A
big band is a type of
musical ensemble associated with playing
jazz music and which became popular during the
Swing Era from the early 1930s until the late
1940s. Big bands evolved with the times and continue to today. A
big band typically consists of approximately 12 to 25 musicians and
contains
saxophones,
trumpets,
trombones,
singers, and a
rhythm section. The terms
jazz
band,
jazz ensemble,
stage
band,
jazz orchestra,
society
band and
dance band may be used to
describe a specific type of
big band.
In contrast to smaller jazz combos, in which most of the music is
improvised, or created spontaneously,
music played by big bands is highly "
arranged", or prepared in advance and notated on
sheet music. The music is traditionally called 'charts'. Improvised
solos may be played only when called for by the arranger.
History and style
There are two distinct periods in the history of popular bands.
Beginning in the mid-1920s, big bands, then typically consisting of
10–25 pieces, came to dominate popular music. At that time they
usually played a sweet form of jazz that involved very little
improvisation, which included a string section with violins, which
was dropped after the introduction of swing in 1935. The dance form
of jazz was characterized by a sweet and romantic melody.
Orchestras tended to stick to the melody as it was written and
vocals would be sung (often in a tenor voice) and in tune with the
melody.
Typical of the genre were such popular artists as
Paul Whiteman,
Ted
Lewis,
Harry Reser,
Leo Reisman,
Abe Lyman,
Nat Shilkret,
George Olsen,
Ben
Bernie,
Bob Haring,
Ben Selvin,
Earl
Burnett,
Gus Arnheim,
Henry Halstead,
Rudy
Vallee,
Jean Goldkette,
Glen Gray,
Isham Jones,
Roger Wolfe Kahn,
Sam Lanin,
Vincent
Lopez,
Ben Pollack,
Shep Fields and
Fred
Waring.

Paul Whiteman and Band, 1921
Many of these artists changed styles or retired after the
introduction of swing music. Although unashamedly commercial, these
bands often featured front-rank jazz musicians - for example Paul
Whiteman employed
Bix Beiderbecke
and
Frankie Trumbauer. There were
also "all-girl" bands such as "Helen Lewis and Her All-Girl Jazz
Syncopators".
Lewis and her band, Ben Bernie's band
"Ben Bernie and All the
Lads", and Roger Wolfe Kahn's band were filmed by Lee De Forest in his Phonofilm sound-on-film process in 1925, in three short
films which are now in the Library of Congress
film collection.
Towards the end of the 1920s, a new form of Big Band emerged which
was more authentically "jazz," in that more space was given to
improvised soloing. This form of music never gained the popularity
of the sweet dance form of jazz. The few recordings made in this
form of jazz were labelled
race records
and were intended for a limited urban audience. Few white musicians
were familiar with this music,
Johnny
Mercer, Harold Arlen and
Hoagy
Carmichael being notable exceptions.
The three major
centres in this development were New York City
, Chicago
and Kansas
City
. In the former, a sophisticated approach to
arranging predominated, first in the work of Don Redman for the Fletcher Henderson band, later in the
work of Duke Ellington for his
Cotton
Club
orchestra, and Walter 'Foots' Thomas for Cab Calloway's, Charlie Spivak and His
Orchestra, and Mel Tomé's
Mel-Tones. Some big ensembles, like the
Joe
"King" Oliver outfit played a kind of half arranged, half
improvised jazz, often relying on “head” arrangements. Other great
bands, like the one of
Luis Russell
became a vehicle for star instrumentalists, in his case
Louis Armstrong. There the whole arrangement
had to promote all the possibilities of the star, although they
often contained very good musicians, like
Henry
"Red" Allen,
J. C. Higginbotham and
Charley Holmes. Others such as
Alvino Rey grew popular with shows in New York
City and then toured the country sharing their hit songs and new
musical styles.
Radio and movies
Earl "Fatha" Hines became the star of Chicago
with his Grand Terrace Cafe band and began to broadcast live from
The Grand Terrace nightly coast-to-coast across America. Meanwhile
in Kansas City and across the Southwest, an earthier, bluesier
style was developed by such bandleaders as
Benny Moten and, later, by
Jay McShann and
Jesse
Stone.
Big band remotes on the
major radio networks spread the music from ballrooms and clubs
across the country during the 1930s and 1940s, with remote
broadcasts from jazz clubs continuing into the 1950s on NBC's
Monitor. Radio was a
major factor in gaining notice and fame for
Benny Goodman, the “Pied Piper of Swing”.
Soon, others challenged him, and “the battles of the bands” became
a staple at theater performances featuring many groups on one
bill.
Gloria Parker, Princess of the
Marimba, conducted the 21-piece Swingphony whose
performances were broadcast nationally from the Kelly Lyceum
Ballroom in Buffalo, New
York
. This was the largest big band ever led by a
female bandleader.
Big Bands also began to appear in movies in the 1930’s right on
through to the 1960’s.
Shep Fields and
his orchestra appeared in
The
Big Broadcast of 1938 for
Paramount Pictures while accompanying the
actor
Bob Hope in the 1930s. Alvino Rey and
His Orchestra were featured in films through
RKO Pictures during their peak in the early
1940s, such as
Sing Your Worries
Away. Fictionalized biographical films of
Glenn Miller,
Gene
Krupa,
Benny Goodman, and others
were made in the 1950’s, as nostalgic tributes to the glory
years.
Rise and fall of swing

Benny Goodman and Peggy Lee
Swing music began in the 1920s, distinguished by a more supple feel
than the more literal
4/4 of earlier jazz and a
walking bass -
Walter Page is often credited with developing
this, though isolated earlier examples exist (e.g., by
Wellman Braud on Ellington's
Washington
Wabble from 1927).
This type of music flourished through the early 1930s, although
there was little mass audience for it until around 1936. Up until
that time, it was viewed with ridicule and looked upon as a
curiosity. After 1935, big bands rose to prominence playing
swing music and held a major role in
defining swing as a distinctive style.
Western Swing musicians also formed very
popular big bands during the same period.
[9963][9964][9965].
There was a considerable range of styles among the hundreds of
popular bands. Many of the better known bands reflected the
individuality of the bandleader, the lead arranger, and the
personnel.
Count Basie played a relaxed
propulsive swing,
Bob Crosby more of a
dixieland style,
Benny Goodman a hard
driving swing, and
Duke Ellington’s
compositions were varied and sophisticated. Many bands featured
strong instrumentalists, whose sounds dominated, such as the
clarinets of
Benny Goodman,
Artie Shaw and
Woody
Herman, the trombone of
Jack
Teagarden, the trumpet of
Harry
James, the drums of
Gene Krupa, and
the vibes of
Lionel Hampton. The
popularity of many of the major bands was amplified by star
vocalists, such as
Frank Sinatra with
Tommy Dorsey,
Helen O'Connell and
Bob Eberly with
Jimmy
Dorsey,
Ella Fitzgerald with
Chick Webb,
Billie Holiday and
Jimmy Rushing with
Count Basie,
Dick
Haymes and
Helen Forrest with
Harry James,
Doris
Day with
Les Brown,
Toni Arden and
Ken
Curtis with
Shep Fields and
Peggy Lee with Benny Goodman. Some bands were
society bands that relied on strong ensembles but
little on soloists or vocalists, such as the bands of
Guy Lombardo and
Paul
Whiteman.
By this time the Big Band was such a dominant force in jazz that
the older generation found they either had to adapt to it or simply
retire - with no market for small-group recordings (made worse by a
depression-era industry reluctant to take risks), some musicians
such as
Louis Armstrong and
Earl Hines fronted their own bands, while others,
like
Jelly Roll Morton and
King Oliver, lapsed into
obscurity.
The major
African American bands of
the 1930s included, apart from the bands led by Ellington, Hines
and Calloway, were those of
Jimmie
Lunceford,
Chick Webb, and
Count Basie. Incidentally, the "white" bands of
Benny Goodman,
Artie Shaw,
Tommy
Dorsey,
Shep Fields and, later,
Glenn Miller far eclipsed their "black"
inspirations in terms of popularity from the middle of the decade.
Bridging the gap to white audiences in the mid-1930’s was the Casa
Loma Orchestra and Benny Goodman’s early band.

Glenn Miller
White teenagers and young adults were the principal fans of the Big
Bands in the late 1930’s and early 1940’s. They danced to
recordings and the radio, and attended live concerts whenever they
could. They were knowledgeable and often biased toward their
favorite bands and songs, and sometimes worshipful of the famous
soloists and vocalists. Many bands toured the country in grueling
one-night stands to reach out to their fans. Traveling conditions
and lodging were often difficult, in part due to segregation in
most parts of the United States, and the personnel often had to
perform on little sleep and food. Apart from the star soloists,
many personnel received low wages and would abandon the tour and go
home if bookings fell through. Personal problems and intra-band
discord could affect the playing of the group. Drinking and
addictions were common. Turnover was frequent in many bands, and
top soloists were often lured away to better contracts. Sometimes
bandstands were too small, public address systems inadequate,
pianos out of tune. Successful bandleaders dealt with all these
hazards of touring to hold their bands together—some with rigid
discipline (
Glenn Miller), some with
canny psychology (
Duke
Ellington).
Big Bands played a major role in lifting morale during World War
II. Many band members served in the military and toured with USO
troupes at the front, with Glenn Miller losing his life while
traveling between troop shows. Many bands suffered from the loss of
personnel and quality declined at home during the war years. An
ill-timed recording strike in 1942 worsened the situation.
Vocalists began to strike out on their own and by the end of the
war, swing was giving way to less danceable music including bebop.
Many of the great swing bands broke up as tastes changed.
Since 1945
As jazz evolved and expanded in new directions, major band
performances of note did occur from the 1950s to the 1970s.
Noteworthy
performers included: Dizzy
Gillespie, Gene Krupa, Buddy Rich, Gil Evans,
Stan Kenton, Johnny Richards, Sun
Ra, Gary MacFarland, Charles
Mingus, Oliver Nelson, Carla Bley, Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Big Band,
Sam Rivers, Don
Ellis, Toshiko
Akiyoshi – Lew Tabackin Big Band, Lincoln Center
Jazz Orchestra
and Anthony
Braxton.
Later bandleaders pioneered the performance of various
Brazilian and
Afro-Cuban styles with the traditional big
band instrumentation, and big bands led by arranger
Gil Evans, saxophonist
John Coltrane (on the album
Ascension from 1965)
and electric bassist
Jaco Pastorius
introduced
cool jazz,
free jazz and
jazz
fusion, respectively, to the big band domain. Modern big bands
can be found playing all styles of jazz music. Some large
contemporary European jazz ensembles play mostly
avant-garde jazz using the instrumentation of
the big bands. Examples include the
Vienna Art Orchestra, founded in 1977,
and the
Italian Instabile
Orchestra, active in the 1990s. In the late 1990s, swing made a
comeback in the US. The Lindy Hop has taken hold on both coasts,
and many younger people took an interest in big band styles again.
The Jazz
at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis is the resident
orchestra of Jazz at Lincoln Center
(JALC). The JALC Orchestra currently tours
internationally, promoting the Big Band sound.
African
"Afrobeat" big bands have existed from 1970
to the present when Fela Kuti of Nigeria
, fused big
band jazz with Yoruba tribal rhythms,
highlife, and American James Brown soul
music. As of 2008 there are over 40 working
afrobeat big bands including
Antibalas,
Chicago Afrobeat Project,
Chopteeth,
Femi Kuti, and
Seun Kuti.
Instrumentation

Typical seating diagram for a big
band.
In the second half of the twentieth century, a standard 17-piece
instrumentation evolved, for which many commercial arrangements are
available. This instrumentation consists of five saxophones (most
often two
altos, two
tenors, and one
baritone), four
trumpets, four
trombones
(including one
bass trombone) and a
four-piece
rhythm section (composed
of
drums,
acoustic
bass or
electric bass,
piano and
guitar).
However, variants to this instrumentation are common. Composers,
arrangers, and bandleaders have used sections with more or fewer
players, and additional instruments, such as
valve trombone,
baritone horn/
euphonium (both of which are usually used in place
of or with trombones),
vibes,
bass clarinet,
French horn,
tuba,
banjo,
accordion and
strings (
violin,
viola,
cello).
Male and
female vocalists have also
joined big bands to perform particular
arrangements.
Some arrangements call for saxophone players to double on other
woodwind instruments, such as
flute,
clarinet,
soprano sax, or
bass clarinet. Trumpet and trombone players
are sometimes called upon to use various sound-changing mutes, and
trumpet players sometimes need to play
flugelhorn. In some
rhythm sections, a
guitar player is omitted. Players in the rhythm
section may be called upon to play acoustic or
electric instruments. Latin or other auxiliary
percussion instruments may be added, such
as cowbells, congas, tambourines, or triangles.
Big band arrangements
Typical big band
arrangements of the
swing period are written in
strophic
form with the same phrase and chord structure repeated several
times. Each iteration, or
chorus, most commonly follows
Twelve bar blues form or
Thirty-two-bar song form. The first
chorus of an arrangement typically introduces the melody, and is
followed by subsequent choruses of development. This development
may take the form of improvised solos, written
soli sections, and
shout choruses.
An arrangement's first chorus is sometimes preceded by an
introduction, which may be as short as a few measures or may extend
to chorus of its own. Many arrangements contain an interlude, often
similar in content to the introduction, inserted between some or
all choruses. Other methods of embellishing the form include
modulations and cadential extensions.
See also
References
- William Russo, Composing for the Jazz Orchestra
University of Chicago
Press, Library of Congress no. 61-8642
- George T. Simon, The Big Bands, The Macmillan Company,
New York, 1967, Library of Congress no. 67-26643
- [www.imdb.com/title/tt0035338/]