Sonny Burke, who played piano, violin, and
vibraphone, founded the Duke Ambassadors in 1934 and led the group for the next three years. After graduating from Duke, Burke went on to a successful career as a band leader, composer, and arranger. He wrote arrangements for
Charlie Spivak (1940–1942) and
Jimmy Dorsey (1942–1945), among others, and collaborated with
Peggy Lee to compose the music for the Disney animated film "Lady and the Tramp" (1955). Burke recorded several albums throughout the 1950s and 1960s and worked in the studio with artists including
Frank Sinatra,
Mel Tormé,
Louis Armstrong, and
Ella Fitzgerald. He was the recording director for Decca Records,
Reprise Records, and Warner Brothers Records and was also the founder and president of Daybreak Records prior to his passing in 1980. After Burke graduated from Duke in 1937, The Duke Ambassadors continued performing for nearly thirty more years, under fourteen different student leaders. Sammy Fletcher, who led and played drums in the group from 1942 to 1943 and again from 1946 to 1947, took the group on a successful tour of New York in the summer of 1942. During the tour, the group appeared at the
Old Orchard Beach in Maine, engaged in a battle of the bands with both
Fletcher Henderson's and
Ray McKinley's bands, and enjoyed co-billings with Benny Goodman and Claude Thornhill. Another highlight occurred in 1953–54, when the Ambassadors, under the leadership of Jack Hail, were hired to conduct two State Department-sponsored tours overseas as a form of cultural diplomacy. Throughout The Ambassadors' thirty-year existence, numerous other members went on to professional success in music. Dutch McMillin, for example, led the Ambassadors from 1938 to 1940. After graduating from Duke and serving as a fighter pilot in WWII, he worked professionally as a session saxophonist in Nashville for much of the 1950s, performing on recordings with Buddy Holly, Roy Orbison, Chet Atkins, and Brenda Lee, among others. In 1955, he released a recording under his own name for Decca Records titled "
The Waltz You Saved For Me". Bill Pape, who led the Ambassadors from 1955 to 1956, went on to play lead trombone and work as an arranger for Glenn Miller,
Si Zentner, and others. Pape also later became the musical director and principal arranger for the bands at Walt Disney World.
Creed Taylor played trumpet in the Duke Ambassadors, as well as in the quintet The Five Dukes, from 1948 to 1951. He credits Les Brown's association with Duke as initially drawing him to the university. As he recalls, "The reason I went to Duke was from hearing Les Brown and all the history of the bands who went through Duke. This was really a great jazz band... and the book was handed down from one class to the next, you had to audition and all the best players who came to Duke got in the band... I had a ball when I was there." After graduating from Duke in 1951 with a degree in psychology, Taylor spent two years in the Marines before returning to Duke for a year of graduate study. Shortly thereafter, he relocated to New York City where he worked for record companies including Bethlehem Records, ABC-Paramount, Verve, and A&M Records. Some of his accomplishments during this period include founding the Impulse! label in 1960, introducing bossa nova to the US through recordings such as "
The Girl from Ipanema" with Antonio Carlos Jobim and Stan Getz, and producing popular recordings by Charles Mingus, Ray Charles, Wes Montgomery, and others. In 1969, Taylor established
CTI Records as an independent company, recording musicians including Freddie Hubbard, Stanley Turrentine, George Benson, Gerry Mulligan, Herbie Hancock, and many others. After a brief distribution deal with Motown Records in the late 1970s, CTI became a part of Columbia Records, which oversaw various reissue programs of CTI's early 1970s material. In 1990, Taylor formed a new CTI which has issued dozens of recordings as of 2009. Frank Bennett served as the percussionist, arranger, and last student leader of the Duke Ambassadors from 1962 to 1964. After graduating from Duke, he completed a Doctor of Musical Arts degree from
Yale University. Since then, he has enjoyed a career as a percussionist in a variety of jazz ensembles, symphony orchestras, and Indian music ensembles, performing with Jimmy Heath, Benny Goodman, Lou Donaldson, and others. Additionally, Bennett has orchestrated and arranged the music for over one hundred feature films and numerous television shows, for which he has received two Emmy Award citations. He continues to compose and perform regularly. ==Recent developments==