The Early Years The Middle Years The Success Years The Final Years

The
Middle Years.
The Wolverine Orchestra and the Frank Trumbauer Orchestra.
The Wolverine
Orchestra was organized at the end of 1923 and had its heyday during 1924.
Several dates in various locations in the midwest, a phenomenal success
at Indiana University, an appearance at the Cinderella Ballroom in New
York City, and several historic recordings for the Gennett
Recording Company marked a year of intensive activity. Bix's first recording
was cut in February of 1924 and released in May of 1924. The record had
Fidgety
Feet on one side and Jazz Me Blues on the other.
This recording was followed by several more. The legendary recordings of
the Wolverine Orchestra became the basis of Bix's growing reputation among
jazz musicians.
In October of
1924, Bix left the Wolverine Orchestra to join the Jean
Goldkette Orchestra. Goldkette was a pianist
and music entrepreneur with headquarters in Detroit, Michigan. His premier
band was the Jean Goldkette Victor Recording Orchestra. Bix's first experience
with the Goldkette group lasted less than two months and was rather frustrating.
Unlike the situation with the Wolverine Orchestra where memorized arrangements
were common, the Goldkette musicians were trained professionals and the
ability to read scores was essential. Bix failed in this respect. This
deficiency was compounded because of Goldkette's contract with the Victor
Company. The
recording director, Eddie King, had a distaste for hot jazz and apparently
developed a strong dislike of Bix. Thus, by December of 1924, and to the
disappointment of his fellow musicians in the band, Bix had to leave the
Goldkette organization.
In January of
1925, Bix returned to Richmond, Indiana and recorded, again for Gennett
Records, his first composition, the immortal Davenport Blues.The
record (flip side was Toddlin' Blues) was issued under the
name of Bix Beiderbecke and His Rhythm Jugglers and included Don
Murray (clarinet), Tommy
Dorsey (trombone), Paul Mertz (piano),
and Tommy Gargano (drums).
Bix decided
to take up his musical education and enrolled in the University of
Iowa in the 1925 Spring semester. He wanted to major in music, but there
were other academic requirements which he was unwilling to fulfill. To
make things worse, Bix was embroiled in a fight in a local bar. Thus, Bix's
college career lasted exactly 18 days.
From February
to August 1925, Bix drifted around. He spent a couple of months in New
York, where he stayed with Red
Nichols, a cornet player who recorded
prolifically in the 1920's and 30's, notable for his group the Five Pennies
and for his association with the great trombone player Miff
Mole. Bix sat with the California
Ramblers, which included the Dorsey brothers
and the great bass saxophone player Adrian
Rollini. In Chicago, he joined the
Charlie Straight Orchestra and stayed with that group until July. Bix then
joined the Breeze Blowers in Island Lake, Michigan. Some of the names in
the band included musicians who, in the next few years, were going to play
often with Bix in various bands: Bill Rank (trombone), Don Murray
(reeds), Frankie Trumbauer (C-melody sax), and Steve Brown (string bass).
In August 1925, Bix joined the Trumbauer orchestra in St. Louis and remained
with the orchestra until May 1926, when both Bix and Tram joined the Jean
Goldkette orchestra. In
September of 1926, Bill
Challis joined the orchestra as arranger.
Challis turns out to be a key figure in Bix's life. His arrangements, both
with the Goldkette and the Whiteman orchestras, provided plenty of room
for Bix's inventiveness and gift of improvisation.
Return to the top
throughout
the Midwest and the Northeast, recorded for the Victor Company, and made
several radio broadcasts. This is also the year in which Bix reached the
apex of his musical creativity. Small contingents of the larger Goldkette
Orchestra, with the addition of some first-class musicians (such as the
great bass saxophone player Adrian Rollini), and led either by Frankie
Trumbauer or by Bix produced a series of legendary recordings in 1927.
On February 4, Frankie Trumbauer and his Orchestra, with Bix, Jimmy Dorsey
(clarinet), Bill Rank (trombone), Paul Mertz (piano), Eddie
Lang (guitar) and Chauncey Morehouse (drums)
recorded Singin' the Blues. This recording is, in
my opinion, one of the two greatest jazz recordings of all times (the other
one is Armstrong's
West
End Blues). Clarinet Marmalade, another Bix classic,
was on the flip side. In May, Frankie Trumbauer and his orchestra, including
Bix, recorded four additional sides, including Ostrich Walk,
Way
Down Yonder in New Orleans and Hoagy Carmichael's
Riverboat
Shuffle. The fourth recording, I'm Coming Virginia,
is probably the most outstanding example of Bix's profound lyrical improvisation.
In October, Bix Beiderbecke and His Gang (Bill Rank, Don Murray, Adrian
Rollini, Frank Signorelli and Chauncey Morehouse) recorded
At the
Jazz Band Ball, Royal Garden Blues, Jazz Me Blues, Goose Pimples, Sorry,
and
Since
My Best Girl Turned Me Down. These recordings, together with those
of Frankie Trumbauer and his Orchestra, exemplify some of Bix's most creative
work and represent a major component of his musical legacy.
compositions.
A year later, on October 7, 1928, Bix played In A Mist as
part of the concert presented by Paul Whiteman in Carnegie Hall. In
A Mist, together with Davenport Blues and his other
piano compositions, Candlelights, Flashes,
and In the Dark, were published in 1938 by the Robbins Music
Corporation of America as the creations of a "world-famed composer" and
"The Foremost Exponent of Modern American Music".
Morehouse
(drums), Don Murray (clarinet), Bill Rank (trombone), Frank Signorelli
(piano) and Joe
Venuti (violin). We get a glimpse of white
jazz at its best from recordings that
the band made on September 28 and 30, 1927 under the Frankie Trumbauer
name. Although the choice of songs was not the most felicitous (Humpty
Dumpty, Krazy Kat, The Baltimore, Just an Hour of Love, and I'm Wondering
Who), we are treated to the musical inventiveness of a group of
gifted and skillful jazz musicians doing outstanding ensemble work and
playing highly imaginative solos. Unfortunately, the New Yorkers lasted
for only a few weeks and on October 27, Bix and Tram joined the Paul Whiteman
Orchestra. Paul
Whiteman and his Orchestra had been playing
in New York since 1920. By the mid 20's Whiteman was known (and imitated)
around the world. In 1924, Whiteman commissioned George Gershwin
to compose Rhapsody
in Blue, and performed it with
his orchestra and the composer on piano at Aeolian Hall. By the time Bix
and Tram joined the Whiteman organization, Paul Whiteman was the King
of Jazz.
Midwest
and the Northeast, parts of the South and the Southwest, recording
dates of the full band, and recording dates of small groups led by Trumbauer
or by Bix. Among the most notable recordings of 1928, I cite Changes,
San, Mississippi Mud (two versions, one by Whiteman and one by Tram), There
Ain't No Sweet Man That's Worth the Salt of My Tears, Dardanella, From
Monday On, Somebody Stole My Gal, Louisiana, You Took Advantage of Me,
That's My Weakness Now, Concerto in F, and Sweet Sue. From the
songs in this list, I highlight From Monday On, one of my
personal favorites. An excellent analysis of this recording is given by
Stephen M. Stroff in his article Bix Beiderbecke: A 50th Anniversary
Evaluation of a Legend (Classic Wax, August, 1981, page 9). "Yet
the best examples of Beiderbecke at his improvising best are the three
existing takes of "From Monday On" with Whiteman. Not only did Matty Malneck
arrange two full choruses of Bix leading the brasses, but he also adapted
one of Bix's improvs to the string section - for the first and last time
in a Whiteman recording - and gave him a 32-bar solo at the outset. The
earliest take (3), with Jimmy Dorsey playing third trumpet and Steve Brown
slappin' the bass for all it's worth, was the best (Dorsey and Brown were
replaced two weeks later by Rank on trombone and Min Leibrook on tuba [bass
sax, really]). Still, we must count ourselves lucky to have three
takes of an extended Bix solo - for each is entirely different. Splicing
the three solos together, in whatever order you choose (though -4, -6,
-3 works the best), you will get 96 bars of uninterrupted Beiderbecke cornet,
finding new paths in the song's trite melody, bringing us closer to the
Bix of legend."
more - when he returned to New York and resumed his unhealthy habits. In
spite of the erosion of his health, Bix still managed to participate in
Whiteman's Old Gold radio broadcasts and to produce some good recordings
such as China Boy and Oh, Miss Hannah. The
last recording of Bix with the Whiteman band (however, see the discussion
in "Is
It Bix or Not?") in September of 1929,
presciently entitled Waiting at the End of the Road, is worthy
of special mention because of Bix's subdued and moving solo anticipating
what was to come.
Shaw, Gene Krupa. At the end of June, Bix moved from his usual address
in New York City, the 44th Street Hotel, to apartment 1G of a new apartment
building at 43-30 46th Street in Sunnyside, Queens. By August, the end
was in sight. Bix had had a cold throughout the summer and was extremely
weak. Finally, Bix's body could not cope with years of excessive drinking
and little nourishment. He died on August 6, 1931 at 9:30 P.M., and was
buried in Oakdale Cemetery in Davenport, Iowa on August 11, 1931.
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Bix's active musical career spanned only a six-year period almost 70 years ago, but his luminous playing has left an indelible mark in the world of jazz. Today, most record stores carry CD's with reissues of his classic recordings. The jazz trade magazines carry stories about him. The Bix Beiderbecke Memorial Society keeps the presence of Bix alive and meets every year in Davenport, Iowa to honor his memory and perpetuate his music.
Through His Music, Bix Is
Alive
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BRIEF TABLE OF CONTENTS
Recordings
The
Original 78's
Analysis
of Some Recordings: Is It Bix or Not ?
Complete
Compilations of Bix's Recordings
Tributes
to Bix
Miscellaneous
Recordings Related to Bix
In
A Mist