BENNY CARTER
American Genius
Carter is among the greatest jazz alto saxists of Jazz and the Swing era alongside Johnny Hodges.
Benny Carter taught the alto saxophone to sing: his signature sound was smooth, flowing and graceful -- displaying ease, confidence and a clear sense of direction.
He was also a fine composer, talented arranger, skilled clarinetist and gifted trumpet player. An exceptionally versatile musician, Carter was active for more than 75 years.
Pt. 1 - Benny Carter: American Genius
<BR>BENNY CARTER PT 1A.mp3
TENDERLY -- Benny Carter Trio, mid 50s
DEVIL’S HOLIDAY -- Benny and his Carter Orchestra, 1933
LONESOME NIGHTS -- Benny and his Carter Orchestra, 1933
DEE BLUES -- Chocolate Dandies, 1930
I NEVER KNEW -- Chocolate Dandies, 1933
KEEP A SONG IN YOUR SOUL -- Fletcher Henderson Orchestra, 1930
SWEET AND HOT -- Fletcher Henderson Orchestra, 1931
RAISIN’ THE ROOF -- Fletcher Henderson Orchestra, 1929
BLAZIN’ -- Fletcher Henderson Orchestra 1929
SIX BELLS STAMPEDE -- Benny Carter and his Orchestra, 1933
SWING IT -- Benny Carter and his Orchestra, 1933
BENNY CARTER PT 1B.mp3
POM POM -- Benny Carter and his Orchestra, 1940
OK FOR BABY -- Benny Carter and his Orchestra, 1940
NIGHT HOP -- Benny Carter and his Orchestra, 1940
RIFF ROMP -- Benny Carter and his Orchestra, 1939
STARDUST -- Willie Lewis and his Orchestra, Paris, 1936
I’M COMING VIRGINIA -- Benny Carter and his Orchestra, Paris, 1938
Pt. 2 - Benny Carter: American Genius
BENNY CARTER PT 2A.mp3
JUNE IN JANUARY -- Benny Carter Trio, c. mid-1950s
FISH FRY -- Benny Carter & his Orchestra, 1940
SLOW FREIGHT -- Benny Carter & his Orchestra, 1940
SYMPHONY IN RIFFS -- Benny Carter & his Orchestra, 1933
PASTORAL -- Spike Hughes and his Orchestra, 1933
SUGAR HILL SLOW DRAG -- Rutgers University Orchestra, 1991
HOW HIGH THE MOON -- Benny Carter Big Band, 1991
BENNY CARTER PT 2B.mp3
MELANCHOLY LULLABY -- Benny Carter & his Orchestra, 1939
NIGHTFALL -- Benny Carter and his Orchestra, 1936
JUST A MOOD -- Benny Carter and his Orchestra, 1936
MEN OF HARLEM -- Leonard Feather’s All-Star Jam Band, 1939
12-BAR STAMPEDE -- Leonard Feather’s All-Star Jam Band, 1939
BIRTH OF THE BLUES -- Benny Carter Trio, c. mid-1950s
BLUES IN MY HEART -- Benny Carter and his Orchestra, Netherlands, 1937
JEEPERS CREEPERS -- Benny Carter Trio, c. mid-1950s
Pt. 3 - Benny Carter: American Genius
BENNY CARTER PT 3A.mp3
SIX OR SEVEN TIMES -- The Little Chocolate Dandies, 1929
I’D LOVE IT -- McKinney’s Cotton Pickers, 1929
KRAZY KAPERS -- The Chocolate Dandies, 1933
MY BUDDY -- Benny Carter and his Orchestra, Hague, 1937
GIN AND JIVE -- Benny Carter and his Orchestra, London, 1936
SKIP IT -- Benny Carter and his Orchestra, Hague, 1937 CD 552
FAREWELL BLUES -- Benny Carter and his Orchestra, Paris 1938
RAMBLING IN “C” -- Benny Carter and his Orchestra [trio] London, 1937
BLUES IN B-FLAT -- Art Tatum/Benny Carter/Louis Bellson [Trio], 1954
BENNY CARTER PT 3B.mp3
PLYMOUTH ROCK -- Benny Carter and his Orchestra, New York, 1939
SAVOY STAMPEDE -- Benny Carter and his Orchestra, New York, 1939
BACK BAY BOOGIE -- Benny Carter and his Orchestra, 1941
ILL WIND -- Benny Carter and his Orchestra, 1940
AUGUST MOON from “TALES OF THE RISING SUN”
-- Benny Carter Big Band and the Rutgers University Orchestra, 1992
I CAN’T GET STARTED -- Jazz at the Philharmonic, 1967
SMACK -- The Chocolate Dandies, 1940
Whether leading a jazz orchestra or sax section Benny Carter’s leadership generated effervescent swing and unified a reed section -- making written arrangements sound clean and spontaneous. His written arrangements in the 1920s and ‘30s helped create the basic building blocks of Big Band Swing for Fletcher Henderson and Benny Goodman among others.
Besides being a composer, arranger, and bandleader, Carter was a very good clarinetist in his early years, an excellent jazz trumpeter (he influenced no less than Dizzy Gillespie), blessed with perfect (or absolute) pitch -- and was largely self-taught. Later, he composed for Hollywood films and television, and taught at Princeton University where he was awarded a Doctorate of Humanities in 1974.
All of his remarkable talents can be heard early in his career in such recordings as:
-- “Dee Blues” and “Six or Seven Times” by The Chocolate Dandies of 1929-30, masterpieces including trumpeter Rex Stewart and tenor giant Coleman Hawkins, and;
-- the 1933 Chocolate Dandies “Krazy Kapers” written by Carter, that includes his excellent solos.
In any of these you can hear Carter’s sweet alto saxophone tone and in the solos an easy balance and sense of direction. Carter’s impeccable phrasing gave each note full value.
European Triumphs
Carter was in Europe during the years 1936-38, where he was a sensation, successfully appearing and recording to wide acclaim. Leading ensembles and collaborating with other great American jazzmen then in Europe Carter set the standard for hot jazz and swing.
PARIS, 1935 -- Carter is toast of the town, jamming and recording with Django Reinhardt and Stephane Grappelli in the Quintet of the Hot Club of France.
ENGLAND, 1936 -- Within 24 hours of his arrival Benny Carter is signed to make what turn out to be great records with the cream of British jazz musicians, orchestrates several movie scores and briefly directs the BBC Dance Orchestra.
LONDON, 1936 -- Carter records the first jazz waltz. A modest 24-bar blues with Benny soloing on tenor, alto sax and trumpet, his “Waltzing The Blues” demonstrates that jazz and classical forms can be successfully be combined. It is loudly praised -- and condemned -- by the British music press.
HOLLAND & FRANCE, 1937 -- Benny is wildly popular in Holland and France where he records with Coleman Hawkins, again with Django, and leads an international, multiracial jazz band in the Hague.
The fruits of these years are perhaps best exemplified by “Gin and Jive” (London, 1936) and “Skip It” (Hague, 1937) both of which are his own compositions. His easy precision and economical solos that are as carefully structured as an architectural drawing can be heard on on “My Buddy” (Hague, 1937) where Carter plays both alto and trumpet. Among my own all-time Carter favorites are “I’m Coming Virginia” and “Farewell Blues” (1938) from his last pre-war European sessions in Paris with guitarist Django Reinhardt and the excellent French tenor saxophonist Alix Combelle.
In 1938 Carter returned to America -- one obvious reason was the imminence of World War Two. But a less obvious motivation may have been his desire to play cutting edge jazz where the edge was sharpest: in America where the Swing craze was in full bloom -- specifically in New York and Harlem.
Within weeks of returning he was recording; and quickly put together a band that booked into the Savoy Ballroom in Harlem for an extended residency. Many say this was his best band: the arrangements were highly sophisticated; his settings for the reed section were intricate, with fantastic voicing and exotic chords melding the saxes into an airtight unit that sounded fresh and spontaneous; with the entire band locked into place by Carter’s superb direction. Carter’s presence always brought a sax section to its peak of perfection.
Two titles representative of his orchestra and arranging at the Savoy Ballroom during 1939-40 are the fitting titles “Savoy Stampede” and “Plymouth Rock” (you know, like where the Pilgrims landed in the New World).
Not Obvious Enough?
Carter’s music isn’t always obvious. For one thing he was a musicians’ musician writing very sophisticated stuff that was often above the heads of the popular mass audience; which may explain why his bands were never financially successful.
Also he pulled it all off with such ease and aplomb, never breaking a sweat. The late trumpeter Doc Cheatham agreed that Carter made the difficult look easy, perhaps too easy. He didn’t put on the showy displays that easily impress a crowd. But I think at some point he sensed this and in crowd pleasers like “Back Bay Boogie” (1941) started to give the audience thrilling fireworks.
Its also fair to say that Carter was an unabashed balladeer able to make the alto sing, partly by allowing each note to fully bloom. The long unissued, “Ill Wind” of 1940 demonstrates his signature talents: balance, proportional phrasing, and impeccable tone.
GENIUS REWARDED
In 1942 Carter moved to Hollywood, California where the focus of his efforts shifted to composing and arranging:
* for films, starting in 1943 with “Stormy Weather,”
* for television series: like “Alfred Hitchcock Presents” and “M Squad,”
* for singers Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughn, Ray Charles and Louis Armstrong -- plus a brief spell with Duke Ellington in 1968,
* he had several popular hits: “Key Largo,” “Cow Cow Boogie,” and “When Lights Are Low,”
* and composed extended concert works for symphonic and jazz orchestras, like “Kansas City Suite” (1960), “Central City Sketches” (1987), “Glasgow Suite” (1987) and “Harlem Renaissance” (1992).
One of Benny Carter’s fully orchestral compositions grew from his frequent visits to Japan where he was a perennial favorite visiting frequently from the early ‘50s on. “Tales of the Rising Sun” Suite (1992) was written for his enthusiastic followers there. It expresses his musical impressions of Japan and warm feeling for the Japanese people.
HONORED STATESMAN OF JAZZ
In the 1970s Benny Carter resumed performing, touring the international festival circuit, and taught music at Princeton University where he was awarded an honorary Doctorate of Humanities. In his last few decades he remained very active, widely honored, and performed for least three US Presidents.
I saw Carter lead a band in the ‘90s and his sax still had that gorgeous tone, flowing melodiousness, poise and ease. Its amazing how well Benny Carter maintained his purity of tone, dedication to melodic improvisation, and talent for well-structured solos. Its my impression that could accomplish any musical goal he set for himself.
Links, Sources and Resources:
A definitive biography is the two-volume 877 page, Benny Carter: A Life in American Music, by Berger and Patrick, Scarecrow Press, 1982.
BENNYCARTER.com
LINKS Page at BENNYCARTER.com
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