Frogtoon Music

Skyliner by Les & Larry Elgart

Artist Biography For Les & Larry Elgart

Lester Elliott Elgart August 3 1917 New Haven Connecticut – July 29 1995 Dallas Texas Was An American Swing Jazz Bandleader And Trumpeter. Larry Elgart March 20 1922 – August 29 2017 Was An American Jazz Bandleader. With His Brother Les He Recorded "Bandstand Boogie" The Theme To The Long-Running Dance Show American Bandstand. Larry Elgart Was Born In 1922 In New London Connecticut Four Years Younger Than His Brother Les. Their Mother Was A Concert Pianist Their Father Played Piano As Well Though Not Professionally. Both Brothers Began Playing In Jazz Ensembles In Their Teens And While Young Larry Played With Jazz Musicians Such As Charlie Spivak Woody Herman Red Norvo Freddie Slack And Tommy Dorsey. In The Mid-1940s Les And Larry Started Up Their Own Ensemble Hiring Nelson Riddle Bill Finegan And Ralph Flanagan To Arrange Tunes For Them. Their Ensemble Was Not Successful And After A Few Years They Scuttled The Band And Sold The Arrangements They Had Commissioned To Tommy Dorsey. Both Returned To Sideman Positions In Various Orchestras. In 1953 Larry Met Charles Albertine And Recorded Two Of His Experimental Compositions "Impressions Of Outer Space" And "Music For Barefoot Ballerinas". Released On 10" Vinyl These Recordings Became Collector's Items For Fans Of Avant-Garde Jazz But They Were Not Commercially Successful At The Time. Larry And Albertine Put Together A More Traditional Ensemble And Began Recording Them Using Precise Microphone Placements Producing What Came To Be Known As The "Elgart Sound". This Proved To Be Very Commercially Successful And Larry Enjoyed A Run Of Successful Albums And Singles In The 1950s. In 1954 The Elgarts Left Their Permanent Mark On Music History In Recording Albertine's "Bandstand Boogie " For The Legendary Television Show Originally Hosted By Bob Horn And Two Years Later Dick Clark. Clark Took The Show National To ABC-TV In 1956 And Remained Host For Another 32 Years. Variations Of The Original Surfaced As The Show's Theme In Later Years. Les And Larry Reunited In 1963 But It Would Not Last Long. Les Moved To Texas And Performed For The Rest Of His Life With The Les Elgart Orchestra While Larry Continued To Perform And Record Regularly For Decades. Larry's Biggest Exposure Came In 1982 With The Smash Success Of A Recording Called "Hooked On Swing". The Instrumental Was A Medley Of Swing Jazz Hits - "In The Mood" "Cherokee" "Don't Sit Under The Apple Tree" "American Patrol" "Sing Sing Sing" "Don't Be That Way" "Little Brown Jug" "Opus #1" "Zing Went The Strings Of My Heart" And "A String Of Pearls" - That Became So Popular It Even Cracked The US Billboard Pop Singles Chart At #31 And Adult Contemporary Chart #20 . This Was The Final Hit For Any Artist In The Year-Long "medley Craze " That Lasted From 1981 To 1982. Billed As "Larry Elgart And His Manhattan Swing Orchestra " The LP From Which The Tune Was Taken Hit #24 On The US Charts. The Follow-Up Hooked On Swing 2 Debuted At #89 On The Album Charts And Soon After Larry Was Back To The Jazz Touring Circuit. He Continued To Tour Internationally And Record Into The 2000s. Les Elgart Began Playing Trumpet As A Teenager And Was Playing Professionally By The Age Of Twenty. During The 1940s He Was A Member Of Bands Led By Raymond Scott Charlie Spivak And Harry James Occasionally Finding Himself Alongside His Brother Larry. They Formed The Les & Larry Elgart Ensemble In 1945 Hiring Nelson Riddle Ralph Flanagan And Bill Finegan To Write Arrangements. The Union Was Short-Lived However Due To The Musician's Union Strike And The Waning Of Swing Jazz's Popularity. The Ensemble Broke Up In 1946. In 1952 The Brothers Reunited And Released Albums On Columbia Records Many To Considerable Sales Success. Among Their Popular Tunes Was "Bandstand Boogie" Which Was Used By Dick Clark As The Theme Song For The Television Dance Show American Bandstand. By The End Of The Decade Elgart Quit Performing Preferring To Handle The Business Aspects Of The Band. The Brothers Reunited Again In 1963 Hiring Arrangers Charles Albertine And Bobby Scott For Music That Could Be Categorized As Easy Listening. Les Elgart Worked Until His Death From Heart Failure In 1995.

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