,899 --> 00:01:18,112 THAT'S EQUIVALENT TO WHAT ERNEST HEMINGWAY CALLED 10 00:01:18,237 --> 00:01:20,241 THE SWEAT ON A WINE BOTTLE. 11 00:01:20,366 --> 00:01:25,126 IF YOU DON'T ENJOY HOW THOSE BEADS OF SWEAT LOOK, YOU KNOW, 12 00:01:25,251 --> 00:01:27,631 WHEN YOU POUR THE WHITE WINE OUT AND YOU TASTE IT 13 00:01:27,798 --> 00:01:32,098 AND HOW YOUR PARTNER LOOKS AND HOW THE SUNLIGHT COMES THROUGH, YOU MISSED IT. 14 00:01:55,812 --> 00:02:01,866 JANUARY 1, 1936... THE SWINGOS THINK THAT SWING 15 00:02:01,991 --> 00:02:05,373 IS MARKING AN INDELIBLE NOTATION ON THE EVOLUTION OF JAZZ. 16 00:02:05,498 --> 00:02:09,297 WITH THEM, IT'S A CREED, A CODE. 17 00:02:09,422 --> 00:02:13,222 THAT'S WHY THE SWING ADDICTS SEEM SO GLAZED AND DAZED 18 00:02:13,347 --> 00:02:19,234 IN THEIR Nth DEGREE APPRECIATION OF THIS...SWING BUSINESS... 19 00:02:19,359 --> 00:02:22,031 SO WHAT IS SWING? 20 00:02:22,156 --> 00:02:28,127 ASK ANY ONE OF THE SWINGOISTS, AND THEY ALL VAMP OFF, "WELL, SWING IS SOMETHING LIKE..." 21 00:02:28,252 --> 00:02:32,593 BUT NONE SEEMS ABLE TO DEFINE JUST WHAT IT IS. 22 00:02:32,761 --> 00:02:43,282 ABEL GREEN. VARIETY. 23 00:02:43,407 --> 00:02:48,960 IN THE MID 1930s, AS THE GREAT DEPRESSION STUBBORNLY REFUSED TO LIFT, 24 00:02:49,085 --> 00:02:52,133 JAZZ CAME AS CLOSE AS IT HAS EVER COME 25 00:02:52,258 --> 00:02:56,976 TO BEING AMERICA'S POPULAR MUSIC. 26 00:02:57,101 --> 00:03:00,566 IT HAD A NEW NAME NOW--SWING-- 27 00:03:00,692 --> 00:03:04,021 AND ITS IMPACT WAS REVOLUTIONARY. 28 00:03:04,097 --> 00:03:07,154 SWING RESCUED THE RECORDING INDUSTRY. 29 00:03:07,448 --> 00:03:13,085 IN 1932, JUST 10 MILLION RECORDS HAD BEEN SOLD IN THE UNITED STATES. 30 00:03:13,833 --> 00:03:22,684 BY 1939, THAT NUMBER WOULD GROW TO 50 MILLION. 31 00:03:22,809 --> 00:03:26,607 SWING--WHICH HAD GROWN UP IN THE DANCEHALLS OF HARLEM-- 32 00:03:26,734 --> 00:03:38,716 WOULD BECOME THE DEFINING MUSIC FOR AN ENTIRE GENERATION OF AMERICANS. 33 00:03:38,841 --> 00:03:42,974 I THINK THAT WE ALL HAVE A HANKERING FOR THE MUSIC 34 00:03:43,099 --> 00:03:45,730 WE WERE HEARING WHEN WE WERE 14, 15, 16 YEARS OLD. 35 00:03:45,897 --> 00:03:47,524 I THINK THAT NEVER GETS AWAY FROM US, 36 00:03:47,649 --> 00:03:52,075 AND WITH ME, IT WAS THE SWING BANDS. 37 00:03:52,242 --> 00:03:54,831 THAT WAS MY MUSIC. THIS IS WHERE I WAS COMING FROM. 38 00:03:54,956 --> 00:03:57,253 THIS IS THE THING THAT GRIPPED MY HEART AT THE BEGINNING, 39 00:03:57,321 --> 00:04:01,913 AND AS IS THE CASE WITH ANYBODY, THOSE THINGS THAT YOU PICKED UP 40 00:04:02,038 --> 00:04:05,504 EARLY IN YOUR LIFE ARE THE ONES YOU TURN BACK TO, YOU KNOW, 41 00:04:05,629 --> 00:04:07,215 WHEN YOU WANT A LITTLE SOLACE. 42 00:04:11,891 --> 00:04:16,276 PEOPLE NEEDED DANCE MUSIC, MAYBE MORE THAN EVER IN AMERICA, 43 00:04:16,401 --> 00:04:21,911 BECAUSE THE COUNTRY WAS IN SUCH DOLDRUMS. 44 00:04:22,037 --> 00:04:26,338 SO I THINK PEOPLE NEEDED THE ESCAPE OF GOING TO THE SAVOY 45 00:04:26,463 --> 00:04:28,049 AND TO THOSE OTHER PLACES TO DANCE. 46 00:04:28,174 --> 00:04:30,512 THEY NEEDED THOSE BANDS. 47 00:04:30,638 --> 00:04:34,312 AS AN ANTIDOTE TO THE DEPRESSION, I THINK SWING MUSIC 48 00:04:34,437 --> 00:04:46,126 DID AS MUCH AS MGM MUSICALS TO HELP AMERICA THROUGH. 49 00:04:46,251 --> 00:04:50,051 SWING PROVIDED HOLLYWOOD WITH ITS THEME MUSIC 50 00:04:50,176 --> 00:04:56,314 AND OFFERED ENTERTAINMENT, ELEGANCE, AND ESCAPE FOR A PEOPLE DOWN ON THEIR LUCK. 51 00:04:56,481 --> 00:05:01,991 RADIOS AND JUKEBOXES COULD BE HEARD PLAYING SWING ALONG EVERY MAIN STREET IN AMERICA, 52 00:05:02,117 --> 00:05:04,162 PROVIDING THE ACCOMPANIMENT 53 00:05:04,330 --> 00:05:07,210 FOR A HOST OF EXHILARATING NEW DANCES-- 54 00:05:07,336 --> 00:05:10,467 THE BIG APPLE AND LITTLE PEACH, 55 00:05:10,592 --> 00:05:13,097 THE SHAG AND SUSY Q, 56 00:05:13,229 --> 00:05:16,235 AND THE DANCE THAT HAD STARTED IT ALL-- 57 00:05:16,354 --> 00:05:21,698 THE LINDY HOP-- NOW CALLED JITTERBUGGING. 58 00:05:21,823 --> 00:05:23,952 HUNDREDS OF BANDS WERE ON THE ROAD-- 59 00:05:24,077 --> 00:05:26,708 AND YOUNG PEOPLE FOLLOWED THE CAREERS 60 00:05:26,833 --> 00:05:28,462 OF THE MUSICIANS WHO PLAYED IN THEM 61 00:05:28,587 --> 00:05:32,720 JUST AS THEY FOLLOWED THEIR FAVORITE BASEBALL PLAYERS. 62 00:05:32,887 --> 00:05:36,226 MILLIONS OF WHITE AMERICANS WHO HAD NEVER LISTENED TO JAZZ BEFORE 63 00:05:36,352 --> 00:05:40,486 SUDDENLY FILLED BALLROOMS AND THEATERS ALL OVER THE COUNTRY-- 64 00:05:40,611 --> 00:05:43,240 THE ARAGON IN CHICAGO, 65 00:05:43,366 --> 00:05:48,042 THE ALCAZAR IN BALTIMORE, AND THE ALI BABA IN OAKLAND; 66 00:05:48,167 --> 00:05:50,881 THE TWILIGHT IN FORT DODGE, IOWA, 67 00:05:51,006 --> 00:05:56,266 AND THE MOONLIGHT IN CANTON, OHIO... 68 00:05:56,392 --> 00:05:58,772 THE ARCADIA BALLROOM IN DETROIT, 69 00:05:58,897 --> 00:06:02,111 THE PARAMOUNT THEATER IN NEW YORK, 70 00:06:02,278 --> 00:06:04,450 AND THE PALOMAR BALLROOM IN LOS ANGELES, 71 00:06:04,617 --> 00:06:07,832 WHERE BENNY GOODMAN HAD THRILLED AUDIENCES 72 00:06:07,957 --> 00:06:11,296 WITH HIS VERSION OF THE MUSIC FIRST PLAYED BY LOUIS ARMSTRONG, 73 00:06:11,464 --> 00:06:17,852 FLETCHER HENDERSON, CHICK WEBB AND DUKE ELLINGTON. 74 00:06:17,977 --> 00:06:23,112 SWING MUSIC WAS AN ELECTRIFYING DEVELOPMENT IN AMERICAN POPULAR CULTURE. 75 00:06:23,237 --> 00:06:32,088 IT UNLEASHED FORCES THAT, I THINK, PEOPLE DIDN'T KNOW EXISTED. 76 00:06:32,213 --> 00:06:36,973 THERE HAD BEEN DANCE BANDS, SWEET BANDS, SENTIMENTAL BANDS, 77 00:06:37,098 --> 00:06:39,019 BUT WHEN BENNY GOODMAN REACHED THOSE KIDS 78 00:06:39,144 --> 00:06:41,482 AT THE PALOMAR BALLROOM IN CALIFORNIA, 79 00:06:41,608 --> 00:06:43,193 IT WAS LIKE 20 YEARS LATER WITH ROCK AND ROLL. 80 00:06:43,319 --> 00:06:46,576 HE WAS PLAYING A SWINGING ROUGH MUSIC 81 00:06:46,701 --> 00:06:48,955 THAT HAD BEEN PLAYED IN BLACK COMMUNITIES FOR YEARS. 82 00:06:49,080 --> 00:06:51,878 ELLINGTON, YOU KNOW, WROTE IT DON'T MEAN A THING IF IT AIN'T GOT THAT SWING 83 00:06:52,003 --> 00:06:53,213 3 YEARS EARLIER, 84 00:06:53,339 --> 00:06:54,884 AND CHICK WEBB'S BAND WAS DOING IT 85 00:06:55,009 --> 00:06:56,053 AND FLETCHER HENDERSON'S. 86 00:06:56,219 --> 00:06:57,973 IT SWEPT THE COUNTRY. 87 00:06:58,098 --> 00:07:00,812 IT WAS--IT UNLEASHED SOME KIND OF PENT-UP EXCITEMENT 88 00:07:00,938 --> 00:07:06,574 AND--AND--AND PHYSICALITY THAT I THINK NOBODY WAS QUITE PREPARED FOR. 89 00:07:06,699 --> 00:07:09,580 ALSO, THIS WAS THE DEPRESSION. IT WAS NOT AN EASY PERIOD. 90 00:07:09,747 --> 00:07:26,113 AND THIS WAS A MUSIC THAT WAS JUST PURE PLEASURE, PURE PHYSICAL PLEASURE. 91 00:08:11,161 --> 00:08:14,375 WE ARE GETTING THIS MONEY OUT JUST AS FAST AS WE CAN 92 00:08:14,543 --> 00:08:20,555 BECAUSE WE ARE ANXIOUS TO GET THE UNEMPLOYED FROM RELIEF ROLLS ONTO PAYROLLS. 93 00:08:20,680 --> 00:08:27,569 WE ARE NOT ONLY BUILDING ROADS, WE ARE BUILDING BRIDGES, WE'RE BUILDING DAMS... 94 00:08:27,694 --> 00:08:39,593 IT IS GOING INTO PUBLIC BUILDINGS AND VARIOUS OTHER PROJECTS. 95 00:08:39,718 --> 00:08:45,104 SONG IS THE WIND-CHIME OF MEMORY, 96 00:08:45,229 --> 00:08:48,611 AND THESE WERE OUR SONGS. 97 00:08:48,778 --> 00:08:53,913 THEY WERE PART OF THE DAILY ORDINARY... 98 00:08:54,038 --> 00:08:59,090 AND THIS, I THINK, IS WHAT TOOK BENNY OVER THE GAP, 99 00:08:59,215 --> 00:09:01,804 OUT OF JAZZ, INTO THE AMERICAN PARLOR. 100 00:09:01,971 --> 00:09:06,731 HE ARRIVED WITH BLUESKIES. WELL, WE KNEW BLUE SKIES. 101 00:09:06,856 --> 00:09:10,739 I MEAN, EVERYBODY KNEW IRVING BERLIN SO THAT WE WERE HOME FREE. 102 00:09:10,864 --> 00:09:18,671 THIS IS OUR GUY. 103 00:09:18,796 --> 00:09:22,962 WITHIN A MONTH OF BENNY GOODMAN'S UNEXPECTED SUCCESS AT THE PALOMAR, 104 00:09:22,995 --> 00:09:30,569 HIS RECORDS STOOD AT NUMBER 3, NUMBER TWO, AND NUMBER ONE IN CALIFORNIA RECORD STORES. 105 00:09:30,695 --> 00:09:37,584 HE WAS 26 YEARS OLD AND ALREADY BEING BILLED AS THE "KING OF SWING." 106 00:09:37,709 --> 00:09:41,884 SUDDENLY, HIS MUSIC WAS EVERYWHERE, 107 00:09:42,009 --> 00:09:46,184 AND GOODMAN, THE RETICENT SON OF JEWISH IMMIGRANTS FROM THE SLUMS OF CHICAGO, 108 00:09:46,322 --> 00:09:49,136 WAS BECOMING A MATINEE IDOL. 109 00:09:52,043 --> 00:09:54,380 I KIND OF WAS IN LOVE WITH BENNY GOODMAN. 110 00:09:54,505 --> 00:09:55,537 I DON'T KNOW WHY. 111 00:09:55,924 --> 00:09:57,471 I THOUGHT HE LOOKED GREAT, 112 00:09:57,496 --> 00:09:59,548 AND I LOVED THE WAY HE JUST STOOD THERE, 113 00:09:59,573 --> 00:10:03,361 AND HE DIDN'T OVER-- YOU KNOW--EMPHASIZE HIMSELF. 114 00:10:03,386 --> 00:10:06,281 HE WAS COOL. TO ME, HE WAS A COOL GUY--IN MY YOUTH. 115 00:10:06,306 --> 00:10:08,785 YOU KNOW, I WAS 16 YEARS OLD, 17. 116 00:10:08,910 --> 00:10:10,481 THE "KING OF SWING". 117 00:10:10,506 --> 00:10:12,375 YES, SIR, IT'S BENNY GOODMAN HIMSELF, PLAYING... 118 00:10:12,400 --> 00:10:15,966 AND I USED TO PUT THE RADIO ON AT HIGH VOLUME 119 00:10:16,091 --> 00:10:18,595 AND PUT MY EAR TO IT TO HEAR GENE KRUPA, 120 00:10:18,620 --> 00:10:22,311 AND MY MOTHER WOULD GO CRAZY, SAYING, "WHAT ARE YOU DOING?" 121 00:10:22,436 --> 00:10:26,898 I SAID, "MOM, SHH! I GOTTA HEAR THIS!" 122 00:10:29,062 --> 00:10:34,795 ON MARCH 3, 1937, BENNY GOODMAN'S ORCHESTRA BEGAN A TWO-WEEK ENGAGEMENT 123 00:10:34,920 --> 00:10:38,037 AT THE PARAMOUNT THEATER IN TIMES SQUARE. 124 00:10:38,635 --> 00:10:42,377 UNTIL THEN, THEY HAD PLAYED HOTELS AND BALLROOMS 125 00:10:42,398 --> 00:10:46,406 WHERE ALCOHOL WAS SERVED AND THE CUSTOMERS WERE MOSTLY ADULTS. 126 00:10:50,957 --> 00:10:57,512 BUT AT THE PARAMOUNT, EVERYONE WAS WELCOME. 127 00:10:57,637 --> 00:11:00,518 FOR THE FIRST TIME, HIGH-SCHOOL STUDENTS, 128 00:11:00,643 --> 00:11:03,315 WHO HAD BEEN BUYING UP BENNY GOODMAN'S RECORDS, 129 00:11:03,440 --> 00:11:11,540 NOW HAD A CHANCE TO SEE THEIR HERO IN PERSON. 130 00:11:11,665 --> 00:11:13,419 THE MOMENT HAD COME, 131 00:11:13,544 --> 00:11:20,266 AND THEY WERE POURING OUT OF THE SUBWAYS AROUND TIMES SQUARE IN MOBS, 132 00:11:20,391 --> 00:11:24,064 AND THE POLICE DIDN'T KNOW WHAT WAS GOING ON. 133 00:11:24,190 --> 00:11:26,068 WHERE WERE ALL THESE KIDS COMING FROM? 134 00:11:26,194 --> 00:11:28,072 WHAT WAS IT ALL ABOUT? 135 00:11:28,198 --> 00:11:34,084 THE MUSIC HAD SUCH AN INCREDIBLE BEAT THAT IT JUST BROUGHT YOU OUT OF YOURSELF 136 00:11:34,252 --> 00:11:37,759 AND YOU GOT OUT OF YOUR SEAT AND YOU DANCED WITH WHOEVER-- A STRANGER, YOU DIDN'T KNOW. 137 00:11:37,925 --> 00:11:46,276 BUT IT WAS JUST FUN TO GET UP AND MOVE WITH THAT BEAT. 138 00:11:46,443 --> 00:11:50,409 AND THE KIDS STARTED JITTERBUGGING IN THE AISLES... 139 00:11:50,534 --> 00:11:54,918 RIGHT UP AROUND THE STAGE, AND SOME OF THEM EVEN JUMPING UP ON THE STAGE. 140 00:11:55,043 --> 00:11:57,507 AND THAT WAS WHAT TRIGGERED A GREAT DEAL OF PUBLICITY, 141 00:11:57,632 --> 00:12:00,971 AND BENNY GOODMAN THEN, ALTHOUGH HE HAD BEEN SUCCESSFUL, 142 00:12:01,097 --> 00:12:02,809 NOW HE HAD BECOME REALLY AN ICON. 143 00:12:02,934 --> 00:12:05,609 A GREAT--A GREAT HERO OF POPULAR CULTURE. 144 00:12:28,235 --> 00:12:31,992 BENNY WAS A GOOD ROLE MODEL. 145 00:12:32,117 --> 00:12:33,829 HE COMES OUT, HE LOOKS LIKE A GENTLEMAN, 146 00:12:33,954 --> 00:12:35,666 AND THEN, IN THE MIDDLE OF A CLARINET SOLO, 147 00:12:35,791 --> 00:12:38,380 ALL OF A SUDDEN, HE'S GOT ONE FOOT RAISED, AND HE'S HOPPING AROUND, 148 00:12:38,505 --> 00:12:40,718 THEN HE SITS DOWN ON A CHAIR, AND HE PRACTICALLY FALLS OVER, 149 00:12:40,843 --> 00:12:43,348 AND HE BECOMES COMPLETELY CONSUMED IN THE MUSIC, 150 00:12:43,474 --> 00:12:46,020 AND THIS IS MESMERIZING FOR AN AUDIENCE BECAUSE IT'S NOT A SHOW, 151 00:12:46,145 --> 00:12:49,181 IT'S NOT A PUT-ON-- IT'S GOODMAN. 152 00:13:26,768 --> 00:13:36,496 THE THING ABOUT BENNY THAT WAS SO GREAT WAS THAT IT WAS KIND OF AN EXPLOSION. 153 00:13:36,663 --> 00:13:41,548 HE SHOWED UP ON THE SCENE, COMPLETELY UNKNOWN AS FAR AS WE WERE CONCERNED. 154 00:13:41,673 --> 00:13:44,345 WE KNEW ELLINGTON, WE KNEW ALL THE OTHER BIG NAMES, 155 00:13:44,470 --> 00:13:46,683 AND HERE IS THIS KID NOBODY HAD EVER HEARD OF. 156 00:13:46,808 --> 00:13:53,822 AND OVERNIGHT, THIS GUY WALKS INTO THE AMERICAN PARLOR WITH JAZZ BY THE SCRUFF OF ITS NECK. 157 00:13:53,947 --> 00:13:57,384 AND ALL OF A SUDDEN, JAZZ, WHICH WAS ALMOST A CULT MUSIC, 158 00:13:57,411 --> 00:13:59,778 HAS BECOME AMERICAN POPULAR MUSIC, 159 00:13:59,898 --> 00:14:01,424 AND THAT'S WHAT GOODMAN DID. 160 00:14:45,759 --> 00:14:51,646 JAZZ MUSIC IS NOT RACE MUSIC. 161 00:14:51,771 --> 00:14:57,198 EVERYBODY PLAYS JAZZ MUSIC. EVERYBODY HAS ALWAYS PLAYED IT. 162 00:14:57,323 --> 00:15:03,503 BUT IF YOU TEACH THE HISTORY OF JAZZ, YOU HAVE WHITE BANDS AND BLACK BANDS. 163 00:15:03,628 --> 00:15:06,341 BUT MUSICIANS DON'T LEARN THAT WAY. 164 00:15:06,509 --> 00:15:09,347 SEE, THIS IS THE BIG LIE IN THE WAY THAT IT'S TAUGHT. 165 00:15:09,515 --> 00:15:16,028 BENNY GOODMAN WAS GOING TO LEARN THE CLARINET FROM WHOEVER HE COULD. 166 00:15:16,153 --> 00:15:18,206 THAT'S HOW MUSIC IS. 167 00:15:18,351 --> 00:15:21,858 YOU HEAR SOMETHING YOU LIKE, AND YOU WANT TO PLAY LIKE THAT. 168 00:15:22,356 --> 00:15:24,966 IT'S NOT SO MUCH THAT HE WAS THE GREAT WHITE HOPE, 169 00:15:25,119 --> 00:15:29,480 IT'S JUST THAT THE MAJORITY OF PEOPLE WHO BOUGHT THE RECORDS WERE WHITE, 170 00:15:29,614 --> 00:15:30,949 THE MAJORITY OF PEOPLE WHO WROTE ABOUT IT WERE WHITE, 171 00:15:31,074 --> 00:15:32,786 THE RECORD COMPANIES WERE OWNED BY WHITE PEOPLE. 172 00:15:32,912 --> 00:15:35,918 JUST THE MUSIC CAME OUT OF THE AFRO-AMERICAN COMMUNITY. 173 00:15:36,043 --> 00:15:40,510 SO IT JUST STANDS TO LOGIC AND REASON THAT THE KING OF IT WOULD BE WHITE. 174 00:15:40,677 --> 00:15:46,649 NOW, BENNY GOODMAN HIMSELF DIDN'T THINK THAT. 175 00:15:56,333 --> 00:15:59,715 WHERE DID YOU GET YOUR IDEAS FROM? 176 00:15:59,840 --> 00:16:06,103 THE IDEAS? OH, MAN, I GOT A MILLION DREAMS. 177 00:16:06,228 --> 00:16:09,401 IT'S ALL I DO IS DREAM... ALL THE TIME. 178 00:16:09,527 --> 00:16:11,698 I THOUGHT YOU PLAYED PIANO. 179 00:16:11,823 --> 00:16:14,160 NO. THIS NOT PIANO; THIS IS DREAMING. 180 00:16:43,928 --> 00:16:47,811 THAT'S DREAMING. 181 00:16:47,936 --> 00:16:55,577 ELLINGTON ONCE DEFINED JAZZ AS "NEGRO FEELINGS," 182 00:16:55,702 --> 00:17:04,678 BY WHICH HE MEANT AMERICAN NEGRO FEELINGS PUT TO RHYTHM AND TUNE. 183 00:17:04,845 --> 00:17:13,655 ELLINGTON'S MUSIC REPRESENTED THE MUSICAL EQUIVALENT 184 00:17:13,780 --> 00:17:23,090 TO THE AMERICAN SPIRIT OF AFFIRMATION IN THE FACE OF ADVERSITY. 185 00:17:23,215 --> 00:17:27,306 IT WAS CONSTANTLY CREATIVE, YOU KNOW? 186 00:17:27,432 --> 00:17:34,112 IT GENERATED RESILIENCE WHICH MADE AN EXPERIMENTAL ATTITUDE POSSIBLE. 187 00:17:34,237 --> 00:18:15,862 MEANT YOU DEVELOPED AN EXPERIMENTAL DISPOSITION... 188 00:18:15,987 --> 00:18:18,701 DUKE ELLINGTON NEVER PUBLICLY COMPLAINED 189 00:18:18,826 --> 00:18:22,500 ABOUT BENNY GOODMAN'S CORONATION AS "THE KING OF SWING" 190 00:18:22,625 --> 00:18:27,678 OR THE ENORMOUS POPULARITY OF THE NEW, MOSTLY WHITE BANDS THAT FOLLOWED IN HIS WAKE. 191 00:18:27,803 --> 00:18:32,520 "JAZZ IS MUSIC," HE SAID. "SWING IS BUSINESS." 192 00:18:36,696 --> 00:18:42,666 HE CONTINUED ON HIS OWN INDEPENDENT COURSE, REFUSING TO BE CATEGORIZED. 193 00:18:42,791 --> 00:18:48,176 BY DOING THAT, HIS TRUMPETER REX STEWART REMEMBERED, 194 00:18:48,302 --> 00:18:50,639 "HE COULD STAND ABOVE HIS CONTEMPORARIES... 195 00:18:50,765 --> 00:18:54,898 IN THE MANNER OF A GOD DESCENDING FROM OLYMPIAN HEIGHTS... 196 00:18:55,065 --> 00:19:02,246 LET THE WORLD CATCH UP." 197 00:19:02,371 --> 00:19:05,419 HE WAS WRITING FOR A SPECIAL ORCHESTRA, 198 00:19:05,544 --> 00:19:08,592 AND HE WAS NOT GOING TO BE CARRIED AWAY 199 00:19:08,718 --> 00:19:11,932 BY A NEW TREND OR A NEW-- A NEW KIND OF STYLE 200 00:19:12,058 --> 00:19:16,274 JUST TO SAY, WELL, HE'S AMONG THEM. 201 00:19:16,441 --> 00:19:20,157 HE WASN'T WORRIED ABOUT WHETHER HE'S NUMBER ONE OR TWO OR 3. 202 00:19:20,282 --> 00:19:21,869 HE WANTED TO BE HONEST TO HIMSELF, 203 00:19:21,994 --> 00:19:24,165 TO WHAT HE WANTED TO DO WITH THAT ORCHESTRA. 204 00:19:24,290 --> 00:19:30,135 AND SO HE JUST SWAM THROUGH THE WHOLE THING AND STILL COMES OUT TO BE AN IMMORTAL. 205 00:19:38,778 --> 00:19:44,873 AT THAT TIME, THERE STILL WAS THIS DESIRE TO PUSH THE BLACK MAN DOWN AT ALL COSTS, 206 00:19:44,998 --> 00:19:50,802 AND DUKE ELLINGTON--HE WAS A MAN WITH A LOT OF FIRE AND PRIDE, 207 00:19:50,927 --> 00:19:55,519 AND YOU CAN BELIEVE THAT DUKE ELLINGTON DID NOT LIKE WHAT HE SAW GOING ON. 208 00:19:55,644 --> 00:20:00,571 AND EVEN THOUGH HE WASN'T THE TYPE OF MAN WHO WOULD COME OUT 209 00:20:00,696 --> 00:20:02,784 WITH A LOT OF VERBAL PRONOUNCEMENTS ON IT, 210 00:20:02,909 --> 00:20:05,749 IN HIS MUSIC, HE MAKES IT VERY, VERY CLEAR 211 00:20:05,874 --> 00:20:09,757 THAT HE IS VERY, VERY PROUD OF WHO HE IS, WHAT HE IS, 212 00:20:09,882 --> 00:20:13,221 AND HE FEELS THAT HIS MUSIC AND THE MUSIC OF HIS PEOPLE 213 00:20:13,346 --> 00:20:19,192 WAS A TREMENDOUS CONTRIBUTION TO THE WORLD OF MUSIC, BAR NONE. 214 00:20:19,317 --> 00:20:23,575 AN INTERVIEWER ONCE ASKED ELLINGTON HOW HE FELT 215 00:20:23,700 --> 00:20:29,337 ABOUT THE FACT THAT HE COULD NOT STAY IN MANY OF THE HOTELS HE PLAYED. 216 00:20:29,462 --> 00:20:31,926 ELLINGTON DEFLECTED THE QUESTION. 217 00:20:32,051 --> 00:20:34,138 "I TOOK THE ENERGY IT TAKES TO POUT," HE SAID, 218 00:20:34,263 --> 00:20:42,112 "AND WROTE SOME BLUES." 219 00:21:32,671 --> 00:21:35,135 ♪♪ I'M BLUE AGAIN ♪♪ 220 00:21:35,260 --> 00:21:36,387 ♪♪ BLUE AGAIN... ♪♪ 221 00:21:36,554 --> 00:21:38,725 Narrator: BY THE MID-1930s, LOUIS ARMSTRONG, 222 00:21:38,893 --> 00:21:44,905 THE MAN WHO HAD FIRST TAUGHT A BIG BAND TO SWING, WAS IN TROUBLE. 223 00:21:45,030 --> 00:21:54,590 HE WAS OUT OF WORK, PRESSED FOR CASH, AND HADN'T RECORDED IN THE UNITED STATES FOR TWO YEARS. 224 00:21:54,715 --> 00:21:58,264 TWO EX-AGENTS WITH GANGSTER CONNECTIONS WERE SUING HIM-- 225 00:21:58,390 --> 00:22:02,564 AND ONE WAS THREATENING BODILY HARM. 226 00:22:02,690 --> 00:22:08,243 ARMSTRONG NEEDED HELP. HE HIRED A NEW MANAGER. 227 00:22:08,368 --> 00:22:13,169 JOE GLASER WAS A HARD, HOT-TEMPERED MAN, COARSE AND CONTROLLING, 228 00:22:13,294 --> 00:22:16,634 WITH HIS OWN STRONG LINKS TO THE MOB. 229 00:22:16,801 --> 00:22:21,269 THE TWO MEN NEVER HAD A WRITTEN CONTRACT, BUT FOR THE NEXT 30 YEARS, 230 00:22:21,394 --> 00:22:26,320 HALF OF EVERYTHING ARMSTRONG EARNED WENT TO GLASER. 231 00:22:26,487 --> 00:22:32,875 IN RETURN, GLASER WORKED TIRELESSLY FOR HIS STAR. 232 00:22:33,001 --> 00:22:38,511 HE BOUGHT OUT ARMSTRONG'S FORMER AGENTS, PLACATED HIS EX-WIFE, 233 00:22:38,636 --> 00:22:41,684 MADE SURE HE PLAYED THE BEST NIGHTCLUBS AND DANCEHALLS, 234 00:22:41,809 --> 00:22:45,358 AND GOT HIM A LUCRATIVE CONTRACT WITH DECCA RECORDS. 235 00:22:45,525 --> 00:22:49,033 ARMSTRONG WAS HAPPY FOR THE HELP. 236 00:22:49,158 --> 00:22:51,370 HE WAS FOLLOWING THE PRACTICAL ADVICE 237 00:22:51,537 --> 00:22:56,714 A NEW ORLEANS BOUNCER HAD GIVEN HIM YEARS BEFORE: IN A WORLD RUN BY WHITE PEOPLE, 238 00:22:56,839 --> 00:23:01,724 "ALWAYS HAVE A WHITE MAN BEHIND YOU." 239 00:23:01,849 --> 00:23:06,234 JOE GLASER WAS TOUGH, HE WAS BRUTAL, HE USED TO HAVE SALAMIS HANGING FROM HIS OFFICE. 240 00:23:06,359 --> 00:23:08,238 THE TERRIBLE ODOR. 241 00:23:08,404 --> 00:23:10,993 AND IF HE LIKED YOU, HE'D PULL DOWN A SALAMI AND GIVE IT TO YOU. 242 00:23:11,119 --> 00:23:16,921 AND ARMSTRONG'S DEVOTION TO GLASER, HOWEVER MUCH GLASER MAY DISTURB THE REST OF US, 243 00:23:17,047 --> 00:23:22,015 HIS DEVOTION TO GLASER WAS REAL AND IT WAS ABSOLUTE. 244 00:23:25,730 --> 00:23:30,157 ARMSTRONG ALSO APPEARED IN THE MOVIES. 245 00:23:30,282 --> 00:23:32,411 ONE OF HIS FIRST FILMS WAS A SHORT CALLED 246 00:23:32,536 --> 00:23:35,125 A RHAPSODY IN BLACK AND BLUE. 247 00:23:35,292 --> 00:23:41,137 UNLIKE DUKE ELLINGTON, WHO ALWAYS APPEARED ON-SCREEN 248 00:23:41,262 --> 00:23:45,770 AS HE WAS IN LIFE-- SUAVE AND SOPHISTICATED-- 249 00:23:45,896 --> 00:23:48,693 LOUIS ARMSTRONG, A DARK-SKINNED BLACK MAN, 250 00:23:48,818 --> 00:24:02,346 WAS OFFERED VERY DIFFERENT ROLES. 251 00:24:02,471 --> 00:24:08,024 HE'S DRESSED IN A LEOPARD SKIN, HE'S STANDING ANKLE DEEP IN SOAP BUBBLES, 252 00:24:08,191 --> 00:24:12,324 AND HE'S PERFORMING IN HEAVEN BECAUSE SOMEBODY WAS DREAMING THIS. 253 00:24:12,449 --> 00:24:15,747 SO THERE'S ALL SORTS OF MINSTREL KIND OF HUMOR SURROUNDING IT. 254 00:24:15,872 --> 00:24:19,463 ♪♪ OH, CHERRY DROP THAT MEAN, 'CAUSE ♪♪ 255 00:24:19,588 --> 00:24:24,223 ♪♪ MY HAIR IS GRITTY ♪♪ 256 00:24:24,390 --> 00:24:28,037 ♪♪ JUST BECAUSE MY TEETH ARE PEARLY ♪♪ 257 00:24:28,091 --> 00:24:30,805 BUT WHAT ARE YOU ACTUALLY SEEING? 258 00:24:30,943 --> 00:24:35,745 YOU'RE SEEING A VERY POWERFUL, CHARISMATIC BLACK MAN 259 00:24:35,857 --> 00:24:39,113 WHO IS PRACTICALLY FLEXING HIS MUSCLES AT YOU 260 00:24:39,238 --> 00:24:42,620 BECAUSE THEY ARE BARED BY THE LEOPARD SKIN, 261 00:24:42,787 --> 00:24:45,167 AND SINGING THE TUNE "SHINE", 262 00:24:45,292 --> 00:24:47,129 WHICH ITSELF IS A MINSTREL NUMBER, 263 00:24:47,254 --> 00:24:49,300 IN SUCH A WAY THAT IT BECOMES-- 264 00:24:49,425 --> 00:24:53,768 IT LOSES WHATEVER MINSTREL OR NEGATIVE QUALITIES IT HAS. 265 00:24:53,893 --> 00:25:01,302 AND PLAYING THIS UNBELIEVABLE, UNPRECEDENTED, MAGNIFICENT VIRTUOSO TRUMPET. 266 00:25:23,660 --> 00:25:28,533 BUT THE ARMSTRONG EFFECT WAS JUST TOO COMPLICATED FOR MOST PEOPLE. 267 00:25:30,883 --> 00:25:32,386 THEY BECAME EMBARRASSED ABOUT IT, 268 00:25:32,511 --> 00:25:34,891 AND THEY REFUSED TO SEE WHAT WAS CLEARLY ON THE SCREEN, 269 00:25:35,017 --> 00:25:37,354 WHICH WAS A BRILLIANT, BRILLIANT YOUNG MAN 270 00:25:37,479 --> 00:25:39,692 THEY'RE TRYING TO IMPRISON WITH THESE STEREOTYPES, 271 00:25:39,818 --> 00:25:43,119 AND HE'S JUST BREAKING THE CHAINS RIGHT AND LEFT. 272 00:25:51,332 --> 00:25:54,296 MOVIES MADE ARMSTRONG EVEN MORE FAMOUS 273 00:25:54,321 --> 00:25:59,457 AND INTRODUCED HIS MUSIC TO A STILL LARGER NATIONAL AUDIENCE. 274 00:25:59,482 --> 00:26:06,788 LOOK OUT, BOYS, FOR PUBLIC MELODY #1. HA! 275 00:26:09,126 --> 00:26:11,297 BUT AS THE SWING ERA REACHED ITS ZENITH, 276 00:26:11,422 --> 00:26:13,468 MOST AMERICANS REMAINED UNAWARE 277 00:26:13,635 --> 00:26:22,319 OF HOW CENTRAL LOUIS ARMSTRONG WAS TO THE MUSIC THEY LOVED. 278 00:26:22,444 --> 00:26:26,452 WHEN YOU LISTEN TO BENNY GOODMAN PLAYING THOSE FLETCHER HENDERSON CHARTS, 279 00:26:26,577 --> 00:26:28,164 AND HE GOES, YOU KNOW... 280 00:26:28,331 --> 00:26:30,335 ♪♪ BAP BA DA DOO DEE DOO BE DOO BAP BE DAP ♪♪ 281 00:26:30,460 --> 00:26:32,381 YOU KNOW, IF YOU JUST MAKE THE VOICE A LITTLE GRAVELLY... 282 00:26:32,506 --> 00:26:33,466 ♪♪ BAP BA DA DOO DA DOO ♪♪ 283 00:26:33,591 --> 00:26:36,389 ♪♪ BAP BA DA DOO DA DOO... ♪♪ 284 00:26:36,514 --> 00:26:38,936 YOU CAN HEAR ARMSTRONG IN EVERY PHRASE. 285 00:26:39,061 --> 00:26:42,025 SO, LOOK OUT FOR PUBLIC MELODY #1. 286 00:26:42,192 --> 00:26:45,782 THE MORE YOU LISTEN TO THOSE ARRANGEMENTS, THE MORE YOU LISTEN TO THE SOLOISTS, 287 00:26:45,908 --> 00:26:48,246 THE MORE YOU LISTEN TO EVERYTHING IN JAZZ, 288 00:26:48,371 --> 00:26:50,667 THE MORE YOU KEEP HEARING LOUIS, LOUIS, LOUIS. 289 00:26:50,792 --> 00:26:52,922 I MEAN, HE CREATED THE VOCABULARY. 290 00:26:53,047 --> 00:26:56,345 AND WE'VE NEVER REALLY GOTTEN SO FAR BEYOND IT 291 00:26:56,471 --> 00:26:59,602 THAT IT DOESN'T KEEP CROPPING UP AND THAT YOU DON'T HEAR ECHOES OF IT. 292 00:26:59,727 --> 00:27:02,566 BUT IN SWING, IT REALLY IS, THE SOUND THAT HE BROUGHT, 293 00:27:02,733 --> 00:27:05,405 THAT INCREDIBLE POWER, IT'S ORCHESTRATED FOR A BIG BAND. 294 00:27:05,530 --> 00:27:19,266 IT'S ORCHESTRATED LOUIS. THAT'S WHAT THE SWING ERA IS. 295 00:27:19,391 --> 00:27:25,654 THE BIG BAND MUSIC WAS POPULAR BECAUSE FIRST IT COMES OUT OF THE SOIL OF THE COUNTRY. 296 00:27:25,779 --> 00:27:32,459 IT HAS THE HAPPINESS AND JOY OF THE SOUND OF JAZZ IN IT. 297 00:27:32,584 --> 00:27:36,884 IT WAS AT A CERTAIN TIME IN THE COUNTRY WHERE YOU HAVE A CERTAIN SOPHISTICATION 298 00:27:37,010 --> 00:27:42,981 AND A BELIEF IN ADULT SENSIBILITY. 299 00:27:43,147 --> 00:27:46,445 YOU HAD THE FLOWERING OF THE AMERICAN POPULAR SONGS. 300 00:27:46,571 --> 00:27:50,161 SO YOU HAD A LOT OF POPULAR MATERIAL THEY COULD SING AND PLAY. 301 00:27:50,287 --> 00:27:54,336 YOU HAD RADIO, WHICH WAS JUST REALLY KICKING IN, WHICH WAS PROJECTING THE BANDS. 302 00:27:54,461 --> 00:27:57,384 AND YOU HAD, ALSO, A FANTASTIC BELIEF IN THE COUNTRY, 303 00:27:57,509 --> 00:28:01,350 LIKE A MATINEE IN THE ROSELAND BALLROOM OR THEN THE COTTON CLUB. 304 00:28:01,475 --> 00:28:03,771 THEY WOULD HEAR THAT ON THE RADIO AND THINK, "BOY, THIS IS SOME GREAT THING," 305 00:28:03,897 --> 00:28:06,110 LIKE, YOU WOULD LOOK AT SOMETHING THAT WOULD SAY, "MADE IN NEW YORK," 306 00:28:06,235 --> 00:28:09,199 AND IF YOU WEREN'T IN NEW YORK, YOU WOULD THINK, "BOY, NEW YORK CITY." 307 00:28:12,289 --> 00:28:14,043 A PLEASANT AND GOOD EVENING TO YOU, LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, 308 00:28:14,209 --> 00:28:15,879 FROM MANHATTAN TO THE GOLDEN GATE. 309 00:28:16,005 --> 00:28:20,430 IT'S ANOTHER FIRST NIGHTER ON THE AIR FOR THE NATIONAL BROADCASTING COMPANY... 310 00:28:20,555 --> 00:28:24,730 ONE OF THE GREAT THRILLS WAS AT THE PARAMOUNT THEATER 311 00:28:24,855 --> 00:28:30,617 WHEN YOU WOULD BE A TEENAGER-- 12, EVEN AS YOUNG AS 12, 13, 14, 15-- 312 00:28:30,742 --> 00:28:35,168 AND YOU'D SAVED YOUR PENNIES, AND YOU WERE ABLE TO GO TO THE THEATER 313 00:28:35,293 --> 00:28:37,089 TO HEAR YOUR FAVORITE BAND, 314 00:28:37,214 --> 00:28:39,426 AND YOU WOULD HEAR IN THE DISTANCE 315 00:28:39,551 --> 00:28:43,434 THE BEGINNINGS OF THE SOUND OF THE THEME OF THAT ORCHESTRA, 316 00:28:43,601 --> 00:28:46,482 AND YOU WOULD HEAR THAT VERY FAINTLY IN THE BACKGROUND... 317 00:28:51,450 --> 00:28:56,210 AND THEN THE BAND WOULD RISE UP ON THIS RISING STAGE THAT THEY HAD 318 00:28:56,335 --> 00:29:10,613 AND COME INTO SIGHT PLAYING THEIR CLASSIC THEME... 319 00:29:10,739 --> 00:29:12,951 AND THAT WAS--THAT WAS CHILLS, I'M TELLING YOU, 320 00:29:13,077 --> 00:29:14,705 THAT WAS CHILLS RIGHT UP YOUR BACK AND ACROSS THE TOP OF YOUR HEAD. 321 00:29:14,830 --> 00:29:18,671 THAT WAS SOMETHING. 322 00:29:18,796 --> 00:29:22,054 IN THE WAKE OF BENNY GOODMAN'S ASTONISHING SUCCESS, 323 00:29:22,179 --> 00:29:25,685 THE SOUNDS OF DOZENS OF BIG BANDS NOW FILLED THE AIR 324 00:29:25,810 --> 00:29:30,487 AND HELPED DRAW MILLIONS TO MOVIE THEATERS AND DANCEHALLS. 325 00:29:30,612 --> 00:29:35,038 SOME PLAYED PRECIOUS LITTLE JAZZ, EMPHASIZING POP TUNES 326 00:29:35,163 --> 00:29:40,131 AND FEATURING ATTRACTIVE SINGERS GUARANTEED TO BOOST THE BOX OFFICE. 327 00:29:40,256 --> 00:29:48,397 BUT ALL OF THEM ENCOURAGED AMERICANS TO GET BACK ON THEIR FEET AND DANCE. 328 00:29:48,523 --> 00:29:52,072 THERE WAS WOODY HERMAN'S "BAND THAT PLAYS THE BLUES" 329 00:29:52,197 --> 00:29:55,703 AND THE CASA LOMA ORCHESTRA. 330 00:29:55,829 --> 00:29:58,876 BOB CROSBY AND THE BOBCATS. 331 00:29:59,001 --> 00:30:03,469 KAY KYSER AND HIS KOLLEGE OF MUSICAL KNOWLEDGE. 332 00:30:03,594 --> 00:30:07,644 THERE WERE THE ALL-GIRL INTERNATIONAL SWEETHEARTS OF RHYTHM 333 00:30:07,769 --> 00:30:11,485 AND INA RAY HUTTON AND HER MELODEARS. 334 00:30:11,610 --> 00:30:13,573 EARL HINES HAD AN ORCHESTRA, 335 00:30:13,698 --> 00:30:15,702 SO DID BENNY CARTER... 336 00:30:15,827 --> 00:30:18,166 AND CHARLIE BARNET... 337 00:30:18,291 --> 00:30:27,225 AND JIMMIE LUNCEFORD. 338 00:30:27,350 --> 00:30:30,064 MEN, JUBILEE IS ON THE AIR TO BRING YOU 339 00:30:30,190 --> 00:30:31,984 RIFF NUMBER ONE OF THE BATTLE OF BARREL HOUSE, 340 00:30:32,152 --> 00:30:33,738 BOOGIE WOOGIE, AND THE BLUES. 341 00:30:33,863 --> 00:30:35,950 FOR THOSE OF YOU WHO DON'T COTTON TO A MELODIC HANDLE, 342 00:30:36,076 --> 00:30:39,166 THE TREBLE CLEF IS NOW BEING TINTINNABULATED BY THE CAT 343 00:30:39,333 --> 00:30:41,670 WHOSE PAW IS THE DADDY OF THE DICTY DOWNBEAT, 344 00:30:41,837 --> 00:30:43,257 JIMMIE LUNCEFORD. 345 00:30:49,436 --> 00:30:50,313 ♪♪ BOY ♪♪ 346 00:30:50,438 --> 00:30:51,732 ♪♪ GINGER AND DYNAMITE ♪♪ 347 00:30:51,857 --> 00:30:53,402 ♪♪ ALL THEY SERVE TONIGHT ♪♪ 348 00:30:53,527 --> 00:30:54,863 ♪♪ BACK IN NAGASAKI WHERE THE FELLAS CHEW TOBACCKY ♪♪ 349 00:30:54,988 --> 00:30:57,076 ♪♪ AND THE WOMEN WICKY-WACKY-WOO! ♪♪ 350 00:30:57,202 --> 00:30:58,537 ♪♪ THE WAY THEY ENTERTAIN ♪♪ 351 00:30:58,704 --> 00:31:00,208 ♪♪ HURRY UP A HURRICANE ♪♪ 352 00:31:00,375 --> 00:31:01,460 ♪♪ BACK IN NAGASAKI WHERE THE FELLAS CHEW TOBACCKY ♪♪ 353 00:31:01,585 --> 00:31:04,383 ♪♪ AND THE WOMEN WICKY-WACKY-WOO! ♪♪ 354 00:31:04,549 --> 00:31:06,595 JIMMIE LUNCEFORD ONCE SAID THAT 355 00:31:06,720 --> 00:31:09,518 "A BAND THAT LOOKS GOOD, GOES IN FOR BETTER SHOWMANSHIP, 356 00:31:09,643 --> 00:31:12,482 "AND SEEMS TO BE ENJOYING ITS WORK, 357 00:31:12,607 --> 00:31:17,450 WILL ALWAYS BE SURE OF A RETURN VISIT." 358 00:31:17,575 --> 00:31:24,256 LUNCEFORD'S ORCHESTRA WOULD DEMONSTRATE THAT NIGHT AFTER NIGHT. 359 00:31:24,423 --> 00:31:26,677 HE HAD FINE SOLOISTS, 360 00:31:26,802 --> 00:31:29,141 BUT IT WAS THE BAND'S ASTONISHING ENSEMBLE PRECISION 361 00:31:29,266 --> 00:31:31,687 THAT BROUGHT THE DANCERS OUT ONTO THE FLOOR 362 00:31:31,812 --> 00:31:42,876 WHEREVER IT PLAYED. 363 00:31:43,001 --> 00:31:48,387 JIMMIE LUNCEFORD HAD THE GREATEST SHOW BAND THAT EVER WAS. 364 00:31:48,512 --> 00:31:50,600 THE GUYS IN THAT BAND WERE BEAUTIFUL. 365 00:31:50,725 --> 00:31:53,689 THEY HAD THE BEST-TAILORED UNIFORMS IN THE BUSINESS, 366 00:31:53,814 --> 00:31:57,906 AND THEY ALL LOOKED GREAT. 367 00:31:58,031 --> 00:32:02,874 AND THEY HAD ALL KINDS OF HAND THINGS, AND THEY HAD NOVELTY VOCALS. 368 00:32:02,999 --> 00:32:04,753 THEY HAD ROUTINES WHERE THEY WOULD THROW 369 00:32:04,878 --> 00:32:13,646 THE TRUMPETS UP IN THE AIR AND CATCH THEM SIMULTANEOUSLY. 370 00:32:13,771 --> 00:32:17,278 VERY FEW PEOPLE ARE TALKING ABOUT JIMMIE LUNCEFORD. 371 00:32:17,404 --> 00:32:21,167 JIMMIE HAD A GREAT RESPECT FOR WHAT HE WAS DOING, 372 00:32:21,227 --> 00:32:24,776 AND HE INFUSED HIS MEN WITH THAT RESPECT. 373 00:32:24,901 --> 00:32:26,738 AND HE HAD A LOT OF PRIMA DONNAS IN THAT BAND, 374 00:32:26,864 --> 00:32:28,533 BUT ONCE THEY WERE IN THAT BAND, 375 00:32:28,659 --> 00:32:30,370 THEY SUBMERGED THEIR PERSONALITIES 376 00:32:30,495 --> 00:32:32,792 INTO THE OVERALL ENSEMBLE. 377 00:32:32,917 --> 00:32:37,342 AND IT WAS A TREMENDOUS BAND. 378 00:32:37,467 --> 00:32:45,233 IT WAS ALWAYS AT ITS PEAK. 379 00:32:55,295 --> 00:32:59,386 MMM...WHAT MUSIC, LET'S DANCE. 380 00:32:59,511 --> 00:33:08,613 NO, LET'S LISTEN, IT'S TOMMY DORSEY. 381 00:33:08,739 --> 00:33:11,703 AND HERE'S THAT SENTIMENTAL GENTLEMAN HIMSELF, 382 00:33:11,828 --> 00:33:13,247 TOMMY DORSEY! 383 00:33:24,395 --> 00:33:27,819 THOUGH HE WAS BILLED AS 384 00:33:27,944 --> 00:33:29,781 "THE SENTIMENTAL GENTLEMAN OF SWING," 385 00:33:29,906 --> 00:33:34,791 THERE WAS NOTHING SENTIMENTAL ABOUT TOMMY DORSEY. 386 00:33:34,916 --> 00:33:38,006 HE WAS COMBATIVE AND TIGHT-FISTED, 387 00:33:38,131 --> 00:33:41,554 A HARD-DRINKING TASKMASTER WHO CREATED HIS OWN BAND 388 00:33:41,679 --> 00:33:44,226 MOSTLY BECAUSE HE COULD NO LONGER BEAR TO PLAY 389 00:33:44,351 --> 00:33:46,982 ALONGSIDE HIS BROTHER, JIMMY. 390 00:33:47,107 --> 00:33:52,242 BUT HIS BAND WAS HUGELY POPULAR AND THROUGH ITS RANKS MOVED 391 00:33:52,367 --> 00:33:57,127 SUCH STARS AS BUNNY BERIGAN, DAVE TOUGH, BUDDY RICH, 392 00:33:57,252 --> 00:34:00,050 AND A SKINNY SINGER FROM HOBOKEN, NEW JERSEY, 393 00:34:00,175 --> 00:34:03,014 NAMED FRANK SINATRA. 394 00:34:03,181 --> 00:34:07,857 DORSEY, HE WAS A SUPERB MUSICIAN, 395 00:34:08,024 --> 00:34:11,782 HE WAS A GREAT TROMBONE PLAYER. 396 00:34:11,907 --> 00:34:17,542 TOMMY MADE THE TROMBONE INTO A SINGING INSTRUMENT. 397 00:34:17,667 --> 00:34:20,925 HE WAS THE FIRST GUY WHO TOOK IT FROM A "BLATTING" INSTRUMENT, 398 00:34:21,050 --> 00:34:24,264 YOU KNOW... ♪♪ TA DA TA DA DA DAH DA DA DA DA DAH ♪♪ 399 00:34:24,389 --> 00:34:26,268 AND HE MADE IT INTO A SONG INSTRUMENT. 400 00:34:26,393 --> 00:34:27,980 HE PLAYED MELODIES ON IT. 401 00:34:28,106 --> 00:34:29,776 HIS BREATH CONTROL WAS SUPERB. 402 00:34:29,901 --> 00:34:32,072 HE WAS A HELL OF A PLAYER. HE HAD A HELL OF A BAND. 403 00:34:32,197 --> 00:34:37,082 VERY, VERY, VERY UNDERESTIMATED. 404 00:34:37,207 --> 00:34:39,963 HE REALLY, I THINK, MORE THAN ANYBODY ELSE, 405 00:34:40,088 --> 00:34:44,054 WAS ABLE TO CREATE AN ORCHESTRA THAT HAD TWO SOULS. 406 00:34:44,179 --> 00:34:45,975 IT COULD BE A VERY GOOD JAZZ ORCHESTRA 407 00:34:46,100 --> 00:34:47,895 AND A VERY GOOD POP ORCHESTRA. 408 00:34:48,020 --> 00:34:51,152 IT COULD BE A SWEET BAND PLAYING VERY SENTIMENTAL TUNES, 409 00:34:51,277 --> 00:34:53,239 BUT IT COULD ALSO BE A VERY VIGOROUS JAZZ BAND. 410 00:34:53,364 --> 00:35:44,758 AND HE ALWAYS KEPT VERY GOOD SOLOISTS IN THE BAND. 411 00:36:02,837 --> 00:36:07,888 ONE OF THE MOST POPULAR SWING BANDS OF ALL TIME WAS LED BY 412 00:36:08,014 --> 00:36:11,020 ANOTHER TROMBONIST, GLENN MILLER, 413 00:36:11,145 --> 00:36:13,357 WHO FAVORED TIGHTLY CONTROLLED ARRANGEMENTS-- 414 00:36:13,482 --> 00:36:17,782 AND PLENTY OF VOCALS AND SHOWMANSHIP. 415 00:36:17,908 --> 00:36:21,123 ♪♪ HI THERE, TEX, HOW'S YOUR NEW ROMANCE ♪♪ 416 00:36:21,290 --> 00:36:24,629 ♪♪ THE ONE YOU MET AT THE CAMPUS DANCE? ♪♪ 417 00:36:24,796 --> 00:36:26,508 ♪♪ WAIT UNTIL YOU SEE HER ♪♪ 418 00:36:26,633 --> 00:36:28,054 ♪♪ YOU'LL AGREE ♪♪ 419 00:36:28,179 --> 00:36:34,901 ♪♪ MY HOMETOWN GAL'S THE ONLY ONE FOR ME ♪♪ 420 00:36:35,026 --> 00:36:41,246 ♪♪ A-B-C-D-E-F-G-H- I GOT A GAL ♪♪ 421 00:36:41,372 --> 00:36:44,151 ♪♪ IN KALAMAZOO ♪♪ 422 00:36:44,171 --> 00:36:45,717 I THINK THE IMPORTANCE OF GLENN MILLER 423 00:36:45,842 --> 00:36:49,515 WAS THAT HE POPULARIZED SWING MUSIC FOR A LOT OF PEOPLE 424 00:36:49,640 --> 00:36:53,315 WHO COULDN'T EVEN GET WITH, YOU KNOW, GOODMAN AND ELLINGTON. 425 00:36:53,440 --> 00:36:55,360 HE MADE IT VERY ROMANTIC. 426 00:36:55,485 --> 00:36:58,784 HE CREATED THE SOUND OF THAT ERA THAT--THAT-- 427 00:36:58,910 --> 00:37:00,537 THAT A LOT OF PEOPLE WILL ALWAYS ASSOCIATE-- 428 00:37:00,662 --> 00:37:02,541 PEOPLE WHO WERE ALIVE THEN-- WITH THAT PERIOD. 429 00:37:02,667 --> 00:37:04,545 AND IT'S NOT A NEGLIGIBLE CONTRIBUTION. 430 00:37:04,713 --> 00:37:09,013 CERTAINLY, IT'S NOT CREATIVE IN A TRADITIONAL JAZZ SENSE, 431 00:37:09,138 --> 00:37:11,727 BUT IT'S A--IT'S A POTENT BREW. 432 00:37:11,852 --> 00:37:13,563 ♪♪ ...TODAY ♪♪ 433 00:37:13,689 --> 00:37:15,150 ♪♪ AM I DREAMIN'? ♪♪ 434 00:37:15,275 --> 00:37:16,569 ♪♪ I CAN HEAR HER SCREAMIN' ♪♪ 435 00:37:16,695 --> 00:37:19,743 HE HAD WHAT YOU'D CALL A REPUBLICAN BAND-- 436 00:37:19,910 --> 00:37:22,874 VERY STRAIGHT-LACED, MIDDLE OF THE ROAD. 437 00:37:22,999 --> 00:37:25,797 AND MILLER WAS THAT KIND OF GUY, HE WAS A BUSINESSMAN. 438 00:37:25,922 --> 00:37:28,510 AND HE WAS SORT OF THE LAWRENCE WELK OF JAZZ. 439 00:37:28,635 --> 00:37:30,597 AND THAT'S ONE OF THE REASONS HE WAS SO BIG, 440 00:37:30,723 --> 00:37:32,643 PEOPLE COULD IDENTIFY WITH WHAT HE DID. 441 00:37:32,769 --> 00:37:34,271 THEY PERCEIVED WHAT HE WAS DOING. 442 00:37:34,438 --> 00:37:38,071 BUT THE BIGGEST PROBLEM, HIS BAND NEVER MADE A MISTAKE. 443 00:37:38,196 --> 00:37:40,117 AND IT'S ONE OF THE THINGS WRONG, 444 00:37:40,242 --> 00:37:41,619 BECAUSE IF YOU DON'T EVER MAKE A MISTAKE, 445 00:37:41,787 --> 00:37:42,872 YOU'RE NOT TRYING, 446 00:37:42,998 --> 00:37:44,667 YOU'RE NOT PLAYING AT THE EDGE OF YOUR ABILITY. 447 00:37:44,793 --> 00:37:46,337 YOU'RE PLAYING SAFELY, WITHIN LIMITS, 448 00:37:46,462 --> 00:37:49,093 AND YOU KNOW WHAT YOU CAN DO, 449 00:37:49,218 --> 00:37:51,681 AND IT SOUNDS, AFTER A WHILE, EXTREMELY BORING. 450 00:37:51,807 --> 00:37:54,980 ♪♪ ...IN KALAMAZOO ♪♪ 451 00:37:56,649 --> 00:37:59,697 ♪♪ ZOO ZOO ZOO ZOO ZOO ZOO ZOO ZOO ZOO ZOO ♪♪ 452 00:37:59,823 --> 00:38:05,667 ♪♪ ZOO... ♪♪ 453 00:38:05,835 --> 00:38:09,843 ♪♪ KALAMAZOO ♪♪ 454 00:38:10,010 --> 00:38:14,895 IN THE YEARS TO COME, GLENN MILLER AND HIS ORCHESTRA 455 00:38:15,020 --> 00:38:16,940 WOULD TURN OUT HIT AFTER HIT, 456 00:38:17,066 --> 00:38:18,778 INCLUDING STRING OF PEARLS, 457 00:38:18,903 --> 00:38:21,950 LITTLE BROWN JUG, AND IN THE MOOD 458 00:38:22,076 --> 00:38:26,794 THAT WOULD BE AMONG SWING'S MOST FAMILIAR ANTHEMS. 459 00:38:38,483 --> 00:38:41,405 I THOUGHT THAT THE HAPPIEST I COULD BE 460 00:38:41,572 --> 00:38:48,586 WOULD BE IN A JAZZ CLUB, PLAYING. 461 00:38:48,711 --> 00:38:57,020 THEN MY DAD SAID, "YOU'RE GOING TO BE A CATTLEMAN." 462 00:38:57,146 --> 00:39:00,777 WHEN WE'D DRIVE THE CATTLE, 463 00:39:00,903 --> 00:39:04,201 MY DREAM WAS THAT THE BENNY GOODMAN BAND BUS 464 00:39:04,326 --> 00:39:06,414 WOULD WANT TO GET THROUGH THE CATTLE 465 00:39:06,539 --> 00:39:08,042 AND I WOULDN'T LET 'EM THROUGH 466 00:39:08,168 --> 00:39:13,720 UNLESS THEY LET ME GET ON THE BUS AND PLAY WITH THEM. 467 00:39:13,846 --> 00:39:16,977 BUT IN MY MIND THAT'S WHAT I WAS-- 468 00:39:17,144 --> 00:39:19,356 SOMEDAY I'D BE HEARD 469 00:39:19,481 --> 00:39:22,654 WITH SOME BAND GOING THROUGH HERE. 470 00:39:22,822 --> 00:39:42,611 HA HA! 471 00:40:04,154 --> 00:40:07,286 ARTIE SHAW IS PROBABLY THE FINEST CLARINET PLAYER 472 00:40:07,411 --> 00:40:09,832 THAT JAZZ HAS EVER PRODUCED TECHNICALLY. 473 00:40:09,958 --> 00:40:13,339 A TRUE VIRTUOSO. 474 00:40:13,464 --> 00:40:17,431 WHEN YOU COMPARE ARTIE AND BENNY, WHAT PEOPLE USUALLY SAY IS THAT 475 00:40:17,597 --> 00:40:20,270 BENNY SWUNG MORE, HE HAD MORE OF A BLUES QUALITY, 476 00:40:20,395 --> 00:40:23,067 BUT THAT ARTIE HAD A PRETTIER TONE, 477 00:40:23,192 --> 00:40:26,115 HE WAS A MORE INTELLECTUAL PLAYER, A MORE LYRICAL PLAYER, 478 00:40:26,282 --> 00:40:28,703 HAD A BETTER TECHNIQUE. 479 00:40:28,828 --> 00:40:36,218 ARTIE SHAW WAS BENNY GOODMAN'S GREATEST RIVAL. 480 00:40:36,344 --> 00:40:40,685 GIFTED, ERUDITE, ARTICULATE, AND OPINIONATED, 481 00:40:40,810 --> 00:40:44,151 SHAW SUCCESSFULLY COMBINED CHAMBER MUSIC WITH JAZZ 482 00:40:44,276 --> 00:40:47,032 AND WON AN ENORMOUS FOLLOWING. 483 00:40:47,157 --> 00:40:51,624 BUT HE WAS CURSED, HE SAID, WITH SERIOUS-MINDEDNESS. 484 00:40:51,749 --> 00:40:55,840 HE DISLIKED AUTOGRAPH-SEEKERS, DISDAINED JITTERBUGGING, 485 00:40:56,008 --> 00:41:00,683 AND WAS MADE PROFOUNDLY UNEASY BY HIS OWN SUCCESS. 486 00:41:00,809 --> 00:41:02,771 AND NOW, LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, 487 00:41:02,896 --> 00:41:39,470 OUR OWN VERSION OF COLE PORTER'SBEGIN THE BEGUINE. 488 00:41:39,595 --> 00:41:44,771 WELL, THE MINUTE YOU BECAME A BIG, BIG SMASH HIT, 489 00:41:44,938 --> 00:41:47,694 IT BECAME VERY CONFUSING. 490 00:41:47,819 --> 00:41:51,285 NOTHING IN LIFE CAN PREPARE YOU FOR STARDOM. 491 00:41:51,452 --> 00:41:55,335 SUCCESS IS A VERY BIG PROBLEM, BIGGER THAN FAILURE. 492 00:41:55,460 --> 00:41:56,921 YOU CAN DEAL WITH FAILURE. 493 00:41:57,047 --> 00:42:00,971 IT'S TOUGH, IT'S HARD, YOU FIGHT LIKE HELL TO GET--GET IT GOING. 494 00:42:01,096 --> 00:42:08,611 BUT SUCCESS IS AN OPIATE, AND YOU GET VERY CONFUSED. 495 00:42:08,736 --> 00:42:14,957 THINGS HAPPEN THAT YOU HAVE NO PREPARATION FOR. 496 00:42:15,083 --> 00:42:18,047 AND MONEY COMES IN AND POPULARITY 497 00:42:18,172 --> 00:42:19,925 AND PEOPLE THROW THEMSELVES AT YOU. 498 00:42:20,051 --> 00:42:27,524 AND YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT YOU'RE INTO. 499 00:42:27,649 --> 00:42:29,027 I COULDN'T HANDLE IT, 500 00:42:29,152 --> 00:42:32,492 I DIDN'T KNOW WHAT TO DO WITH IT. 501 00:42:32,617 --> 00:42:34,663 THE BASIC TRUTH, ARTIE SHAW CONCLUDED, 502 00:42:34,788 --> 00:42:37,877 IS THAT POPULAR MUSIC HAS LITTLE OR NOTHING TO DO WITH 503 00:42:38,045 --> 00:42:40,675 MUSICAL VALUES AT ALL. 504 00:42:40,800 --> 00:42:43,723 I STILL WANTED TO PLAY MUSIC, 505 00:42:43,889 --> 00:42:47,230 AND THE AUDIENCE WAS SAYING, "PLAY WHAT YOU'RE PLAYING, 506 00:42:47,397 --> 00:42:49,443 PLAY THE SAME THING OVER AND OVER, WE LIKE THAT." 507 00:42:49,568 --> 00:42:52,574 AND THEY NEVER COULD GET IT THROUGH THEIR HEADS THAT 508 00:42:52,741 --> 00:42:55,204 WHAT THEY LIKED WAS SOMETHING I WAS DOING ON MY WAY 509 00:42:55,330 --> 00:42:56,498 TO GETTING BETTER. 510 00:42:56,624 --> 00:43:00,465 THAT RECORD THAT THEY LIKED,BEGIN THE BEGUINE-- 511 00:43:00,590 --> 00:43:01,925 WHICH BECAME A MILLSTONE, 512 00:43:02,052 --> 00:43:06,393 IT BECAME AN ALBATROSS AROUND MY NECK. 513 00:43:06,518 --> 00:43:09,900 THE OVERWHELMING SUCCESS OF BEGIN THE BEGUINE 514 00:43:10,025 --> 00:43:14,242 WOULD EVENTUALLY PROPEL ARTIE SHAW PAST BENNY GOODMAN 515 00:43:14,368 --> 00:43:15,787 IN POPULARITY. 516 00:43:15,912 --> 00:43:22,967 BUT IN 1939, SHAW DISBANDED HIS ORCHESTRA IN FRUSTRATION. 517 00:43:23,094 --> 00:43:25,723 "I'M UNHAPPY IN THE MUSIC BUSINESS," HE SAID. 518 00:43:25,848 --> 00:43:29,064 "I LIKE THE MUSIC-- LOVE AND LIVE IT, IN FACT-- 519 00:43:29,189 --> 00:43:39,876 BUT FOR ME THE BUSINESS PART PLAIN STINKS." 520 00:43:55,907 --> 00:43:59,080 AUGUST 27, THE DUKE ELLINGTON ORCHESTRA 521 00:43:59,205 --> 00:44:00,707 WILL APPEAR FOR ONE NIGHT ONLY 522 00:44:00,834 --> 00:44:08,265 AT THE TURNPIKE CASINO, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. 523 00:44:08,390 --> 00:44:11,939 AUGUST 28, WATERLOO, IOWA; 524 00:44:12,064 --> 00:44:15,404 AUGUST 29 AND 30, 525 00:44:15,529 --> 00:44:20,706 CORONADO THEATER, ROCKFORD, ILLINOIS; 526 00:44:20,832 --> 00:44:28,388 AUGUST 31, ORPHEUM THEATER, MADISON, WISCONSIN. 527 00:44:28,513 --> 00:44:30,142 SEPTEMBER 2 AND 3, 528 00:44:30,267 --> 00:44:37,156 THE DUKE ELLINGTON ORCHESTRA WILL BE APPEARING IN MILWAUKEE. 529 00:44:37,323 --> 00:44:41,832 DESPITE THE DEPRESSION AND IN PART BECAUSE OF IT, 530 00:44:41,999 --> 00:44:43,126 SWING MUSIC HAD BECOME 531 00:44:43,251 --> 00:44:45,464 A HUNDRED-MILLION-DOLLAR INDUSTRY. 532 00:44:45,589 --> 00:44:53,563 30,000 TO 40,000 MUSICIANS WERE EMPLOYED TO PLAY DANCE MUSIC ACROSS THE COUNTRY. 533 00:44:53,688 --> 00:44:57,529 AND ANOTHER 8,000 MEN AND WOMEN WERE NEEDED JUST TO MANAGE, 534 00:44:57,655 --> 00:45:04,710 BOOK, AND PROMOTE THEIR APPEARANCES. 535 00:45:04,835 --> 00:45:06,798 EVEN FOR THE BEST-PAID BANDS, 536 00:45:06,924 --> 00:45:09,553 LIKE BENNY GOODMAN'S AND ARTIE SHAW'S, 537 00:45:09,679 --> 00:45:12,601 THE ROAD WAS HECTIC AND EXHAUSTING. 538 00:45:12,726 --> 00:45:18,071 THE PROBLEM WAS TO MEET A PAYROLL. 539 00:45:18,238 --> 00:45:22,914 YOU HAVE 14 TO 20 OR AT TIMES 40 MEN, 540 00:45:23,081 --> 00:45:25,127 AND YOU GOT TO PAY THEM EVERY WEEK. 541 00:45:25,252 --> 00:45:28,174 IN MY DAY, THE MEN WERE PART OF AN ORGANIZATION. 542 00:45:28,300 --> 00:45:30,637 WE TRAVELED TOGETHER, WE LIVED TOGETHER, 543 00:45:30,762 --> 00:45:56,272 AND I'M TALKING ABOUT TIMES WHEN HOTELS WERE $3.00 A NIGHT. 544 00:45:56,397 --> 00:46:00,990 SOME BOOKERS INSISTED BANDS COVER 500 MILES BETWEEN DATES 545 00:46:01,115 --> 00:46:03,328 AND WORK 7 NIGHTS A WEEK-- 546 00:46:03,495 --> 00:46:07,002 UNTIL THE UNION FINALLY MANAGED TO GET IT DECREASED TO 547 00:46:07,169 --> 00:46:09,882 6 NIGHTS AND 400 MILES. 548 00:46:10,008 --> 00:46:14,935 ANDY KIRK AND HIS CLOUDS OF JOY AVERAGED MORE THAN 50,000 MILES 549 00:46:15,060 --> 00:46:17,272 A YEAR ON ROUGH ROADS. 550 00:46:17,398 --> 00:46:19,735 "WHEN I LEFT DUKE," 551 00:46:19,860 --> 00:46:22,199 ONE LONG-TIME ELLINGTON TRUMPET-PLAYER REMEMBERED, 552 00:46:22,324 --> 00:46:25,914 "I SLEPT ALMOST A WHOLE YEAR." 553 00:46:29,088 --> 00:46:33,388 WE DID 300 ONE-NIGHTERS AND NEVER EVEN FELT IT. 554 00:46:33,555 --> 00:46:35,642 AFTER 300 OR 400 MILES A DAY AT A BUS, 555 00:46:35,767 --> 00:46:37,896 WE COULDN'T WAIT TO GET ON THE BANDSTAND, 556 00:46:38,064 --> 00:46:39,608 WE HAD THAT VITALITY. 557 00:46:39,733 --> 00:46:41,612 WE WANTED TO PLAY, YOU KNOW, 558 00:46:41,737 --> 00:46:44,410 EVEN IF WE HADN'T EATEN ALL DAY. 559 00:46:44,535 --> 00:46:47,249 'COURSE WHEN I FIRST JOINED THE BAND, 560 00:46:47,416 --> 00:46:50,088 WE WERE MAKING ABOUT $8.00 A NIGHT. 561 00:46:50,213 --> 00:46:51,591 SO WE DIDN'T PLAY FOR THE MONEY. 562 00:46:51,757 --> 00:47:01,277 WE PLAYED FOR OURSELVES. WE JUST LOVED TO PLAY. 563 00:47:01,402 --> 00:47:03,823 TRAVELING COULD BE REALLY KIND OF ROUGH 564 00:47:03,948 --> 00:47:05,827 BECAUSE WE'D TRAVEL FOR HOURS, 565 00:47:05,952 --> 00:47:07,873 AND THEN WE'D HAVE TO GET OUT OF THE BUS, 566 00:47:07,999 --> 00:47:11,923 GET ON THE STAGE, AND DO A GREAT SHOW. 567 00:47:12,049 --> 00:47:13,676 AND SOMEHOW, IT'S SO FUNNY, 568 00:47:13,801 --> 00:47:15,597 THAT THE MORE DIFFICULT THE TRAVELING WAS 569 00:47:15,722 --> 00:47:19,063 OR THE MORE TIRED EVERYONE WAS, THE GREATER THE MUSIC. 570 00:47:19,188 --> 00:47:23,112 THE GUYS WOULD COME OFF OF A LONG, LONG RIDE 571 00:47:23,238 --> 00:47:27,162 AND SIT ON THAT BANDSTAND AND BLOW US AWAY. 572 00:47:27,287 --> 00:47:32,464 IT WAS UNBELIEVABLE. 573 00:47:32,589 --> 00:47:35,136 ♪♪ I DON'T WANT YOU ♪ 574 00:47:35,262 --> 00:47:37,474 ♪♪ BUT HATE TO LOSE YOU ♪♪ 575 00:47:37,599 --> 00:47:39,979 ♪♪ YOU GOT ME IN BETWEEN ♪♪ 576 00:47:40,105 --> 00:47:42,693 ♪♪ THE DEVIL AND THE DEEP BLUE SEA ♪♪ 577 00:47:42,859 --> 00:47:44,071 ♪♪ OH... ♪♪ 578 00:47:44,196 --> 00:47:49,665 THE MEN DRANK HARD, GAMBLED HARD, PLAYED HARD. 579 00:47:49,790 --> 00:47:52,421 ♪♪ ...YOU'VE GOT ME IN BETWEEN ♪ 580 00:47:52,546 --> 00:47:56,220 ♪♪ THE DEVIL AND THE DEEP BLUE SEA ♪♪ 581 00:47:56,387 --> 00:47:58,391 ♪♪ I OUGHT TO CROSS YOU OFF MY LIST ♪♪ 582 00:47:58,516 --> 00:48:01,939 ♪♪ BUT WHEN YOU COME A-KNOCKIN' AT MY DOOR ♪♪ 583 00:48:02,065 --> 00:48:04,278 ♪♪ FATE SEEMS TO GIVE MY HEART A TWIST ♪♪ 584 00:48:04,403 --> 00:48:07,576 ♪♪ AND I COME RUNNING BACK FOR MORE ♪♪ 585 00:48:07,743 --> 00:48:10,665 ♪♪ I SHOULD HATE YOU ♪♪ 586 00:48:10,790 --> 00:48:13,880 ♪♪ BUT I GUESS I LOVE YOU ♪♪ 587 00:48:14,005 --> 00:48:16,344 ♪♪ YOU'VE GOT ME IN BETWEEN ♪♪ 588 00:48:16,469 --> 00:48:38,262 ♪♪ THE DEVIL AND THE DEEP BLUE SEA ♪♪ 589 00:48:38,388 --> 00:48:41,644 BUS 112 FOR NEWARK, NEW JERSEY-- 590 00:48:41,769 --> 00:48:43,272 "ALL YOU NEED TO SURVIVE ON THE ROAD," 591 00:48:43,398 --> 00:48:45,151 BENNY GOODMAN'S GREAT TRUMPET PLAYER 592 00:48:45,276 --> 00:48:46,779 BUNNY BERRIGAN ONCE SAID, 593 00:48:46,904 --> 00:48:51,372 "WAS A TOOTHBRUSH AND A PHOTO OF LOUIS ARMSTRONG." 594 00:48:54,837 --> 00:48:58,970 "NOVEMBER 1-- HAVING BUS TROUBLE. 595 00:48:59,096 --> 00:49:01,225 "STAY ON ROAD ALL NIGHT. 596 00:49:01,350 --> 00:49:03,521 "WEATHER COLD. 597 00:49:03,688 --> 00:49:07,779 "ORCHESTRA MAKES BONFIRE WITH BUS TIRE. 598 00:49:07,904 --> 00:49:11,537 "GET HELP NEXT MORNING. 599 00:49:11,704 --> 00:49:16,255 "NOVEMBER 7--BUS SEIZED BY CLOTHING STORE, 600 00:49:16,380 --> 00:49:19,178 "FINALLY REDEEMED... 601 00:49:19,303 --> 00:49:23,519 "TOO LATE FOR ORCHESTRA TO MAKE DATE IN CUMBERLAND, KENTUCKY. 602 00:49:23,644 --> 00:49:26,776 "WOMAN PROPRIETOR OF SOUTHERN HOTEL HOLDS 603 00:49:26,901 --> 00:49:29,823 KING OLIVER'S TRUMPET FOR RENT." 604 00:49:29,948 --> 00:49:34,583 PAUL BARNES. 605 00:49:34,750 --> 00:49:39,176 ON THE ROAD, BAND LEADERS RARELY PAID FOR FOOD OR LODGING, 606 00:49:39,201 --> 00:49:43,110 SO MANY MUSICIANS SPENT EVERY OTHER NIGHT SLEEPING ON THE BUS 607 00:49:43,135 --> 00:49:45,389 TO SAVE A LITTLE MONEY. 608 00:49:46,203 --> 00:49:49,652 SOME BANDS WERE TOO POOR TO AFFORD A BUS AT ALL. 609 00:49:49,719 --> 00:49:53,435 AS MANY AS 10 MUSICIANS PACKED INTO A SINGLE TOURING CAR 610 00:49:53,560 --> 00:49:58,027 AND HAULED THEIR INSTRUMENTS IN A TRAILER. 611 00:49:58,152 --> 00:50:02,745 SOMETIMES, STRANDED BETWEEN ENGAGEMENTS, 612 00:50:02,870 --> 00:50:07,128 THEY WOULD SIMPLY PULL INTO A ROADHOUSE, BEGIN TO PLAY, 613 00:50:07,174 --> 00:50:11,844 AND HOPE PASSING THE HAT WOULD RAISE ENOUGH CASH TO BUY DINNER. 614 00:50:24,070 --> 00:50:26,282 TRAVELING IN SEGREGATED AMERICA, 615 00:50:26,407 --> 00:50:28,913 THE MUSICIANS WHO HAD BEEN THE FIRST TO PLAY SWING 616 00:50:29,038 --> 00:50:32,963 HAD TO OVERCOME OBSTACLES UNKNOWN TO WHITES. 617 00:50:33,088 --> 00:50:38,390 BLACK MUSICIANS WERE GENERALLY PAID FAR LESS, 618 00:50:38,516 --> 00:50:41,772 BARRED FROM CAFES AND RESTROOMS ALONG THE ROAD, 619 00:50:41,897 --> 00:50:45,572 WERE RARELY PERMITTED TO EAT OR SLEEP AT THE HOTELS 620 00:50:45,697 --> 00:50:48,578 WHERE THEY PERFORMED, 621 00:50:48,703 --> 00:50:53,336 BUT THEY FOUND A READY WELCOME IN BLACK NEIGHBORHOODS. 622 00:50:53,504 --> 00:50:56,217 THERE WERE BLACK-OWNED AND OPERATED HOTELS 623 00:50:56,342 --> 00:50:59,600 AND ROOMING-HOUSES IN EVERY BIG TOWN. 624 00:50:59,725 --> 00:51:02,814 AND THERE WAS A NETWORK OF CELEBRATED COOKS 625 00:51:02,939 --> 00:51:06,195 EAGER TO CATER TO BLACK MUSICIANS. 626 00:51:06,321 --> 00:51:09,995 "THEY COOKED FOR YOU LIKE THEY COOKED FOR THEIR FAMILY," 627 00:51:10,120 --> 00:51:12,166 ONE BAND-MEMBER REMEMBERED. 628 00:51:12,291 --> 00:51:26,612 "AND THEY DIDN'T MIND FILLING YOUR PLATE UP." 629 00:51:26,737 --> 00:51:28,616 AND WE'D GET IN TOWN FROM THE BUS 630 00:51:28,741 --> 00:51:30,452 JUST IN TIME TO GET THE INSTRUMENTS OUT 631 00:51:30,578 --> 00:51:33,960 AND SET UP THE BANDSTAND AND GO TO PLAY. 632 00:51:34,085 --> 00:51:35,588 HADN'T HAD ANYTHING TO EAT. 633 00:51:35,713 --> 00:51:38,259 I HAD NO PLACE TO STAY, OR ANYTHING. 634 00:51:38,385 --> 00:51:40,097 WE UP THERE PLAYING, AND THE PEOPLE CRAMMED IN THERE, 635 00:51:40,263 --> 00:51:43,353 AND MY WIFE MONA WOULD BE THE ONLY GIRL TRAVELING WITH THE BAND, 636 00:51:43,478 --> 00:51:46,652 SHE WOULD GO AROUND TO THE BLACK NEIGHBORHOODS AND TALK TO THE LADIES. 637 00:51:46,777 --> 00:51:48,488 SHE SAYS, "WE HAVEN'T HAD ANYTHING TO EAT. 638 00:51:48,614 --> 00:51:50,117 WE HAVEN'T HAD ANY PLACE TO STAY." 639 00:51:50,283 --> 00:51:52,037 AND THESE LADIES WERE AWFUL NICE. 640 00:51:52,162 --> 00:51:53,456 THEY WOULD GET TOGETHER AND CALL ONE ANOTHER, SAY, 641 00:51:53,624 --> 00:51:55,795 "WELL, MRS. JONES WILL TAKE TWO OVER AT HER HUSBAND'S HOUSE, 642 00:51:55,962 --> 00:51:57,799 AND MRS. SMITH SAY, SHE'LL TAKE TWO." 643 00:51:57,966 --> 00:52:02,474 BY INTERMISSION TIME, MONA WOULD COME DOWN TO THAT BANDSTAND 644 00:52:02,600 --> 00:52:04,730 WITH A GREAT BIG BASKET OF CHICKEN AND POTATO SALAD 645 00:52:06,692 --> 00:52:08,821 "'DIZZY, YOU AND CHU BERRY ARE STAYING OVER AT MRS. JONES HOUSE; 646 00:52:08,946 --> 00:52:11,492 CHARLIE, YOU AND SO-AND-SO OVER AT MRS. SMITH'S HOUSE." 647 00:52:11,618 --> 00:52:12,829 AND THIS IS THE WAY WE SURVIVED... 648 00:52:20,469 --> 00:52:24,060 Man: VARIETY. JUNE, 1937. 649 00:52:24,185 --> 00:52:26,648 "ATTENDANCE RECORDS ARE BEING BROKEN 650 00:52:26,774 --> 00:52:28,861 "PRACTICALLY EVERY NIGHT OF THE WEEK. 651 00:52:28,986 --> 00:52:32,326 "CLAIM IS THAT MANY OF THE SMALLER SPOTS, 652 00:52:32,451 --> 00:52:34,956 "INCLUDING THOSE FAR OFF THE BEATEN PATH, 653 00:52:35,082 --> 00:52:40,092 "TURN IN BETTER GROSSES THAN RECOGNIZED CITY PALACES. 654 00:52:40,217 --> 00:52:44,225 "REASON IS THAT EVEN THE BARE-FOOTED POPULATION 655 00:52:44,350 --> 00:53:18,836 RECOGNIZE BAND NAMES WHEN THEY HEAR 'EM." 656 00:53:29,941 --> 00:53:31,485 ♪♪ THERE ARE SMILES ♪♪ 657 00:53:31,611 --> 00:53:33,239 ♪♪ SILLY OL' SMILES ♪♪ 658 00:53:33,364 --> 00:53:35,410 ♪♪ THAT MAKE US HAPPY ♪♪ 659 00:53:35,535 --> 00:53:36,537 ♪♪ HAPPY ALL DAY ♪♪ 660 00:53:36,663 --> 00:53:38,291 WHEN WE TALK ABOUT SWING, 661 00:53:38,416 --> 00:53:41,505 THE SWING BANDS, IT'S A LITTLE DICEY 662 00:53:41,631 --> 00:53:43,176 AS TO WHETHER WE'RE GOING TO CALL THIS JAZZ OR NOT. 663 00:53:43,343 --> 00:53:45,180 ♪♪ THERE ARE SMILES ♪♪ 664 00:53:45,305 --> 00:53:49,689 ♪♪ THAT STEAL AWAY THE TEARDROPS ♪♪ 665 00:53:49,856 --> 00:53:51,818 BECAUSE A GREAT DEAL OF THAT MUSIC REALLY WAS 666 00:53:51,944 --> 00:53:55,952 PRETTY COMMERCIAL STUFF. 667 00:53:56,077 --> 00:53:58,206 THE KIDS OUT THERE, MOST OF THEM, LIKE ANY KIDS, 668 00:53:58,373 --> 00:54:01,420 WERE INTERESTED IN POPULAR MUSIC BECAUSE THAT WAS THE HIP THING, 669 00:54:01,545 --> 00:54:03,258 YOU HAD TO KNOW THE NAMES OF THE BANDS. 670 00:54:03,383 --> 00:54:05,011 ♪♪ BUT THE SMILES ♪♪ 671 00:54:05,136 --> 00:54:08,559 ♪♪ THAT FILLED MY LIFE WITH SUNSHINE ♪♪ 672 00:54:08,686 --> 00:54:09,896 ♪♪ YES, YES ♪♪ 673 00:54:10,021 --> 00:54:11,565 ♪♪ ARE THE SMILES ♪♪ 674 00:54:11,692 --> 00:54:20,000 ♪♪ THAT YOU GIVE TO ME ♪♪ 675 00:54:20,125 --> 00:54:22,212 THAT'S SWING MUSIC IF I EVER HEARD IT. 676 00:54:28,892 --> 00:54:30,938 ADULTS LOVED SWING MUSIC, 677 00:54:31,063 --> 00:54:40,958 BUT IT WAS TEENAGERS WHO MADE IT A NATIONAL CRAZE. 678 00:54:41,125 --> 00:54:43,756 TRUMPET SALES DOUBLED, 679 00:54:43,881 --> 00:54:46,010 AND SALES OF CLARINETS, 680 00:54:46,135 --> 00:54:51,437 ARTIE SHAW'S AND BENNY GOODMAN'S INSTRUMENT, TRIPLED. 681 00:54:51,562 --> 00:54:54,360 THERE WAS AN UNOFFICIAL SWING "UNIFORM." 682 00:54:54,485 --> 00:54:57,032 BOYS DRESSED IN SPORT JACKETS AND SLACKS, 683 00:54:57,157 --> 00:55:00,246 LIKE THE ONES THEIR HEROES WORE ON THE BANDSTAND. 684 00:55:00,372 --> 00:55:03,879 GIRLS FAVORED BOBBY SOCKS AND SADDLE SHOES, 685 00:55:04,004 --> 00:55:07,868 AND PLEATED SKIRTS THAT FLARED WHEN THEY GOT ONTO THE DANCE FLOOR. 686 00:55:24,205 --> 00:55:26,751 FANS HAD THEIR OWN LANGUAGE, TOO, 687 00:55:26,876 --> 00:55:28,797 AND THE BANDLEADER CAB CALLOWAY 688 00:55:28,922 --> 00:55:33,223 PUBLISHED A HEPSTER'S DICTIONARY TO AID THE UNINITIATED. 689 00:55:33,348 --> 00:55:36,771 A HOT NUMBER WAS A "KILLER-DILLER." 690 00:55:36,938 --> 00:55:41,155 "ARMSTRONGS" WERE MUSICAL NOTES IN THE UPPER REGISTER. 691 00:55:41,280 --> 00:55:44,286 "SWINGAROOS" OR "HEP CATS" 692 00:55:44,411 --> 00:55:47,292 WERE DIVIDED BETWEEN "JITTERBUGS," WHO DANCED, 693 00:55:47,417 --> 00:55:49,547 AND "ICKIES," WHO DIDN'T 694 00:55:49,672 --> 00:55:53,513 BUT STAYED ON THE SIDELINES SHOUTING ENCOURAGEMENT TO THE MUSICIANS 695 00:55:53,638 --> 00:55:58,395 AND CLAPPING... USUALLY BEHIND THE BEAT. 696 00:56:00,277 --> 00:56:03,825 EVERY IMPORTANT BANDLEADER HAD A FAN CLUB. 697 00:56:03,950 --> 00:56:08,000 YOUNG WOMEN SHOWERED THE BEST-LOOKING PLAYERS WITH LETTERS... 698 00:56:08,125 --> 00:56:12,634 AND TELEPHONE NUMBERS. 699 00:56:12,759 --> 00:56:19,899 ARTIE SHAW ONCE DISMISSED JITTERBUGS AND ICKIES ALIKE AS "MORONS." 700 00:56:20,024 --> 00:56:21,527 AND EVEN BENNY GOODMAN, 701 00:56:21,694 --> 00:56:25,535 WHOSE APPEARANCE AT THE PARAMOUNT HAD PULLED THEM OUT OF THEIR SEATS, 702 00:56:25,660 --> 00:56:32,883 CONFESSED HE WAS SOMETIMES FRIGHTENED BY THEIR ENTHUSIASM. 703 00:56:33,008 --> 00:56:36,227 TO BE A BAND LEADER AT THAT TIME WAS TO BE, I SUPPOSE YOU COULD SAY, 704 00:56:36,252 --> 00:56:38,089 LIKE A ROCK MUSICIAN MORE RECENTLY. 705 00:56:39,521 --> 00:56:41,734 THEY WERE COURTED BY THE WHOLE CULTURE. 706 00:56:41,901 --> 00:56:43,446 THESE WERE THE NEW CELEBRITIES. 707 00:56:43,571 --> 00:56:45,575 AND IT WAS SOMETHING NEW IN THE MUSIC. 708 00:56:45,700 --> 00:56:47,579 IT WAS SOMETHING NEW IN AMERICAN POPULAR CULTURE, 709 00:56:47,704 --> 00:56:49,458 AND IT LASTED FOR ALMOST 10 YEARS. 710 00:56:54,426 --> 00:56:57,265 BUT SWING HAD ITS CRITICS. 711 00:56:57,391 --> 00:57:02,526 THE SWEET BANDLEADER BLUE BARRON DENOUNCED IT AS "NOTHING BUT ORCHESTRATED SEX.... 712 00:57:02,651 --> 00:57:07,118 A PHALLIC SYMBOL SET TO SOUND..." 713 00:57:07,244 --> 00:57:13,297 AND DR. A.A. BRILL, A NOTED PSYCHIATRIST, WAS EVEN MORE CONCERNED. 714 00:57:13,423 --> 00:57:20,478 SWING MUSIC REPRESENTS OUR REGRESSION TO THE PRIMITIVE TOM-TOM-TOM, 715 00:57:20,603 --> 00:57:25,447 A RHYTHMIC SOUND THAT PLEASES SAVAGES AND CHILDREN ALIKE. 716 00:57:25,572 --> 00:57:32,294 IT ACTS AS A NARCOTIC AND MAKES THEM FORGET REALITY. 717 00:57:32,419 --> 00:57:37,011 THEY FORGET THE DEPRESSION, THE LOSS OF THEIR JOBS. 718 00:57:37,136 --> 00:57:43,691 IT IS LIKE TAKING A DRUG. 719 00:57:43,858 --> 00:57:48,284 MY PARENTS, ANYWAY, DIDN'T REALLY UNDERSTAND ANYTHING ABOUT MUSIC. 720 00:57:48,409 --> 00:57:49,953 WHY AM I LISTENING TO DUKE ELLINGTON? 721 00:57:50,079 --> 00:57:52,041 WHY AM I LISTENING TO LOUIS ARMSTRONG? 722 00:57:52,208 --> 00:57:53,628 AND THEY'RE OUT OF IT COMPLETELY. 723 00:57:53,753 --> 00:57:55,632 THEY DON'T EVEN WHY I'M INTO IT. 724 00:57:55,757 --> 00:57:58,763 I LOVED IT, THAT'S ALL I KNOW AND THAT'S ALL I CARED ABOUT. 725 00:57:58,888 --> 00:58:01,101 THERE WAS THAT SENSE THAT WE WERE REBELS. 726 00:58:01,226 --> 00:58:04,525 WE WERE DOING SOMETHING THAT OUR GROWN-UPS DIDN'T KNOW ABOUT 727 00:58:04,650 --> 00:58:06,570 AND PROBABLY DIDN'T LIKE VERY WELL. 728 00:58:06,737 --> 00:58:10,077 AND THE JITTERBUGGING, OF COURSE, IS VERY MUCH A PART OF IT, 729 00:58:10,202 --> 00:58:13,083 THAT, THAT DANCING, BECAUSE IT WAS STRENUOUS, 730 00:58:13,208 --> 00:58:17,592 AND THE GIRLS WERE OUT THERE WITH THEIR LITTLE SHORT SKIRTS AND THEIR BOBBY SOCKS. 731 00:58:17,717 --> 00:58:21,892 AS THEY TWIRLED AROUND, THOSE SKIRTS WOULD RISE UP A LITTLE BIT LIKE THAT. 732 00:58:22,017 --> 00:58:24,439 NOTHING LIKE WHAT WE HAVE TODAY, MIND YOU. 733 00:58:24,565 --> 00:58:38,551 BUT IT WAS, YOU KNOW, IT WAS PRETTY NICE WHEN YOU WERE A YOUNG GUY. 734 00:58:41,807 --> 00:58:44,646 I'M AT MY FRESHMAN YEAR, GONZAGA UNIVERSITY. 735 00:58:44,771 --> 00:58:47,151 I'M IN THE GYMNASIUM ONE DAY. 736 00:58:47,189 --> 00:58:48,744 AND I'M SITTING AT THE PIANO. 737 00:58:48,769 --> 00:58:50,648 AND I'M PLAYING. 738 00:58:50,673 --> 00:58:52,969 AND THIS GUY COMES IN AND LISTENED... 739 00:58:53,401 --> 00:58:55,957 WITH HIS ARM ON THE TOP OF THE PIANO. 740 00:58:55,982 --> 00:59:00,031 AND HE'S LISTENING TO ME, AND HE'S LOOKING AT ME, AND HE'S KINDA GRINNING. 741 00:59:00,198 --> 00:59:03,868 SO I FINALLY STOPPED AND I SAID, "WELL, HOW DO YOU LIKE IT?" 742 00:59:03,893 --> 00:59:05,229 OR SOMETHING LIKE THAT. 743 00:59:05,778 --> 00:59:10,746 AND HE SAID, "I LIKE YOUR TOUCH, YOU GOT A NICE TOUCH. 744 00:59:10,871 --> 00:59:14,294 "BUT YOU'RE NOT PLAYING THE RIGHT STYLE. 745 00:59:14,419 --> 00:59:17,092 YOU'RE NOT PLAYING THE RIGHT WAY TO PLAY." 746 00:59:17,217 --> 00:59:20,223 HE TAKES ME DOWNSTAIRS, AND HE SETS ME DOWN IN THIS ROOM, 747 00:59:20,348 --> 00:59:23,229 AND HE PUTS THIS TEDDY WILSON ON RECORD ON WITH BENNY GOODMAN. 748 00:59:23,354 --> 00:59:26,235 AND I HAD NEVER HEARD THIS KIND OF MUSIC BEFORE IN MY LIFE. 749 00:59:26,360 --> 00:59:27,905 NEVER HEARD ANY JAZZ. 750 00:59:28,030 --> 00:59:29,909 I HADN'T EVEN HEARD LOUIS ARMSTRONG. 751 00:59:30,967 --> 00:59:32,596 I HADN'T HEARD ANYTHING. 752 00:59:32,656 --> 00:59:34,993 JUST AMERICAN ALBUM OF FAMILIAR MUSIC. 753 00:59:35,680 --> 00:59:38,510 AND ALL OF A SUDDEN I'M LISTENING TO THIS GUY PLAY THE PIANO. 754 00:59:38,882 --> 00:59:40,260 I SAY, "HOLY MACKEREL, 755 00:59:40,332 --> 00:59:42,544 WAIT A MINUTE, WAIT A MINUTE, WHO IS THAT?" 756 00:59:42,597 --> 00:59:44,689 HE SAID, "THAT'S TEDDY WILSON. 757 00:59:44,814 --> 00:59:47,928 AND THAT'S THE WAY YOU SHOULD PLAY THE PIANO, ACE." 758 00:59:51,368 --> 00:59:53,874 ONE OF BENNY GOODMAN'S BEST-LOVED RECORDS 759 00:59:53,999 --> 00:59:56,755 HAD BEEN BODY AND SOUL, 760 00:59:56,880 --> 01:00:02,767 PLAYED BY A TRIO HE USED ONLY AT RECORDING DATES. 761 01:00:02,892 --> 01:00:05,731 THE WHOLE COUNTRY HAD HEARD THE RECORD, 762 01:00:05,856 --> 01:00:10,114 BUT IT HAD NEVER OCCURRED TO GOODMAN TO BRING THE TRIO ON STAGE 763 01:00:10,239 --> 01:00:12,745 BECAUSE THE PIANO PLAYER, TEDDY WILSON, 764 01:00:12,870 --> 01:00:17,630 WAS A BLACK MAN. 765 01:00:17,755 --> 01:00:21,638 WILSON WAS THE RESERVED, URBANE SON OF A LIBRARIAN 766 01:00:21,763 --> 01:00:26,480 AND A PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH AT TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE. 767 01:00:28,108 --> 01:00:30,948 HIS LIGHT TOUCH AND SEEMINGLY EFFORTLESS TECHNIQUE 768 01:00:31,114 --> 01:00:33,703 PERFECTLY MATCHED GOODMAN'S OWN PLAYING. 769 01:00:39,924 --> 01:00:43,807 THERE WAS NEVER A PIANO PLAYER LIKE TEDDY WILSON. 770 01:00:43,932 --> 01:00:46,855 I THINK ONE OF THE THINGS THAT DISTINGUISHES HIM 771 01:00:46,980 --> 01:00:49,526 FROM ALL THE PIANO PLAYERS WHO PRECEDE HIM-- 772 01:00:49,652 --> 01:00:50,946 WALLER, DUKE ELLINGTON-- 773 01:00:51,071 --> 01:00:53,158 IS THEY HAD A VERY PERCUSSIVE TACK. 774 01:00:53,284 --> 01:01:01,843 TEDDY WILSON HAD A LIGHT, LYRICAL TACK. 775 01:01:01,968 --> 01:01:03,555 IT'S AN EXQUISITE SOUND. 776 01:01:03,680 --> 01:01:08,857 HE MAKES EVERY KEY SOUND LIKE A CHIME OR A BELL. 777 01:01:08,982 --> 01:01:25,556 AND HE'S VERY FAST. 778 01:01:25,724 --> 01:01:29,397 AND YOU REALIZE THAT NO ONE HAS EVER MADE THE PIANO SOUND QUITE LIKE THAT. 779 01:01:29,564 --> 01:01:32,070 AFTER TWO MEASURES YOU KNOW IT CAN'T BE ANYBODY ELSE BUT TEDDY WILSON. 780 01:01:35,368 --> 01:01:41,965 GOODMAN HAD FIRST PLAYED WITH WILSON AT A JAM SESSION IN 1934. 781 01:01:42,090 --> 01:01:44,720 "TEDDY AND I BEGAN TO PLAY," HE REMEMBERED, 782 01:01:44,845 --> 01:01:49,939 "AS THOUGH WE WERE THINKING WITH THE SAME BRAIN." 783 01:01:50,064 --> 01:01:55,951 WITHIN WEEKS, GOODMAN HAD BROUGHT HIS DRUMMER, GENE KRUPA, AND WILSON INTO THE STUDIO 784 01:01:56,076 --> 01:01:58,999 TO RECORD TOGETHER. 785 01:01:59,124 --> 01:02:01,503 BUT WHEN A CONCERT WAS SCHEDULED IN CHICAGO 786 01:02:01,629 --> 01:02:06,973 AND THE PROMOTER, HELEN OAKLEY, SUGGESTED WILSON BE INCLUDED ON THE PROGRAM, 787 01:02:07,098 --> 01:02:11,481 GOODMAN WAS RELUCTANT. 788 01:02:11,606 --> 01:02:14,195 I SAID, "LET ME BRING TEDDY IN. 789 01:02:14,333 --> 01:02:17,256 THAT'LL BE A TREMENDOUS ATTRACTION." 790 01:02:17,368 --> 01:02:19,915 BENNY SAID, "I'M NOT SUCH A FOOL. 791 01:02:20,041 --> 01:02:22,003 "I'M MAKING A HIT HERE, 792 01:02:22,128 --> 01:02:24,215 "AND I'M--THIS IS GONNA BE MY CAREER. 793 01:02:24,340 --> 01:02:25,593 "I DON'T WANT TO WRECK EVERYTHING 794 01:02:25,719 --> 01:02:30,186 "TO PRESENT A BLACK TALENT IN THE MIDDLE OF EVERYTHING. 795 01:02:30,352 --> 01:02:32,190 AND SO I DON'T LIKE THE IDEA." 796 01:02:32,356 --> 01:02:35,196 THIS WAS THE DEPRESSION, MIND YOU, 797 01:02:35,362 --> 01:02:40,206 AND THE LAST THING HE WANTED TO DO WAS TO JEOPARDIZE THIS 798 01:02:40,372 --> 01:02:42,543 AND THROW IT ALL OUT THE WINDOW 799 01:02:42,711 --> 01:02:49,725 BY TAKING WHAT SEEMED TO EVERYBODY TO BE A GREAT CHANCE. 800 01:02:49,850 --> 01:02:55,236 HELEN OAKLEY, WHO KNEW HOW PROFOUNDLY GOODMAN HAD BEEN INFLUENCED BY BLACK MUSICIANS, 801 01:02:55,402 --> 01:02:59,452 AND WHO WAS EAGER TO SHOW THAT INTEGRATION WOULD WORK ON THE BANDSTAND, 802 01:02:59,577 --> 01:03:06,717 FINALLY CONVINCED HIM TO TAKE THE CHANCE WITH WILSON. 803 01:03:06,843 --> 01:03:12,061 BY THAT TIME, BLACK AND WHITE MUSICIANS WERE FRATERNIZING AND HAD BEEN FOR A LONG TIME. 804 01:03:12,186 --> 01:03:14,775 THEY'D GO INTO MIDNIGHT JAM SESSIONS TOGETHER 805 01:03:14,942 --> 01:03:17,221 AND SIT UNTIL 2:00, 3:00 IN THE MORNING 806 01:03:17,246 --> 01:03:18,707 BUT WHAT GOODMAN DID, 807 01:03:19,068 --> 01:03:23,159 HE PUT TEDDY WILSON IN SHOW BIZ. 808 01:03:28,399 --> 01:03:37,124 GOODMAN NEVER FORGOT THE TRIO'S FIRST APPEARANCE IN PUBLIC. 809 01:03:37,250 --> 01:03:43,011 "THE THREE OF US WORKED TOGETHER AS IF WE HAD BEEN BORN TO PLAY THIS WAY," HE SAID. 810 01:03:43,136 --> 01:03:47,019 "THE GOODMAN THING WAS AS SOLID AS A FAMILY," WILSON SAID LATER. 811 01:03:47,144 --> 01:04:03,553 "WE WERE ALL THERE, JUST LIKE BROTHERS." 812 01:04:03,678 --> 01:04:07,268 BENNY GOODMAN NOW SAW NO REASON WHY MERE CUSTOM AND PREJUDICE 813 01:04:07,394 --> 01:04:12,069 SHOULD KEEP HIM FROM IMPROVING HIS BAND BY ENLISTING MORE GREAT MUSICIANS 814 01:04:12,194 --> 01:04:18,916 JUST BECAUSE THEY WERE BLACK. 815 01:04:19,042 --> 01:04:21,589 IN A RUNDOWN BAR IN LOS ANGELES, 816 01:04:21,714 --> 01:04:23,635 HE HEARD LIONEL HAMPTON, 817 01:04:23,760 --> 01:04:27,099 A MASTER OF A NEW INSTRUMENT, THE VIBRAPHONE. 818 01:04:27,224 --> 01:04:29,980 GOODMAN HIRED HIM ON THE SPOT 819 01:04:30,105 --> 01:04:32,861 AND TRANSFORMED THE TRIO INTO A QUARTET. 820 01:04:50,814 --> 01:04:52,651 THEY PLAY EVERY NIGHT, 821 01:04:52,776 --> 01:04:58,161 AND THEY MAKE MUSIC YOU WOULD NOT BELIEVE. 822 01:04:58,286 --> 01:04:59,665 NOT A FALSE NOTE, 823 01:04:59,790 --> 01:05:03,715 ONE FINISHING HIS SOLO AND DROPPING INTO BACKGROUND SUPPORT, 824 01:05:03,840 --> 01:05:05,342 THEN THE OTHER, 825 01:05:05,510 --> 01:05:08,348 ALL ADDING INSPIRATION 826 01:05:08,474 --> 01:05:28,430 UNTIL THEY GET GOING TOO STRONG TO QUIT. 827 01:05:28,556 --> 01:05:32,731 THIS IS REALLY COMPOSITION ON THE SPOT, 828 01:05:32,898 --> 01:05:34,735 AND IT IS A COLLECTIVE THING, 829 01:05:34,860 --> 01:05:37,616 THE MOST BEAUTIFUL EXAMPLE OF MEN WORKING TOGETHER 830 01:05:37,741 --> 01:05:40,914 TO BE SEEN IN PUBLIC TODAY. 831 01:05:41,080 --> 01:05:53,898 OTIS FERGUSON, THE NEW REPUBLIC. 832 01:05:54,023 --> 01:05:56,821 DESPITE THE QUARTET'S SUCCESS, 833 01:05:56,946 --> 01:06:01,580 FEW OTHER WHITE BANDLEADERS WOULD DARE FOLLOW GOODMAN'S LEAD. 834 01:06:01,705 --> 01:06:03,835 THE MUSIC MAY HAVE BEEN COLOR-BLIND, 835 01:06:03,960 --> 01:06:09,345 BUT THE COUNTRY WASN'T. 836 01:06:09,470 --> 01:06:12,644 WE HAD A PLACE WHERE WE WERE SITTING 837 01:06:12,769 --> 01:06:16,484 AND WHERE THE MUSICIANS COULD STOP AND HAVE A DRINK. 838 01:06:16,652 --> 01:06:19,490 AND A GUY CAME OVER TO BENNY AND SAY, 839 01:06:19,616 --> 01:06:25,127 "WELL, BENNY, WHAT YOU DOING WITH THOSE NIGGERS IN THE BAND?" 840 01:06:25,252 --> 01:06:28,383 AND BENNY SAY, "IF YOU SAY THAT AGAIN TO ME, 841 01:06:28,509 --> 01:06:31,014 I'LL TAKE THE CLARINET AND BUST YOU ACROSS THE HEAD WITH IT." 842 01:06:41,117 --> 01:06:44,666 WELL, JAZZ DEFINITELY IS ABOUT THE POSSIBILITIES OF OUR-- 843 01:06:44,791 --> 01:06:46,377 INHERENT IN OUR SYSTEM, 844 01:06:46,545 --> 01:06:51,220 BECAUSE WHEN A BAND PLAYS, THEY'RE DEALING WITH A NEGOTIATION. 845 01:06:51,346 --> 01:06:53,893 THE THING ABOUT JAZZ IS IT'S A HEALING, 846 01:06:54,018 --> 01:06:58,276 BUT NOT BY RUNNING. 847 01:06:58,401 --> 01:07:00,949 IT'S THE TYPE OF HEALING OF THE ENGAGEMENT. 848 01:07:01,074 --> 01:07:02,284 IT'S LIKE, WELL, 849 01:07:02,409 --> 01:07:05,123 UH, WE HAVE A-- WE HAVE A PROBLEM. 850 01:07:05,248 --> 01:07:07,712 BUT WE'RE GOING TO HEAL IT WITH SOME SOUL. 851 01:07:07,837 --> 01:07:10,969 BUT IN ORDER FOR US TO HEAL IT, WE HAVE TO DEAL WITH IT. 852 01:07:11,094 --> 01:07:12,639 AND WE CAN'T RUN FROM IT. 853 01:07:12,764 --> 01:07:46,497 AND THE MORE WE RUN FROM IT, THE MORE WE RUN INTO IT. 854 01:07:46,623 --> 01:07:48,501 IN 1935, 855 01:07:48,627 --> 01:07:52,009 DUKE ELLINGTON ASKED A MOSTLY UNKNOWN 19-YEAR-OLD SINGER 856 01:07:52,134 --> 01:08:11,965 TO APPEAR IN A SHORT FILM CALLED "SYMPHONY IN BLACK." 857 01:08:12,091 --> 01:08:16,767 ♪♪ SADDEST TALE ON LAND OR SEA ♪ 858 01:08:16,892 --> 01:08:22,152 ♪♪ WAS WHEN MY MAN WALKED OUT ON ME ♪♪ 859 01:08:22,277 --> 01:08:25,575 HER NAME WAS BILLIE HOLIDAY 860 01:08:25,743 --> 01:08:29,375 AND SHE HAD ALREADY BEEN LIVING THE KIND OF HARD LIFE 861 01:08:29,500 --> 01:08:31,420 SHE PORTRAYED IN THE FILM. 862 01:08:31,546 --> 01:08:37,432 ♪♪ MY MAN'S GONE, I FEELS ALONE ♪♪ 863 01:08:37,558 --> 01:08:43,111 ♪♪ I'VE GOT THOSE LOST MY MAN BLUES ♪♪ 864 01:08:43,278 --> 01:08:46,159 ♪♪ HE DIDN'T TREAT ME FAIR ♪♪ 865 01:08:46,284 --> 01:08:49,123 ♪♪ IT'S MORE THAN I CAN BEAR ♪♪ 866 01:08:49,248 --> 01:08:54,633 ♪♪ I'VE GOT THOSE LOST MY MAN BLUES ♪♪ 867 01:08:54,759 --> 01:08:57,849 ♪♪ I'VE GOT THOSE LOST MY MAN ♪♪ 868 01:08:57,974 --> 01:09:06,302 ♪♪ CAN'T GET HIM BACK AGAIN BLUES ♪♪ 869 01:09:06,329 --> 01:09:10,165 SHE HAD BEEN BORN ELEANORA FAGAN IN 1915 870 01:09:10,290 --> 01:09:12,969 AND WAS BROUGHT UP IN BALTIMORE. 871 01:09:13,036 --> 01:09:14,915 HER PARENTS NEVER MARRIED, 872 01:09:15,040 --> 01:09:17,252 AND SHE YEARNED ALL OF HER CHILDHOOD 873 01:09:17,378 --> 01:09:18,923 FOR HER MOSTLY ABSENT FATHER, 874 01:09:19,090 --> 01:09:20,483 CLARENCE HOLIDAY, 875 01:09:20,508 --> 01:09:25,435 A GUITARIST WHO ONCE PLAYED WITH FLETCHER HENDERSON. 876 01:09:26,104 --> 01:09:30,947 HER FATHER'S FLASHY EXAMPLE HELPED LURE HER INTO THE MUSIC BUSINESS, 877 01:09:31,072 --> 01:09:34,997 BUT HIS HUSTLING WAYS WERE MIRRORED IN MANY OF THE PREDATORY MEN 878 01:09:35,122 --> 01:09:41,522 TO WHOM SHE WOULD BE ATTRACTED ALL HER LIFE. 879 01:09:41,569 --> 01:09:44,073 SHE WAS MOLESTED AND ABUSED AS A CHILD, 880 01:09:44,240 --> 01:09:46,077 AND BY THE AGE OF 12, 881 01:09:46,202 --> 01:09:50,085 SHE WAS WORKING AS A PROSTITUTE IN A WATERFRONT WHOREHOUSE. 882 01:09:50,453 --> 01:09:52,374 SHE EARNED EXTRA MONEY 883 01:09:52,399 --> 01:09:55,070 SINGING ALONG WITH THE VICTROLA IN THE PARLOR-- 884 01:09:55,454 --> 01:09:58,460 THE MUSIC OF LOUIS ARMSTRONG AND BESSIE SMITH. 885 01:10:04,786 --> 01:10:06,998 AT 13, SHE WAS IN NEW YORK, 886 01:10:07,509 --> 01:10:09,606 SINGING FOR TIPS AT RENT PARTIES 887 01:10:09,631 --> 01:10:11,133 AND SMALL HARLEM CLUBS, 888 01:10:11,616 --> 01:10:13,495 SINGING FOR FUN AT JAM SESSIONS, 889 01:10:13,520 --> 01:10:17,737 AND EVENTUALLY RENAMING HERSELF BILLIE HOLIDAY, 890 01:10:17,762 --> 01:10:19,406 AFTER HER ABSENT FATHER. 891 01:10:23,611 --> 01:10:25,490 ONE EVENING IN 1933, 892 01:10:25,615 --> 01:10:28,496 SHE WAS SINGING IN A CLUB CALLED MONETTE'S 893 01:10:28,621 --> 01:10:36,845 WHEN THE JAZZ CRITIC AND PROMOTER JOHN HAMMOND HAPPENED TO DROP BY. 894 01:10:36,971 --> 01:10:39,851 HE WAS DAZZLED BY THE WAY SHE LOOKED... 895 01:10:39,977 --> 01:10:42,356 AND BY THE WAY SHE SANG. 896 01:10:47,659 --> 01:10:52,042 ♪♪ A FINE ROMANCE ♪♪ 897 01:10:52,167 --> 01:10:56,050 ♪♪ WITH NO KISSES ♪♪ 898 01:10:56,175 --> 01:10:59,891 ♪♪ A FINE ROMANCE ♪♪ 899 01:11:00,017 --> 01:11:02,564 ♪♪ MY FRIEND, THIS IS ♪♪ 900 01:11:02,689 --> 01:11:05,235 ALTHOUGH SHE HAD A TINY VOCAL RANGE-- 901 01:11:05,402 --> 01:11:07,574 JUST OVER AN OCTAVE-- 902 01:11:07,699 --> 01:11:11,080 HOLIDAY WAS ABLE TO MAKE EACH SONG HER OWN, 903 01:11:11,205 --> 01:11:22,144 IN PART BY SINGING JUST BEHIND THE BEAT. 904 01:11:22,269 --> 01:11:27,154 SHE PHRASED THE MELODIES IN THE MANNER OF JAZZ INSTRUMENTALISTS... 905 01:11:27,279 --> 01:11:30,118 AND CONSIDERED HERSELF A MUSICIAN 906 01:11:30,243 --> 01:11:34,126 BEFORE SHE WAS A SINGER. 907 01:11:34,251 --> 01:11:39,971 ♪♪ I MIGHT AS WELL PLAY BRIDGE WITH MY OLD MAID AUNT ♪♪ 908 01:11:40,097 --> 01:11:43,478 ♪♪ I HAVEN'T GOT A CHANCE ♪♪ 909 01:11:43,604 --> 01:11:50,702 ♪♪ THIS IS A FINE ROMANCE ♪♪ 910 01:11:50,827 --> 01:11:53,999 HAMMOND EVENTUALLY ARRANGED FOR A SERIES OF RECORDING SESSIONS 911 01:11:54,125 --> 01:11:57,297 LED BY TEDDY WILSON. 912 01:11:57,423 --> 01:12:03,686 BENNY GOODMAN SOMETIMES SAT IN, TOO. 913 01:12:03,811 --> 01:12:07,694 ♪♪ A FINE ROMANCE ♪♪ 914 01:12:07,819 --> 01:12:11,702 ♪♪ MY GOOD FELLOW ♪♪ 915 01:12:11,827 --> 01:12:15,375 ♪♪ YOU TAKE ROMANCE ♪♪ 916 01:12:15,500 --> 01:12:18,506 ♪♪ I'LL TAKE JELL-O ♪♪ 917 01:12:18,632 --> 01:12:20,762 ♪♪ YOU'RE CALMER THAN... ♪♪ 918 01:12:20,887 --> 01:12:24,226 BILLIE HAD THAT STRANGE SCRATCH. 919 01:12:24,351 --> 01:12:32,034 SHE HAD THAT ASTONISHING TIMING AHEAD OF NOTES, BEHIND NOTES. 920 01:12:32,159 --> 01:12:34,748 WHEN YOU LISTEN TO THE EARLY RECORDS, 921 01:12:34,873 --> 01:12:41,260 THE BLUES FEELING, WHICH ALWAYS SUGGESTS A CERTAIN MELANCHOLY, 922 01:12:41,385 --> 01:12:48,776 LET'S SAY, YOU KNOW, IT SUGGESTS THAT LIFE IS GOING TO PLAY SOME, SOME HARD TRICK ALONG THE WAY, 923 01:12:48,901 --> 01:12:53,117 IT IS PERFECTLY BALANCED BY THIS KIND OF INSOUCIANCE. 924 01:12:53,243 --> 01:12:54,578 SHE'S TERRIBLY WITTY. 925 01:12:54,704 --> 01:12:57,125 LISTEN TO HER SINGA FINE ROMANCE 926 01:12:57,251 --> 01:12:58,963 OR ANY SUCH THING. 927 01:12:59,088 --> 01:13:02,971 SHE'S PRACTICALLY EBULLIENT WHEN SHE SOUNDS IN THOSE EARLY THINGS LIKE A HORN, 928 01:13:03,096 --> 01:13:05,308 SHE'S HAVING THE TIME OF HER LIFE. 929 01:13:05,433 --> 01:13:11,864 ♪♪ I'VE NEVER MUSSED THE CREASE IN YOUR BLUE SERGE PANTS ♪♪ 930 01:13:11,989 --> 01:13:15,830 ♪♪ I NEVER GET NO CHANCE ♪♪ 931 01:13:15,955 --> 01:13:24,513 ♪♪ THIS IS A FINE ROMANCE ♪♪ 932 01:13:24,639 --> 01:13:28,354 HOLIDAY WAS FIERCELY INDEPENDENT. 933 01:13:28,479 --> 01:13:31,360 A WOMAN WHO HAD KNOWN HER SINCE CHILDHOOD SAID, 934 01:13:31,485 --> 01:13:34,575 "SHE WAS JUST DON'T CARE-ISH." 935 01:13:36,537 --> 01:13:39,878 BILLIE HOLIDAY WOULD REMAIN DON'T CARE-ISH ALL HER LIFE, 936 01:13:40,003 --> 01:13:43,384 CURSING, DRINKING, BRAWLING, 937 01:13:43,509 --> 01:13:45,890 PURSUING PARTNERS OF BOTH SEXES, 938 01:13:46,015 --> 01:13:48,729 LEADING A LIFE SO CLOSE TO THE EDGE 939 01:13:48,896 --> 01:13:54,031 THAT IT WAS A WONDER TO HER FRIENDS THAT SHE MANAGED TO SURVIVE. 940 01:13:54,156 --> 01:13:58,081 BUT OUT OF ALL OF IT, SHE MADE UNFORGETTABLE ART 941 01:13:58,206 --> 01:14:02,130 AND WOULD EVENTUALLY BECOME THE MOST IMPORTANT FEMALE VOCALIST 942 01:14:02,255 --> 01:14:06,932 IN THE HISTORY OF JAZZ. 943 01:14:07,057 --> 01:14:15,407 ♪♪ OH, EVERY TIME IT RAINS, IT RAINS PENNIES FROM HEAVEN ♪♪ 944 01:14:15,532 --> 01:14:18,287 WHEN YOU HEAR BILLIE HOLIDAY SING, 945 01:14:18,413 --> 01:14:21,627 YOU HEAR THE SPIRIT OF BESSIE SMITH 946 01:14:21,753 --> 01:14:23,631 AND LOUIS ARMSTRONG 947 01:14:23,799 --> 01:14:26,262 TOGETHER IN A PERSON. 948 01:14:26,387 --> 01:14:30,270 SO YOU HAVE THAT FIRE OF THE BLUES SHOUTER, 949 01:14:30,395 --> 01:14:34,278 YOU HAVE THE INTELLIGENT CHOICE OF NOTES LIKE A GREAT JAZZ MUSICIAN, LIKE LOUIS ARMSTRONG. 950 01:14:34,403 --> 01:14:39,288 ♪♪ BE SURE THAT YOUR UMBRELLA ♪♪ 951 01:14:39,413 --> 01:14:44,380 ♪♪ IS UPSIDE DOWN ♪♪ 952 01:14:44,393 --> 01:14:46,022 BUT YOU HAVE A-- WITH HER, 953 01:14:46,147 --> 01:14:52,786 A VERY PROFOUND SENSITIVITY TO THE HUMAN CONDITION. 954 01:14:52,911 --> 01:14:57,928 SHE TELLS YOU SOMETHING ABOUT THE PAIN OF THE BLUES, 955 01:14:59,575 --> 01:15:00,842 OF LIFE... 956 01:15:02,346 --> 01:15:06,772 BUT INSIDE OF THAT PAIN IS A TOUGHNESS, 957 01:15:06,897 --> 01:15:09,276 AND THAT'S WHAT YOU'RE ATTRACTED TO. 958 01:15:09,401 --> 01:15:13,117 ♪♪ THERE'LL BE PENNIES FROM HEAVEN ♪♪ 959 01:15:13,243 --> 01:15:33,032 ♪♪ FOR YOU AND ME ♪♪ 960 01:15:41,499 --> 01:15:44,046 DO YOU REMEMBER WHAT IT WAS LIKE? 961 01:15:44,172 --> 01:15:45,717 MAYBE YOU DO. 962 01:15:45,842 --> 01:15:47,553 MAYBE YOU WERE THERE. 963 01:15:47,721 --> 01:15:49,892 MAYBE YOU WERE THERE IN NEW YORK 964 01:15:50,058 --> 01:15:52,313 2/3 OF THE WAY THROUGH THE 1930s 965 01:15:52,438 --> 01:15:55,569 WHEN THERE WERE SO MANY GREAT BANDS PLAYING. 966 01:15:55,737 --> 01:15:59,118 YOU COULD GO TO THE MANHATTAN ROOM OF THE HOTEL PENNSYLVANIA, 967 01:15:59,243 --> 01:16:02,082 WHERE BENNY GOODMAN WAS PLAYING WITH HIS GREAT BAND, 968 01:16:02,208 --> 01:16:04,420 COMPLETE WITH GENE KRUPA. 969 01:16:04,587 --> 01:16:07,426 MAYBE YOU'D RATHER GO TO SOME OTHER HOTEL ROOM, 970 01:16:07,593 --> 01:16:09,848 LIKE THE PALM ROOM OF THE COMMODORE 971 01:16:09,973 --> 01:16:14,273 FOR RED NORVO AND MILDRED BAILEY AND THEIR SOFT, SUBTLE SWING, 972 01:16:14,440 --> 01:16:19,116 OR TO THE GRILL ROOM OF THE LEXINGTON FOR BOB CROSBY AND HIS DIXIELAND BOB CATS. 973 01:16:19,283 --> 01:16:23,458 AND THEN 974 01:16:23,625 --> 01:16:26,005 THE ROSELAND WITH WOODY HERMAN 975 01:16:26,130 --> 01:16:29,721 AND THE SAVOY WITH CHICK WEBB. 976 01:16:29,847 --> 01:16:33,813 GEORGE T. SIMON, METRONOME. 977 01:16:33,938 --> 01:16:37,486 THE SAVOY BALLROOM, AT 140th STREET AND LENOX AVENUE, 978 01:16:37,611 --> 01:16:42,204 WAS STILL HARLEM'S HOTTEST SPOT. 979 01:16:42,329 --> 01:16:43,833 AND CHICK WEBB, 980 01:16:43,958 --> 01:16:46,741 WHO HAD BEEN ONE OF THE FIRST BANDLEADERS TO PLAY SWING, 981 01:16:46,766 --> 01:16:49,146 WAS STILL IN CHARGE. 982 01:16:50,005 --> 01:16:52,523 CHICK WEBB IS A-- A PHENOMENON. 983 01:16:52,548 --> 01:16:55,522 THERE'S NEVER BEEN ANYONE LIKE HIM, NEVER WILL BE AGAIN. 984 01:16:55,647 --> 01:16:57,234 HE WAS A HUNCHBACK DWARF, 985 01:16:57,359 --> 01:17:00,867 SUFFERED FROM A SPINAL DISFIGUREMENT FROM HIS CHILDHOOD. 986 01:17:00,992 --> 01:17:02,453 AN ABSOLUTELY BRILLIANT DRUMMER. 987 01:17:05,000 --> 01:17:08,590 HERE'S THIS LITTLE GUY SITTING BEHIND A FULL-SIZE DRUM SET 988 01:17:08,715 --> 01:17:12,222 AND YET THEY HAD TO NAIL IT DOWN TO THE STAGE 989 01:17:12,348 --> 01:17:14,602 BECAUSE THE FORCE OF HIS FOOT PEDAL 990 01:17:14,727 --> 01:17:17,232 WOULD HAVE KICKED THE BASS DRUM RIGHT OFF. 991 01:17:23,078 --> 01:17:27,113 CHICK WEBB WAS MY FIRST HERO THAT I EVER SAW. 992 01:17:28,060 --> 01:17:30,523 AND I WALKED IN, MY OLD MAN TOOK ME THERE-- 993 01:17:30,649 --> 01:17:32,763 I WAS...MUST HAVE BEEN 12 YEARS OLD, TO THE THEATER-- 994 01:17:32,797 --> 01:17:34,676 AND I'M LOOKING FOR A REAL, LIKE A DRUMMER 995 01:17:34,801 --> 01:17:36,680 AND ALL I SEE IS A GIGANTIC BASS DRUM 996 01:17:36,805 --> 01:17:39,101 WITH A HEAD STICKING OVER THE TOP OF IT 997 01:17:39,226 --> 01:17:42,758 AND THESE TWO-- TWO ARMS FLAILING AROUND, 998 01:17:43,031 --> 01:17:45,238 PLAYING THE GREATEST STUFF I EVER HEARD IN MY LIFE. 999 01:17:50,905 --> 01:17:53,171 ON MAY 11, 1937, 1000 01:17:53,297 --> 01:17:56,135 BENNY GOODMAN VENTURED UPTOWN TO CHALLENGE WEBB 1001 01:17:56,260 --> 01:18:01,479 IN WHAT WAS BILLED AS THE "MUSIC BATTLE OF THE CENTURY." 1002 01:18:01,605 --> 01:18:04,485 "FELLAS, THIS IS MY HOUR," WEBB TOLD HIS MEN, 1003 01:18:05,083 --> 01:18:09,196 "ANYBODY MISSES NOTES-- DON'T COME BACK TO WORK!" 1004 01:18:14,344 --> 01:18:17,266 4,000 FANS JAMMED INTO THE BALLROOM, 1005 01:18:17,698 --> 01:18:20,573 AND MOUNTED POLICEMEN AND FIREMEN HAD TO BE CALLED 1006 01:18:20,598 --> 01:18:22,943 TO CONTROL THE CROWD OF 5,000 MORE 1007 01:18:23,043 --> 01:18:26,170 WHO COULDN'T GET IN AND REFUSED TO GO HOME. 1008 01:18:27,069 --> 01:18:28,635 AMONG THOSE WHO DID GET IN 1009 01:18:28,847 --> 01:18:31,492 WERE NORMA MILLER AND FRANKIE MANNING, 1010 01:18:31,823 --> 01:18:33,368 PROFESSIONAL LINDY HOPPERS NOW, 1011 01:18:33,393 --> 01:18:39,614 WHO HAD BEEN TAKING ON ALL COMERS IN DANCE CONTESTS AROUND THE WORLD. 1012 01:18:39,639 --> 01:18:41,559 THEY HAD COME HOME TO THE SAVOY 1013 01:18:41,685 --> 01:18:45,818 TO SEE THEIR HERO FACE HIS MOST CELEBRATED CHALLENGER. 1014 01:18:52,848 --> 01:18:56,398 THE NIGHT THAT BENNY GOODMAN CAME TO PLAY AGAINST CHICK WEBB... 1015 01:18:56,423 --> 01:18:57,100 Woman: 1938. 1016 01:18:57,125 --> 01:18:59,000 THIS WAS AN ELECTRICAL NIGHT, 1017 01:18:59,313 --> 01:19:02,692 THIS WAS, I MEAN, WITH THE, THE AIR 1018 01:19:02,799 --> 01:19:05,451 OF BEING AROUND THE SAVOY BALLROOM. 1019 01:19:05,551 --> 01:19:08,651 HERE'S BENNY GOODMAN, THE KING OF SWING, AND HERE'S-- 1020 01:19:08,676 --> 01:19:09,771 CHICK WEBB, THE KING OF SWING. 1021 01:19:09,796 --> 01:19:11,885 THE KING OF SWING. 1022 01:19:11,910 --> 01:19:13,650 YOU KNOW, AS FAR AS WE ARE CONCERNED, YOU KNOW, 1023 01:19:13,675 --> 01:19:17,631 THERE'S CHICK WEBB GOING UP AGAINST BENNY GOODMAN. 1024 01:19:21,082 --> 01:19:22,836 YOU KNOW, GOODMAN WAS A GIANT 1025 01:19:22,961 --> 01:19:24,549 BECAUSE THEY CALLED HIM "THE KING OF SWING" AT THAT TIME. 1026 01:19:24,574 --> 01:19:27,469 AND ANY BAND THAT PLAYED SWING, 1027 01:19:27,494 --> 01:19:28,309 WE WOULD BUY THEIR RECORDS. 1028 01:19:28,334 --> 01:19:30,986 SO WE WE KNEW-- WE KNEW ABOUT BENNY GOODMAN. 1029 01:19:32,171 --> 01:19:34,217 A LOT OF PEOPLE MAY NOT REALIZE 1030 01:19:34,434 --> 01:19:38,366 THAT A LOT OF THE ARRANGEMENTS THAT BENNY GOODMAN HAD, 1031 01:19:38,533 --> 01:19:41,172 CHICK WEBB HAD THE SAME ARRANGEMENTS. 1032 01:19:44,853 --> 01:19:47,566 AND WHEN THEY GET ON A BANDSTAND, 1033 01:19:47,733 --> 01:19:51,574 NOW THIS IS WHEN YOU CAN KNOW WHICH BAND IS THE BEST, 1034 01:19:51,741 --> 01:19:55,290 BY LISTENING TO THEM PLAY THE SAME ARRANGEMENT. 1035 01:20:37,666 --> 01:20:39,002 TO ME, 1036 01:20:39,509 --> 01:20:42,457 CHICK WEBB OUTSWUNG BENNY GOODMAN THAT NIGHT. 1037 01:20:42,482 --> 01:20:44,059 I SAY THE SAME THING, YEAH. 1038 01:20:44,185 --> 01:20:45,262 THAT WAS MY FEELING. 1039 01:20:45,287 --> 01:20:46,899 I'M NOT SAYING THIS BECAUSE-- 1040 01:20:47,024 --> 01:20:48,360 NOT BEING PREJUDICED. 1041 01:20:48,527 --> 01:20:49,456 YEAH, BECAUSE IT'S CHICK WEBB 1042 01:20:49,481 --> 01:20:51,026 OR BECAUSE I'M BEING PREJUDICED. 1043 01:20:51,176 --> 01:20:55,596 BUT TO ME, I FEEL THAT CHICK WEBB OUTSWUNG BENNY GOODMAN 1044 01:20:55,621 --> 01:20:57,355 THAT NIGHT, YOU KNOW, 1045 01:20:57,480 --> 01:21:01,857 BECAUSE I SAW GUYS ON BENNY GOODMAN'S BAND-- BANDSTAND 1046 01:21:01,964 --> 01:21:03,383 WHEN CHICK WEBB WAS PLAYING... 1047 01:21:03,508 --> 01:21:06,419 I SEEN GUYS ON THERE, THEY'D STAND UP THERE AND SAY... 1048 01:21:06,473 --> 01:21:09,979 THEY JUST SHOOK THEIR HEADS. 1049 01:21:10,104 --> 01:21:12,686 THE GOODMAN BAND WAS ROUTED. 1050 01:21:12,709 --> 01:21:16,717 GENE KRUPA BOWED DOWN IN TRIBUTE 1051 01:21:16,842 --> 01:21:20,571 CHICK WEBB, HE SAID, HAD "CUT ME TO RIBBONS." 1052 01:21:22,394 --> 01:21:25,108 "NOBODY," ONE OF WEBB'S MEN REMEMBERED, 1053 01:21:25,233 --> 01:21:29,529 "COULD HAVE TAKEN IT AWAY FROM CHICK THAT NIGHT." 1054 01:21:48,781 --> 01:21:51,661 DESPITE ITS OVERWHELMING POPULARITY, 1055 01:21:51,787 --> 01:21:55,001 SWING MUSIC HAD NOT CAPTURED THE HEART OF EVERY MUSICIAN-- 1056 01:21:55,127 --> 01:21:57,673 OR EVERY JAZZ FAN. 1057 01:21:57,799 --> 01:22:02,516 SOME FOUND BIG BANDS TOO STIFF, TOO REGIMENTED. 1058 01:22:02,683 --> 01:22:07,192 JOHN HAMMOND, WHO HAD HELPED BUILD THE BENNY GOODMAN BAND, 1059 01:22:07,317 --> 01:22:10,825 NOW CHARGED THAT SWING HAD BECOME TOO COMMERCIAL, 1060 01:22:10,950 --> 01:22:13,705 THAT IT STIFLED FREEDOM AND SELF-EXPRESSION, 1061 01:22:13,831 --> 01:22:19,550 TOOK JAZZ IN THE WRONG DIRECTION. 1062 01:22:19,717 --> 01:22:22,389 THERE WAS A PRESSURE ON EVEN THE BEST OF THE JAZZ BAND LEADERS. 1063 01:22:22,514 --> 01:22:25,103 NOT ALL OF THEM FELL TO THAT PRESSURE, 1064 01:22:25,228 --> 01:22:27,734 BUT BENNY GOODMAN ON A TYPICAL RECORDING SESSION 1065 01:22:27,901 --> 01:22:29,863 WOULD MAKE TWO GREAT JAZZ INSTRUMENTALS 1066 01:22:29,988 --> 01:22:32,326 AND THEN TWO POP VOCALS AT THE SAME SESSION. 1067 01:22:32,451 --> 01:22:35,917 SO THERE WAS ALWAYS THIS-- THIS PRESSURE TO BE COMMERCIAL, 1068 01:22:36,042 --> 01:22:38,756 TO REACH THE POPULAR AUDIENCE, 1069 01:22:38,881 --> 01:22:41,552 TO BREAK THE GLEN MILLER BARRIER, AS IT WERE. 1070 01:22:41,677 --> 01:22:45,812 ♪♪ DRIFTING THROUGH THE SKY ♪♪ 1071 01:22:45,937 --> 01:22:50,278 ♪♪ WHILE I WONDER WHY MY LOVE ♪♪ 1072 01:22:50,403 --> 01:22:56,792 ♪♪ EVER SAID GOOD-BYE ♪♪ 1073 01:22:56,917 --> 01:23:00,131 ONE SNOWY NIGHT IN 1936, 1074 01:23:00,257 --> 01:23:04,515 JOHN HAMMOND GREW TIRED OF LISTENING TO BENNY GOODMAN PERFORM HIS FAMILIAR HITS 1075 01:23:04,640 --> 01:23:06,352 AT THE CONGRESS HOTEL IN CHICAGO. 1076 01:23:06,477 --> 01:23:08,356 HAMMOND WENT OUTSIDE, 1077 01:23:08,481 --> 01:23:11,696 GOT INTO HIS CAR, AND TURNED ON THE RADIO, 1078 01:23:11,822 --> 01:23:15,495 HOPING TO HEAR SOMETHING NEW, SOMETHING DIFFERENT, 1079 01:23:15,620 --> 01:23:20,005 SOMETHING LESS PREDICTABLE. 1080 01:23:20,130 --> 01:23:22,175 HE CAME ACROSS AN EXPERIMENTAL STATION 1081 01:23:22,301 --> 01:23:25,892 BROADCASTING LIVE FROM KANSAS CITY. 1082 01:23:26,017 --> 01:23:28,313 IT WAS 1:00 IN THE MORNING. 1083 01:23:28,438 --> 01:23:30,860 THE NIGHTLY BROADCAST BY THE COUNT BASIE BAND 1084 01:23:31,027 --> 01:23:32,989 FROM THE RENO CLUB WAS JUST BEGINNING. 1085 01:23:36,872 --> 01:23:52,904 I COULDN'T BELIEVE MY EARS. 1086 01:23:53,029 --> 01:23:55,910 JOHN HAMMOND 1087 01:23:56,035 --> 01:23:59,918 TO BRING COUNT BASIE AND THE SOUND OF KANSAS CITY 1088 01:24:00,043 --> 01:24:03,800 TO THE REST OF THE COUNTRY. 91541

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.