By sixteen, Barnet had performed on tours with
Jean Goldkette's satellite band and was in New York, where he joined Frank Winegar's Pennsylvania Boys on tenor sax. Always restless, by 1931, he had relocated to Hollywood and appeared as a film extra while trying to interest local bandleaders in hot music, which was increasingly unpopular due to the
Great Depression. Late in 1932, aged 18, he returned east and persuaded a contact at
CBS's artist bureau to try him out as an orchestra leader. Barnet began recording in October 1933, during an engagement at New York's
Park Central Hotel, but was not a great success for most of the 1930s, regularly breaking up his band and changing its style. Early in 1935, he attempted to premiere
swing music at New Orleans'
Hotel Roosevelt, where Louisiana's colorful Governor,
Huey Long, disliking the new sound, had the band run out of town by luring them to a bordello, which was then raided. Barnet arranged with
Joe Haymes to take several of his now-jobless sidemen, while he himself went on a lark in
Havana, as an escort to well-to-do older women. 1936 saw another swinging Barnet edition, which featured the up-and-coming vocal quartet
The Modernaires, but quickly faded from the scene. The height of Barnet's popularity—and his first truly permanent band—came between 1939 and 1941, a period that began with his hit version of "
Cherokee", written by
Ray Noble and arranged by
Billy May. Trumpeters
Roy Eldridge and
Frankie Newton and bassist
John Kirby joined in 1937. Lena Horne was one of Barnet's vocalists. Unusually, for a mainly white group, Barnet was booked to perform at the
Apollo Theater in Harlem and established a new attendance record. Throughout his career, he was an opponent of syrupy arrangements. In the song "The Wrong Idea", he lampooned the "sweet"
big band sound of the era. The song was written by Billy May, who later used the same satirical bent in his collaborations with
Stan Freberg on
Capitol Records, including the
Lawrence Welk satire "Wunnerful! Wunnerful!". Barnet's was a notorious party band where drinking and vandalism were not uncommon. While Glenn Miller enforced strict standards of dress and deportment, Barnet was more interested in having fun, according to his autobiography
Those Swinging Years: The Autobiography of Charlie Barnet. In 1949, he retired, apparently because he had lost interest in music. He was able to retire when he chose to because he was one of the few heirs in a very wealthy family. He occasionally returned from retirement for brief tours but never returned to music full-time. In 1956, he released an album,
Dance Bash, which was recorded over five years from 1947 to 1952. Known for a unique sound and hard-swinging style on tenor saxophone, Barnet in the late 1930s added the alto saxophone to his arsenal, followed by the soprano saxophone, an instrument that had fallen out of favor after the 1920s and was not generally used in the big band era. Barnet did not play at the gathering. Barnet's theme song was "Redskin Rhumba". His autobiography,
Those Swinging Years: The Autobiography of Charlie Barnet, written with
Stanley Dance, was published in 1984. == Personal life ==