Paul Whiteman

Paul Whiteman

Person from United States

Genres: jazz, swing, Big Band, 20s, bandleaders

About Paul Whiteman

Paul Whiteman (March 28, 1890 – December 29, 1967) was a popular American orchestral leader. He was born in Denver, Colorado. After a start as a classical violinist and violist, Whiteman then led a jazz-influenced dance band which became locally popular in San Francisco, California in 1918. In 1920 he moved his band to New York City where they started making recordings for Victor Records which propelled Whiteman and his band to national prominence. Whiteman became the most popular band leader of the decade. In the late 1920s he recorded for Columbia Records. In the 1920s and early 1930s Whiteman dubbed himself The King of Jazz (see: Jazz royalty). Much of what his band played hasn't been considered "true" jazz by later generations. Others reject these notions, and regard Whiteman's music as an interesting development in jazz history. He recorded Hoagy Carmichael singing and playing Washboard Blues to the accompaniment of his orchestra in 1926. While today most fans of jazz consider improvisation to be essential to the musical style, Whiteman thought the music could be improved by scoring the best of it. Modern revisionists might look back & say "that wasn't the True Jazz", but his notions were critically popular and commercially successful at the time. Whiteman's music was often the first jazz of any form that some people heard. Duke Ellington wrote in his autobiography: "Paul Whiteman was known as the King of Jazz, and no one as yet has come near carrying that title with more certainty and dignity." Whiteman commissioned George Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue, which was premiered by Whiteman's Orchestra with Gershwin at the piano in 1924. Another familiar piece in Whiteman's repertoire: Grand Canyon Suite, by Ferde Grofé (much of which was used in the score of A Christmas Story). Whiteman appreciated jazz musicians and hired many of the best white jazz men for his band, including Bix Beiderbecke, Frankie Trumbauer, Joe Venuti, Eddie Lang, Steve Brown, Mike Pingitore, Gussie Mueller, Jack Teagarden, and Bunny Berigan. Whiteman gave them constant chances to improvise, paid them top salaries and encouraged them to make small band jam recordings on the side. Paul Whiteman was primarily responsible for revolutionizing the dance orchestra and dance music after World War I. Prior to that time, dances were played by military bands, string ensembles, or small combinations. Working in 1918-19 with arranger Ferde Grofé and in parallel with fellow San Francisco bandleader Art Hickman, Whiteman introduced the saxophone section as a musical unit of equal weight with the brass. This set a standard for instrumentation that defined the dance orchestra, and remains in big bands to this day. Before Whiteman, musical arrangements were very cut-and-dried, with much repetition. Whiteman and Grofé introduced arrangements that instead of repeating, changed keys, textures and rhythms over their course, much like symphonic music. This innovation, combined with the jazz elements mentioned above, plus his insistence on using top notch, concert-calibre musicians, made Paul Whiteman's orchestra a vanguard force that changed the face of popular music in the 1920s. Whiteman was also one of the greatest of all talent scouts. For over 30 years, he sought out and encouraged musicians, vocalists, composers, arrangers and entertainers who looked promising. It is worth repeating that Whiteman not only premiered George Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue" in 1924, but commissioned him to write it, much to Gershwin's surprise at the time. Both Bing Crosby and Mildred Bailey got their start singing with the Whiteman Orchestra. In 1931, Whiteman married motion picture actress Margaret Livingston. After he disbanded his Orchestra, in the 1940s and 1950s Whiteman worked as a music director for the ABC Radio Network. He also hosted several television programs and continued to appear as guest conductor for many concerts. Paul Whiteman died at the age of 77 in Doylestown, Pennsylvania.

Taken from Last.fm

59,840 listeners  ·  280,496 plays via Last.fm

On RadioStar

26
stations playing
8
countries
46
tracks tracked
most active station (The United States Of America)

Radio Stations sorted by tracks on rotation

Paul Whiteman — Top 30 songs of 46

Artist Song title Like / Dislike
Paul Whiteman A Night With Paul Whiteman At The Biltmore (Medley)
Paul Whiteman Changes
Paul Whiteman In The Dim Dim Dawning
Paul Whiteman Mississippi Suite (A Tone Journey)
Paul Whiteman Happy Feet
Paul Whiteman Something Had to Happen
Paul Whiteman Song of India
Paul Whiteman Smoke Gets in Your Eyes
Paul Whiteman Would There Be Love
Paul Whiteman Whispering
Paul Whiteman Jazz Goes Steampunk! Electro Swing Invasion
Paul Whiteman Oriental
Paul Whiteman Let`s Do It, Let`s Fall In Love
Paul Whiteman Just A Memory [1927]
Paul Whiteman Sittin` On a Rainbow
Paul Whiteman Park Avenue Fantasy [1934]
Paul Whiteman Park Avenue Fantasy [1934]
Paul Whiteman Willow Weep For Me [1932]
Paul Whiteman Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
Paul Whiteman Three OClock In The Morning [1922]
Paul Whiteman Slaughter On Tenth Avenue [1936]
Paul Whiteman Lover, Come Back to Me
Paul Whiteman Waiting At the End of the Road
Paul Whiteman Cole Porter Medley [1933]
Paul Whiteman Hot Cha & Face The Music Medley [1932]
Paul Whiteman Just A Memory [1927]
Paul Whiteman Lonely Melody [1928]
Paul Whiteman Side By Side [1927]
Paul Whiteman Slaughter On Tenth Avenue [1936]
Paul Whiteman We Just Couldn't Say Goodbye [1932]
A Night With Paul Whiteman At The Biltmore (Medley)
In The Dim Dim Dawning
Mississippi Suite (A Tone Journey)
Happy Feet
Something Had to Happen
Song of India
Smoke Gets in Your Eyes
Would There Be Love
Whispering
Jazz Goes Steampunk! Electro Swing Invasion
Let`s Do It, Let`s Fall In Love
Just A Memory [1927]
Sittin` On a Rainbow
Park Avenue Fantasy [1934]
Park Avenue Fantasy [1934]
Willow Weep For Me [1932]
Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
Three OClock In The Morning [1922]
Slaughter On Tenth Avenue [1936]
Lover, Come Back to Me
Waiting At the End of the Road
Cole Porter Medley [1933]
Hot Cha & Face The Music Medley [1932]
Just A Memory [1927]
Lonely Melody [1928]
Side By Side [1927]
Slaughter On Tenth Avenue [1936]
We Just Couldn't Say Goodbye [1932]