Billy May And His Rico Mambo Orchestra – Cha Cha! (1955/2023)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 26:48 minutes | 458 MB | Genre: Latin Jazz, Mambo
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © RevOla
May was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He started out playing the tuba in the high school band. “I sat in the rear of the stand,” he said. “I didn’t realize it at the time, but I was intrigued with becoming an arranger and an orchestrator.” At the age of 17, he began playing with Gene Olsen’s Polish-American Orchestra.May moved to New York City at age 22 to become chief arranger for the Charlie Barnet Orchestra. He held this position from February 1939 until October 1940, and joined its trumpet section in June 1939. May’s contract with Barnet called for writing at extraordinary speed: four new arrangements per week, about 70 of which were recorded and commercially released by RCA Victor on the Bluebird label. May arranged some of Barnet’s best-selling records, including “Pompton Turnpike” and “Leapin’ at the Lincoln,” but it was May’s now-classic arrangement of Ray Noble’s “Cherokee” that launched Barnet and his band to national stardom.
At Barnet’s request, May closely studied the musical language of Barnet’s idol, Duke Ellington. May soon developed a harmonic and sonic palette rich with Ellingtonian colors. The Ellington influence is apparent in some of May’s arrangements of new pop songs including “Danger in the Dark” and “Strange Enchantment.” They are on full display in May’s arrangements of Ellington’s own compositions, particularly “The Sergeant Was Shy,” “Ring Dem Bells,” and “Rockin’ in Rhythm.” Ellington even reciprocated the musical respect by recording his own arrangement of “In a Mizz,” a Charlie Barnet original arranged by May in June 1939.
May’s first recorded serious composition for jazz orchestra was Wings Over Manhattan, a three-part suite celebrating the “aviation” theme of the 1939-1940 New York World’s Fair for which it was written. It is also a musical salute to Ellington, showing the influence of Ellington’s longer-form works like Reminiscing in Tempo and Symphony in Black.Composer/historian Gunther Schuller felt that by age 23, Billy May’s command of Ellington’s compositional language had become so convincing that “the ‘disciple’ could hardly be distinguished from the ‘master’.
May’s sense of musical humor—which would later become one of the hallmarks of his sound— began to gradually take shape with the Charlie Barnet Orchestra, as evident in his arrangements of novelty numbers like “Six Lessons From Madame La Zonga.” May’s earliest recorded musical parody—a comedic skill he would later master with comedian Stan Freberg—was “The Wrong Idea,” an original song by May and Barnet, with syrupy vocal and comically bad trumpet soloing by May (whom Barnet introduces as “Slappy Habits”). Barnet called “The Wrong Idea” a “flagrant burlesque” of the best-selling “sweet” bands of the day led by Kay Kyser and Sammy Kaye, whose motto “Swing and Sway with Sammy Kaye” becomes “Swing and Sweat with Charlie Barnet” when May sings it
Tracklist:
1-1. Billy May And His Rico Mambo Orchestra – In A Mellow Tone (Remastered) (02:39)
1-2. Billy May And His Rico Mambo Orchestra – Twelfth Street Rag (Remastered) (02:28)
1-3. Billy May And His Rico Mambo Orchestra – Artistry In Rhythm (Remastered) (01:48)
1-4. Billy May And His Rico Mambo Orchestra – The Poor People Of Paris (Remastered) (01:55)
1-5. Billy May And His Rico Mambo Orchestra – Good Bye (Remastered) (01:30)
1-6. Billy May And His Rico Mambo Orchestra – Leap Frog (Remastered) (02:00)
1-7. Billy May And His Rico Mambo Orchestra – Flyin Home (Remastered) (02:34)
1-8. Billy May And His Rico Mambo Orchestra – Snowfall (Remastered) (02:26)
1-9. Billy May And His Rico Mambo Orchestra – In The Mood (Remastered) (02:46)
1-10. Billy May And His Rico Mambo Orchestra – I Remember (Remastered) (01:52)
1-11. Billy May And His Rico Mambo Orchestra – Tuxedo Junction (Remastered) (02:46)
1-12. Billy May And His Rico Mambo Orchestra – Bijou (Remastered) (02:00)
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