Market1949 in jazz
Company Profile

1949 in jazz

This is a timeline documenting events of Jazz in the year 1949.

Shows, movies and events
Begone Dull Care is an animated film directed by Norman McLaren and Evelyn Lambart, giving a visual presentation of Oscar Peterson's jazz music. • My Foolish Heart was a film starring Dana Andrews and Susan Hayward that was panned by the critics, but the title song "My Foolish Heart", written by singer Billie Holiday and sung by Martha Mears, was a hit and became a jazz standard. • Sarah Vaughan made her first appearance with a symphony orchestra in a benefit for the Philadelphia Orchestra entitled "100 Men and a Girl." • Al Jolson appeared in the film Jolson Sings Again, a sequel to the 1946 The Jolson Story. • Dolly Rathebe's career was launched by an appearance as a nightclub singer in the British-produced movie ''Jim Comes To Jo'burg''. • Frank Sinatra co-starred with Gene Kelly in Take Me Out to the Ball Game. • Lena Horne appeared in the movie Some of the Best. • Liza Minnelli made her debut aged three in the movie In the Good Old Summertime. • The musical Lost in the Stars premiered on Broadway. • At a Jazz at the Philharmonic concert, Ray Brown first worked with the jazz pianist Oscar Peterson. • Sonny Rollins made his first recording with Babs Gonzales. • Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers danced to the jazz standard "They Can't Take That Away from Me" in their last movie The Barkleys of Broadway. • Waring's Pennsylvanians, a jazz – Dixieland band had their own TV show in 1949. • Club openings included Birdland, founded by Monte Kay in New York City, the Lighthouse Café in Hermosa Beach, California and The Black Hawk in San Francisco. ==Recordings==
Recordings
• "Ain't She Sweet": Pearl Bailey issued a recording of this standard on Harmony Records. • "All the Things You Are": Django Reinhardt and Stéphane Grappelli issued a version of the 1939 number. • "Baby Get Lost": a July, 1949 single by Dinah Washington. • "Baby Won't You Please Come Home", a recording of the 1919 standard by Sidney Bechet & His Feetwarmers. • "Baby, It's Cold Outside": there were several recordings of this song in 1949. The version by Dinah Shore and Buddy Clark reached number four on the Billboard chart. • "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered": recorded by Doris Day with The Mellomen. • "Blue Moon": a version of the standard recorded by Mel Tormé. • "Blue Skies": Donald Peers recorded the standard at Royal Albert Hall, London. • "Bye Bye Blues": Dinah Shore recorded the standard. • "C'est si bon": recorded by Johnny Desmond. • "Charley, My Boy": recorded by The Andrews Sisters and released by Decca Records. • "Dust My Broom": a cover of the Robert Johnson classic by Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup. • "Early Autumn", composed by Ralph Burns and Woody Herman with lyrics by Johnny Mercer, was first released in 1949 and became a hit. • "East of the Sun (and West of the Moon)": recorded by Sarah Vaughan. • "Exactly Like You": Nat King Cole recording of the standard. • "How Blue Can You Get": recorded by Johnny Moore's Three Blazers. • "Ain't Nobody's Business": a hit sung by Jimmy Witherspoon with the Jay McShann band. • "Moody's Mood for Love": saxophonist James Moody's instrumental solo. • "Saturday Night Fish Fry": an R&B hit recorded by Louis Jordan and his Tympany Five. ==Standards==
Industry and technology
• New labels launched in 1949 included Coral Records, EMS Recordings, Fantasy Records, Good Time Jazz Records, Jazzology Records, New Orleans Records, Peacock Records, Prestige Records, Roost Records and Tempo Records, a subsidiary of Decca Records. • Columbia Records opened their CBS 30th Street Studio in Manhattan, New York, thought by some to have been the greatest recording studio in history. • The Fender Telecaster guitar was introduced, and Gibson launched their ES-165, ES-175 and ES-5 guitars. • Capitol Records and Decca Records introduced their first LPs (33-1/3 rpm). In response, RCA Records released the first 45 rpm recordings, while Universal Audio was granted a patent for "Double Feature", a method for putting two songs on each side of a 10-inch record. ==Deaths==
Deaths
, 1910 ; January • 14George Baquet, American clarinetist (born 1881). ; February • 14Seymour Simons, American pianist, composer, orchestra leader, and radio producer (born 1896). ; March • 20Irving Fazola, American clarinetist (born 1912). ; April • 11Herbie Haymer, American reedist, known primarily as a saxophonist in big bands (born 1915). • 21Snoozer Quinn, American guitarist (born 1907). • 25Kid Rena, American trumpeter (born 1898). ; July • 2Bud Scott, American guitarist, banjoist, and singer (born 1890). • 7Bunk Johnson, New Orleans trumpeter (born 1879). • 11Danny Polo, American clarinetist (born 1901). ; August • 18Paul Mares, American early dixieland jazz cornet & trumpet player, and leader of the New Orleans Rhythm Kings (born 1900). • 20Louis Nelson Delisle, dixieland clarinetist (born 1885). ; October • 23Buster Wilson, American pianist (born 1897). ; December • 3Albert Ammons, American pianist, a player of boogie-woogie (born 1907). • 28Ivie Anderson, American singer (born 1905). ==Births==
Births
August 2006. ; January • 6Chris Laurence, English upright bassist. • 21David Moss, American composer, percussionist, and singer. • 22Phil Miller, English guitarist (died 2017). • 25Paul Murphy, American drummer. • 27Djavan, Brazilian singer and songwriter. • 29Vincent Klink, German trumpeter, chef, and restaurateur. ; February • 16Michel Herr, Belgian pianist, composer, and arranger. • 17Fred Frith, English guitarist, multi-instrumentalist, composer, and improvisor, Henry Cow. • 18Justo Almario, Colombian flutist and saxophonist. ; March • 16Jerry Goodman, American violinist Mahavishnu Orchestra. • 29Carlos Azevedo, Portuguese composer and pianist (died 2012). • Michael Brecker, American saxophonist, Brecker Brothers (died 2007). ; April • 2Per Husby, Norwegian pianist and composer. • 3Eric Kloss, American saxophonist. • 22David Attwooll, British drummer, poet, and publisher, Henry Cow (died 2016). ; May • 1Tim Hodgkinson, British experimental music composer, performer, and reedist, Henry Cow. • 5David Toop, English musician and author. • Kaoru Abe, Japanese avant-garde alto saxophonist (died 1978). • Randy Sandke, American trumpeter and guitarist. • 13Philip Kruse, Norwegian trumpeter and music publisher. • 18Jim McNeely, American pianist, composer and arranger. ; June • 5Jerry Gonzalez, American trumpeter and percussionist (died 2018). • 12John Wetton, English singer, bassist, and songwriter (cancer) (died 2017). • 14Papa Wemba, American soul singer (died 2016). • 20Harald Halvorsen, Norwegian trombonist. • 21Christy Doran, Irish guitarist. • 26Gyula Babos, Hungarian guitarist (died 2018). • 29Richard James Burgess, English singer, drummer, electronic musician, songwriter, producer, and composer. ; July • 6Phyllis Hyman, American singer and actress (died 1995). • 17Chico Freeman, American tenor saxophonist and trumpeter. • 30Duck Baker, American acoustic guitarist. ; August • 6Lillian Boutté, American singer. • Olli Ahvenlahti, Finnish pianist, composer, and conductor. • 19Danny Mixon, American pianist. • 21Malachi Thompson, American trumpet player (died 2006). • 25Harold Ivory Williams, American keyboardist (died 2010). • 26Leon Redbone, American singer and guitarist. • 28Dennis Davis, American drummer (cancer) (died 2016). ; September • 2Knut Borge, Norwegian journalist, entertainer, and jazz enthusiast (died 2017). • 3Onaje Allan Gumbs, American pianist, composer, and bandleader. • 9Larry Stabbins, British saxophonist, flautist, and composer. • 10Viktor Paskov, Bulgarian writer, musician, and musicologist (died 2009). • 14Peter Guidi, Scottish saxophonist and flutist (died 2018). • 19Sally Potter, English composer, musician, film director, actor, and screenwriter. • 24Bill Connors, American guitarist, Return to Forever. • 27Allan C. Barnes, American saxophonist (died 2016). ; October • 5Thomas Clausen, Danish pianist. • 13Ray Brown, Jr., American pianist and singer. • 17Kazutoki Umezu, Japanese saxophonist. • 23Tristan Honsinger, American cellist. ; November • 6Arturo Sandoval, Cuban trumpeter, pianist and composer. • 7David S. Ware, American saxophonist and composer (died 2012). • 14Raúl di Blasio, Argentine pianist. • 21Rainer Brüninghaus, German pianist and composer. • 30Bill Reichenbach Jr., American trombonist and composer. ; December • 5Enrico Pieranunzi, Italian pianist. • John Altman, English film composer, orchestrator, and conductor. • 7Tom Waits, American singer, songwriter, and actor. • 10Pops Mohamed, South African multi-instrumentalist and producer. • 19Lenny White, American drummer Return to Forever. • 21Marilyn Scott, American singer. • 25Konstanty Wilenski, Ukrainian-Polish pianist and composer. • 27T. S. Monk, American drummer, composer and bandleader. ; Unknown date • Jesper Zeuthen, Danish saxophonist composer. ==See also==
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