Sammy Nestico

http://youtu.be/RWvqwtW4L7c

I have always loved big bands.  When we started the museum, I wanted it to be a big band museum.  There is no other musical group that can create the excitement, power, and feel of a big band.  When I say power, I don’t mean volume, I mean everyone hitting the note at exactly the same time to create an explosion of sound. To achieve that, everyone in the band actually has to back off their volume and listen to everyone else.  So, it’s not at all about sheer volume at all.

Listen to this example of how it’s done when it’s done right. It starts with the rhythm section playing perfectly together and laying down the tempo and feel.  They call it a walking bass line because it has the feel of someone walking down the street.  And I mean a cool dude walking down the street!

The horn players also have to be aware of the time and feel, and above all they have to listen to make that happen.  When you are playing in a band with a great sense of feel and time like this one, you actually feel like the band is one unit and you are just riding along with that unit.  You lock in with everyone else and the band takes on a life of it’s own.  You feel like you worked your whole life to get to those few moments.

Also, listen to the ensemble after the trumpet solo.  It’s like a Corvette driving 20 mph down the street.  It’s the most powerful thing in the world to have all that power and not use it.  Everyone knows it’s there, and everyone just stares at the car as it drives past.  You know it’s going to unleash the power at some point, but you don’t exactly know where or when.  Then when the power of the band does let loose, it is amazing to see that much power with so much control and yet, still contain the feel and musicality.  It’s not just noise and chaos like most people think when they think of big bands.  It’s only chaos if the musicians aren’t listening to each other properly. Every idea we are taught in classical music of balance, blend, tone, dynamics, etc. have to be included in big band jazz, too.  The result is that we get a feel and a power you can’t get with any other size, or style of music. A group larger than a big  band loses feel, and the ability to follow the lead players and rhythm section.  The precision of this band in this recording will be lost.  A group smaller than a big band won’t have the power of 15 horn players.

Sammy Nestico wrote for the Count Basie band, and this is in the style of Basie.  To me, this is as good as it gets for big band playing.  A century of jazz evolution brought us to this recording, which was actually done in the late 80’s, but is so good it is timeless.

They make it sound very easy and simple on this recording.  That’s the misunderstanding of jazz—-it sounds easy.  These are some of the top musicians in L.A. and they have years of experience. Most musicians, including many professionals, have never experienced playing in a band this good.  You have to work yourself to the top to play with musicians who can achieve this quality, and even when you do, you don’t always get to play great arrangements like this.

Sammy is one of the best big band writers in the business, using some of the best big band musicians in the world on this recording. It’s rare to get that combination these days on a cd, and Sammy knew he wouldn’t make money on a cd like this.  He wanted to do it and others like it, because he loves big bands as much as many of us do.  He wanted to show how it’s done when done right.

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Doc Playing “Malagueña” with the Ft. Worth Symphony

http://youtu.be/pUWbNic0tzI

While I’m posting Doc playing “Malagueña”, here’s one more from the 80’s with the Ft. Worth Symphony.  This is the longest cadenza of any versions I have heard from him on this piece.  I got this recording from the late Don Thomas, who was the co-principal trumpet in the symphony at the time, and good friends with Doc.  I’m sure Don was playing on this concert, too.

 

 

 

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Best Video of Doc Playing “Malaguena”

https://youtu.be/M4BsH7rpWk4

This is the best version I have in video of Doc playing Malaguena.  I was at home one night watching TV and found this on a PBS channel.  Unfortunately I recorded it at a slower speed than I meant, mainly because in 1981 I was new at video recording at home, so the quality isn’t great.  But he played great on that show which was produced in Canada.  This was the closing number of the show.

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Collecting North Texas Lab Band Albums Since 1967

 

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I have been collecting the annual recordings of the North Texas One O’Clock Lab Band since 1967, when the tradition began.  In our museum, we have a display of all of them and is the only place I know of where they can be seen publicly.

Because they haven’t made the record album format in years, it is difficult now to find all of the original albums.  I think it would be very hard to put together this collection if I had to start now.  Sometimes you can find them on eBay, and sometimes certain years never seem to show up for sale.  Even when you do find a particular year, it could be very expensive to buy.

I don’t know how long they will be making an annual recording, but I plan to keep adding to our collection each year.  The display gets a little more impressive each year. Now you can just download the tunes, or you can buy the cd.  I still buy the cd to display, but because many people may just be downloading now, the hard copy may be worth even more in the future than past recordings some day.  I still think having a hard copy of music is the best way for the long term of a music collection, even if it costs more originally. It is something tangible to pass down, and also might appreciate in value.

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Doc in Video Playing Malaguena at Halftime

Playing Malaguena pretty much became Doc’s trademark song in the 70’s and 80’s.  This performance was with the Texas Tech marching band in the fall of 1970.  I was there and heard his performance because TCU was the opposing team that day.  I remember watching him play from our perch in the stands. In fact, you can see our purple uniforms in the left side of the screen, as we watch from the stands.

It was super windy that day.  If you look closely, you will see Doc have to anchor himself before playing.  He was pointed directly into that strong wind, and it was extremely difficult to play under those conditions.  The TCU band marched first, and I was whipped from trying to march and play into that wind.  I don’t know how Doc played as well as he did that day.  This is a rare video from 44 years ago and I’m glad it survived.  I have no idea how much they had to pay Doc to come do this performance that day, but it wasn’t cheap since he was already leading the Tonight Show band.

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“Clams Anyone?” from Lab’67 at NTSU

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https://youtu.be/JWz088slXd0

This is a song from the very first annual lab band record at North Texas, Lab’67.  The band sight read an an original composition in the studio.  Leon Breeden felt that music students were harmed by playing only a few pieces of music each year to take to contest.  He thought this 48 years ago, and he was, and is in the minority of music educators to think this way.  Considering he was in charge of the top stage band in the country, you would think more educators would have listened to him.  One of the major reasons I made the One O’Clock Lab band my first semester up there was that I could read music well.  It didn’t matter how many first divisions my high school band had been awarded.  It was all about me, and my skills.  I was prepared for college, and too many students aren’t, who come from very good band programs.  Leon Breeden may have been right 48 years ago.

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Doc Plays Malagueña 1981 Plano High School

At the same concert Doc played Concerto Barrocco, he played Malagueña, also.  I edited the 15 minute piece down a bit, so we could hear just Doc.  Doc hired a local rhythm section of professional players from the Dallas area, one being Ernie Chapman, who hired me three times years later to play Doc’s show in the DFW area.  This is the best I ever heard Doc play this cadenza.

http://youtu.be/BknK_x30ZQQ

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Doc Severinsen at Plano Senior High School 1981

https://youtu.be/zfm-oPw1MJI

In March, or April of 1981 I went to hear Doc play with the Plano High school concert band, since I was not working that night.  Doc had played at my high school in 1967 with the concert and stage band, but only played with the concert band every year when he would come to Plano.   I was disappointed he didn’t use their stage band, but instead hired a rhythm section of Dallas professionals for his jazz part of the show.  Plano either didn’t have a stage band, or wasn’t good enough for Doc.

Doc was not known as a classical musician, so whenever he played classical music it was a little bit of classical and pop together.  Because of that, the classical musicians didn’t appreciate Doc, and the jazz musicians didn’t appreciate him, either.  He was in a world of his own musically, and he was good enough to make it that way.  Doc could have been anything musically he wanted in life, but he decided to be a showman in order to make more money.  He knew what he was doing.  Also, he was old school where a big trumpet sound was necessary to be heard across the ballroom floor.

This was the classical side of Doc, except that no classical trumpet player in the world plays classical music like this.  Whatever this is, this is Doc at his best, as far as I’m concerned.  It’s also when he was in his prime, age 53.  His sound and control of the instrument in all registers is something I’ve never heard from anyone.  There are a few great players who could play this piece, like Allen Vizzutti, or Wynton, but they would not have this incredible sound.  The piece is Concerto Barrocco.

It was so amazing, I’ll never forget where I was sitting that night, just off to his right side. His sound was filling the large gymnasium we were in so much that I couldn’t believe what I was hearing.  He never missed a note, either.  It was one of the greatest moments in trumpet history I had ever heard.  I haven’t heard anyone play like this since.

He played two nights, and I think this was from the first night.  At the end of the night I did something I had never done before, or since.  I asked the sound man for a tape. He agreed and sent me two reel to reel tapes a few weeks later.  I’ll post the second night on another post, but the microphones aren’t as good on that performance.  But the playing might be better!

I’ve heard Doc play many times, and have even played in his back-up band three times in my career.  Even Doc would like this night.  The piece was commissioned for Doc by an Air Force band, and Doc had performed it with them a month, or two earlier.  He had been working on this piece quite a bit, and it showed.  This was never put onto a cd, and even though Plano High made a record of it that year, this is an example of a night in music that could disappear forever, if not transferred and saved.  Most people, even Doc fans, have never heard this concert.  It was amazing, and still is to hear it.

In 1981 I was already in the musical preservation mode without knowing it.  If only I had known I would be running a music museum someday, I might have tried to video tape the night.  But I wouldn’t be aware of that until 2005.  At least we have the music.

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Live Recording of Doc Playing “Take The A Train”

http://youtu.be/Uha-M8B1ox0

This is a recording of Doc jamming with a rhythm section in 1966 at the National Championship stage band contest in Pampa, TX.  Doc had not yet taken over the conducting job at NBC in the Tonight Show band, which didn’t occur until late 1967.

Doc never did much small group playing like this, so it’s great to find an old recording from the 60’s where he was jamming.  I edited out the sax and trombone solos in this piece because the tune would have gone for almost nine minutes.  Doc was actually the third solo in the piece, which is why you hear an edit after the head of the piece is played. Doc was 38 years old at the time of this recording.

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Doc Severinsen’s 1966 Getzen Trumpet

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In 1966 the Paschal High School stage band went to the National Championship contest in Pampa, Tx. where Doc Severinsen was one of the judges.  Doc was so impressed with the playing of lead trumpet, 15 year old John Thomas, he decided to give John his trumpet.  Doc was a Getzen clinician at the time.

in 2011, John donated this trumpet to our jazz museum in Sherman during John’s trumpet clinic at the museum.  It’s a great example of what Doc was playing in 1966.  Thanks to John for the donation and for being such a good friend through the years.

 

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