Pictures from Google Image Search

James, Harry

Contemporary Musicians | 1994 | | Copyright 1994 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Harry James

Trumpeter, bandleader

For the Record

Selected discography

Sources

Called a major figure of the swing era by John S. Wilson in the New York Times, Harry James struck a resounding chord with the public of the late 1930s and remained a popular bandleader for over 40 years. He built a reputation as one of the hottest trumpet players in the nation, then skyrocketed to fame after forming his own band and offering listeners a mix of romantic ballads and fast-paced jazz numbers. The New Grove Dictionary of American Music called him a fine jazz improviser, possessing a verve that enhanced many small and large band recordings.

James grew up on the road with the Mighty Haag Circus, of which his father, Everette James, was director and star trumpet player. His mother was the trapeze artist, and she reportedly kept performing her high-wire routines until a month before Harry was born. Harry demonstrated his musical talent at an early age and was eagerly trained by his father. The young James played drums by age four, mastered the trumpet by eight, played solos by ten, led the second band for the Christy Brothers Circus at 12, and won a state contest for trumpet playing in Texas at 14. As a teenager he began performing in bands around Beaumont, Texas, where his family had settled. After failing an audition for champagne bandleader Lawrence Welk, he was hired in 1935 by Ben Pollack, who had heard James play in Dallas. Before long the lanky Texan with the southern drawl was recording jumping boogie-woogie numbers with the top musicians of the day, including Buster Bailey and Johnny Hodges.

King of Swing Benny Goodman found out about James through his brother, Irving, and hired him to play in what was then the most popular swing band in the country. Jamess sizzling horn became known nationwide as he played alongside such greats as Gene Krupa on drums, Ziggy Elmah on trumpet, Teddy Wilson on piano, and Lionel Hampton on vibes. His contribution was a key element of the success of such rocking tunes as Sing Sing Sing, One OClock Jump, and Life Goes to a Party. Perhaps most notable about James at the time was the sheer force of his playing. In his early years James was a brashly exciting player, attacking solos and abetting ensembles with a rich tone and what was at times an overwhelmingly powerful sound, described the Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music.

In the late 1930s James reportedly took a $40,000 loan from Goodman to start his own band. The fledgling outfit struggled, however, and lost money in its early years. That all changed in May of 1941, though, when James recorded a cover version of You Made Me Love You, a hit for Judy Garland that he had especially liked. The tender ballad was a smash, with the flames of

For the Record

Born Harry Haag James, March 15, 1916, in Albany, GA; died of lymphatic cancer, July 5, 1983, in Las Vegas, NE; son of Everette (a trumpeter and circus director) and Mabel (a trapeze artist) James; married Louise Tobin (a singer), May 4, 1935 (divorced, 1943); married Betty Grable (an actress), July 5, 1943 (divorced, 1965); married Joan Boyd; children: (first marriage) Harry, Timothy; (second marriage) Victoria, Jessica; (third marriage) Michael.

Mastered the drums, c. 1920, and the trumpet, c. 1924; led second band for Christy Brothers Circus, c. 1928; worked as contortionist and led band in fathers circus, 1920s; won state contest for trumpet playing, Texas, 1930; performed with bands, Beaumont, TX, early 1930s; member of Ben Pollack band, 1935-1937; member of Benny Goodman orchestra, 1937-1939; formed own band, 1939; recorded You Made Me Love You, 1941; appeared on weekly musical radio program, 1940s; recorded series of million-selling records, 1940s; featured singers Frank Sinatra, Dick Haymes, Helen Forrest, and Kitty Kallen in his band; played and recorded with Teddy Wilson, Buster Balley, Johnny Hodges, Corky Corcoran, Buddy Rich, Willie Smith, among other musicians; recorded charts by Ernie Wilkins and Neal Hefti, 1950s; appeared in films, including Hollywood Hotel 1937, Springtime in the Rockies, 1942, Two Girls and a Sallor, 1944, and The Benny Goodman Story, 1955.

listener approval fanned by extensive play on the popular Make-Believe Ballroom radio program on WNEW in New York City. From there James went on to seal his popularity with a repertoire of easy-listening tunes and swinging instrumentals, shifting with ease from blues and boogie-woogie to Viennese waltzes. Many of his songs, such as I Cried for You and I Dont Want to Walk Without You, addressed the sadness of separation caused by World War II. Churning out hits like I Had the Craziest Dream, Ciribiribin, Ive Heard That Song Before, and Velvet Moon, the Harry James Band scored a series of million-selling discs. At one point the band was actually held responsible for a shortage of shellac, which was rationed during the war, as so much of it was required to press Jamess records.

By 1943 James was grossing well over $40,000 a week and was at the top of a number of bandleader popularity polls. Key to his rise in fame was a move away from pure jazz. Although James irritated his hard-core jazz fans with what they considered lightweight trumpet solos on recordings of The Flight of the Bumble Bee and The Carnival of Venice, Wilson attested in the New York Times that his success as a band leader only came when he added to his repertory romantic ballads played with warm emotion and a vibrato so broad that at times it seemed almost comic.

America swooned at a celebrity match seemingly made in heaven when James wed leggy actress Betty Grable in July of 1943. Grable was the designated favorite pinup of G.l.s overseas, and the marriage prompted new lyrics to an old song, which resulted in the ditty I Want a Girl Just Like the Girl That Married Harry James. The Grable connection further enhanced Jamess image, and he also appeared in a few of his wifes movies for Twentieth Century Fox. Further aiding his bands prominence during its wartime heyday was Jamess ability to recruit top-drawer singers. At his microphone during the 1940s were legendary vocalists Dick Haymes, Helen Forrest, and Kitty Kallen. James had even discovered Frank Sinatra in the late 1930s, but Sinatra had left his band to sing for Tommy Dorsey.

When the Big Band sound began to fade toward the end of the 1940s and many of the swing orchestras folded, James was among the few to keep his band going. He settled in Las Vegas but also toured abroad, bringing his entire entourage of 21 with him wherever he went. He continued to attract great performers, among them saxophonist Willie Smith, who had played in the Jimmie Lunceford band, and Juan Tizol, onetime trombonist for Duke Ellington. Other greats sharing the stage with James over the years included trumpet player Nick Buono and drummers Buddy Rich, Sonny Payne, and Louie Bellson.

James served as technical adviser and played the trumpet parts for actor Kirk Douglas in the 1950 Warner Bros. film Young Man with a Horn. In the mid-1950s, he reassessed his career and turned toward more serious musical pursuits, assembling a group to play charts by Ernie Wilkins and Neal Hefti. The Guinness Encyclopedia called this particular James crew one of the outstanding big bands. Still, it has been suggested that the bandleaders skills on the trumpet may have been best demonstrated outside of the big-band format. The Oxford Companion to Popular Music allowed that James was sometimes inclined to over-emphasize his technique in the big-band context and was at his best in his occasional small group recordings.

James continued to perform throughout the 1960s and 1970s, shuttling between long-term gigs at major hotels and casinos. He also developed a stable of racing horses. Some considered the music of Jamess later career among his best, tapping as it did the best of both serious jazz and popular music and leaving behind the indulgence of earlier years. Touring to the end, James gave his last performance on June 26, 1983, in Los Angeleslittle more than a week before his death. He is remembered by many as the wizard whose horn could blast listeners into a jitterbugging frenzy with one song, then soothe their souls with the next.

Selected discography

(With Benny Goodman) Jazz Concert No. 2, Columbia, 1937-1938.

Harry James and His Great Vocalists, Sony, 1976.

Harry James and Les Brown, Ranwood, 1985.

On the Air, Vol. II (recorded 1942-45), Aircheck, 1986.

Big Band Recordings, Hindsight, 1987.

Harry James Plays the Songs That Sold a Million (recorded in 1946 and 1954), reissued, Columbia, 1988.

Best of the Big Bands, Columbia, 1990.

Best of Harry James and His Orchestra, Curb/Cema, 1990.

Young and Swinging (recorded 1936-39), Zeta, 1992.

Young Man With a Horn (soundtrack), Sony Music Special Products.

Sources

Books

The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music, Vol. II, edited by Colin Larkin, Guinness, 1992.

The New Grove Dictionary of American Music, Vol. II, edited by H. Wiley Hitchcock and Stanley Sadie, Macmillan, 1986.

The Oxford Companion to Popular Music, edited by Peter Gammond, Oxford University Press, 1991.

Periodicals

Life, May 10, 1943.

New York Times, July 6, 1983.

Stereo Review, June 1992.

Time, September 28, 1942.

Ed Decker

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

Decker, Ed. "James, Harry." Contemporary Musicians. Gale Research Inc. 1994. Encyclopedia.com. 11 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

Decker, Ed. "James, Harry." Contemporary Musicians. Gale Research Inc. 1994. Encyclopedia.com. (November 11, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3492900042.html

Decker, Ed. "James, Harry." Contemporary Musicians. Gale Research Inc. 1994. Retrieved November 11, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3492900042.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

Justice Under Pressure: The Saint Albans Raid and Its Aftermath.
Magazine article from: Canadian Journal of History; 8/1/1993; ; 700+ words ; ...and plundered the good citizens of Saint Albans, Vermont, and then sought refuge...Justice Under Pressure: The Saint Albans Raid and Its Aftermath. Wilson correctly...thousands of Americans: the Saint Albans raid resulted in a rapid deterioration...
U.S. SECRETARY OF EDUCATION MARGARET SPELLINGS HIGHLIGHTS NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND AT WEST VIRGINIA STATE CAPITOL, VISITS SAINT ALBANS HIGH SCHOOL
News Wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News; 3/7/2008; 700+ words ; ...Behind. Secretary Spellings also today visited Saint Albans High School in Saint Albans, W.V., and delivered remarks to students...school assembly, recognizing the progress Saint Albans High School students have made under No Child Left...
Saint Albans man wins trip to Indy race
Newspaper article from: Bangor Daily News Bangor, ME; 9/7/2006; 288 words ; SAINT ALBANS - Roland Beauregard of Saint Albans recently won the PEAK Antifreeze 300 for the 300 Sweepstakes, and as a result will be flown to Chicagoland Speedway in Joliet, Ill., for this weekend's PEAK Antifreeze Indy 300 Indy Racing League...
The 'Alexis' in the Saint Albans Psalter: A Look into the Heart of the Matter.
Magazine article from: Medium Aevum; 3/22/1993; ; 700+ words ; ...Psalter in mediaeval religious life, the composition of the Saint Albans Psalter, the history of the abbey up to the end of the...the real thesis of the book is stated, that the Vie de Saint Alexis in the Hildesheim MS is effectively a lecon farcie...
Saint Albans residents gone as fire strikes house
Newspaper article from: Sunday Gazette-Mail; 7/20/2003; 288 words ; Fire was already shooting through the roof of a family home when members of the Saint Albans Fire Department responded to the call Saturday, a firefighter said. Lt. Mark Beane said they received a call about 6 p.m...
REP. WELCH ANNOUNCES $100,000 GRANT FOR COMMUNITY POLICING IN SAINT ALBANS
News Wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News; 7/8/2009; 460 words ; ...000 in federal funding for the St. Albans Police Department at a press conference...region. The funds will help the St. Albans Police Department upgrade and improve...professionals. These funds will bolster the St. Albans Police Department's ability to keep...
Rep. Gregory W. Meeks to Present Purple Heart to St. Albans Korean War Veteran
Newspaper article from: U.S. Newswire; 7/7/2005; 434 words ; ...Advisory: Herbert Gibbs, a St. Albans resident who was a United States...Congressman Gregory W. Meeks, Saint Albans resident Corporal Herbert Gibbs of...Meeks 196-06 Linden Blvd, Saint Albans, NY When: Friday, July 8, 10...
St. Albans couple arrested on pot charges
Newspaper article from: Charleston Gazette; 5/18/2007; 340 words ; A Saint Albans man and woman were arrested Thursday for conspiracy to cultivate marijuana...police permission to search Arbaugh's home at 713 Coal River Road in Saint Albans. Police were following up on an anonymous tip that marijuana was being...
PREP BASEBALL REGIONALS: Ripley ousts St. Albans 7-2
Newspaper article from: Charleston Gazette; 5/25/2005; ; 651 words ; ...from Dakota Wills to dispatch St. Albans 7-2 in the Region 4 semifinals...runs in the first inning off St. Albans starter Ben Paxton. "Those were...While Wills was taking care of the Saint Albans hitters, Ripley's sluggers were...
SCHOOL NEWS: DRAGON'S DEN; St. Albans Classix prepare for Swing Sing
Newspaper article from: Charleston Gazette; 11/5/2004; ; 580 words ; St. Albans High School Classix are preparing to shine...Barb Varney. On a sad note, the St. Albans staff would like to express their deepest...Virginia W. White, a former teacher at Saint Albans High School. On Monday, Nov. 1 seniors...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Saint Albans Raid
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History SAINT ALBANS RAID SAINT ALBANS RAID. On 19 October 1864, Confederate Lt. Bennett H. Young led about thirty men not in uniform from Canada against the town of Saint Albans, in northwestern Vermont. The raid was in retaliation for the depredations...
Saint Albans
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Saint Albans , city (1991 pop. 76,709) and district...central England. The market city of Saint Albans has printing, engineering, and clothing...10th cent. In the Wars of the Roses, St. Albans was the scene of a Yorkist victory in 1455...
Canada, Confederate Activities in
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History ...federal ships on Lake Erie, a raid on Saint Albans, Vermont, in October, a train-wrecking...Justice under Pressure: The Saint Albans Raid and Its Aftermath. Lanham, Md...Agents ; Northwest Conspiracy ; Saint Albans Raid .
Caxton, William (c. 14221491)
Encyclopedia entry from: Europe, 1450 to 1789: Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World ...Jacobus de Voragine's late thirteenth-century collection of saints' lives, the Golden Legend (1484), a large folio of almost...other printing shops were begun in London, Oxford, and Saint Albans; they all ceased operation around 1486, and their combined...
New York City, Plot To Burn
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History NEW YORK CITY, PLOT TO BURN NEW YORK CITY, PLOT TO BURN. After the Confederate raid on Saint Albans, Vermont, in October 1864, Confederates attempted to burn New York City on 25 November. Participants fired Barnum's Museum...