Thomas Francis Dorsey Jr. (November 19, 1905 – November 26, 1956) was an American jazz trombonist, composer, conductor and bandleader of the big band era. He was known as the “Sentimental Gentleman of Swing” because of his smooth-toned trombone playing. His theme song was “I’m Getting Sentimental Over You”. His technical skill on the trombone gave him renown among other musicians. He was the younger brother of bandleader Jimmy Dorsey. After Dorsey broke with his brother in the mid-1930s, he led an extremely successful band from the late 1930s into the 1950s. He is best remembered for standards such as “Opus One”, “Song of India”, “Marie”, “On Treasure Island”, and his biggest hit single, “I’ll Never Smile Again”.
In 2009, Buddy De Franco recalled recording “Opus One” with Dorsey in the 1940s, commenting on Dorsey’s desire to be precise and exact.[14] Expanding on De Franco’s opinions about Dorsey, writer Peter Levinson said, “He wanted things to be done his way.”
The band was popular almost from the moment it signed with RCA Victor for “On Treasure Island”, the first of four hits in 1935. After his 1935 recording, however, Dorsey’s manager dropped the “hot jazz” that Dorsey had mixed with his own lyrical style, and instead had Dorsey play pop and vocal tunes. Dorsey kept his Clambake Seven as a Dixieland group that played during performances. Dorsey became the co-host of The Raleigh-Kool Program on the radio with comedian Jack Pearl, then become the host.
By 1939, Dorsey was aware of criticism that his band lacked a jazz feeling. He hired arranger Sy Oliver away from the Jimmie Lunceford band. Sy Oliver’s arrangements include “On The Sunny Side of the Street” and “T.D.’s Boogie Woogie”; Oliver also composed two of the new band’s signature instrumentals, “Well, Git It” and “Opus One“. In 1940, Dorsey hired singer Frank Sinatra from bandleader Harry James. Sinatra made eighty recordings from 1940 to 1942 with the Dorsey band. Two of those eighty songs are “In the Blue of Evening“ and “This Love of Mine“. Sinatra achieved his first great success as a vocalist in the Dorsey band and claimed he learned breath control from watching Dorsey play trombone.[13] Sy Oliver and Sinatra did a posthumous tribute album to Dorsey on Sinatra’s Reprise records. I Remember Tommy appeared in 1961. In turn, Dorsey said his trombone style was heavily influenced by Jack Teagarden.
Dorsey made further business decisions in the music industry. He loaned money to Glenn Miller enabling him to launch his band of 1938, but Dorsey saw the loan as an investment, entitling him to a percentage of Miller’s income. When Miller balked at this, the angry Dorsey got even by sponsoring a new band led by Bob Chester, and hiring arrangers who deliberately copied Miller’s style and sound. Dorsey branched out in the mid-1940s and owned two music publishing companies, Sun and Embassy.[49] After opening at the Los Angeles ballroom, the Hollywood Palladium on the Palladium’s first night, Dorsey’s relations with the ballroom soured and he opened a competing ballroom, the Casino Gardens circa 1944. Dorsey also owned for a short time a trade magazine called The Bandstand.
Tommy Dorsey disbanded his own orchestra at the end of 1946. Dorsey might have broken up his own band permanently following World War II, as many big bands did due to the shift in music economics following the war, but Tommy Dorsey’s album for RCA Victor, “All Time Hits” placed in the top ten records in February 1947. In addition, “How Are Things in Glocca Morra?“, a single recorded by Dorsey, became a top-ten hit in March 1947. As a result, Dorsey was able to re-organize a big band in early 1947. The Dorsey brothers were also reconciling. The biographical film The Fabulous Dorseys (1947) describes sketchy details of how the brothers got their start from-the-bottom-up into the jazz era of one-nighters, the early days of radio in its infancy stages, and the onward march when both brothers ended up with Paul Whiteman before 1935 when The Dorsey Brothers’ Orchestra split into two.
Jimmy Dorsey broke up his big band in 1953. Tommy invited him to join as a feature attraction. In 1953, the Dorseys focused their attention on television. On December 26, 1953, the brothers appeared with their orchestra on Jackie Gleason‘s CBS television show, which was preserved on kinescope and later released on home video by Gleason. The brothers took the unit on tour and onto their own television show, Stage Show, from 1954 to 1956. In January 1956, The Dorseys made rock music history introducing Elvis Presley on his national television debut. Presley, then a regional country singer, made six guest appearances on Stage Show promoting his first releases for RCA Records several months before his more familiar visits to the Milton Berle, Steve Allen, and Ed Sullivan variety programs.
Dorsey died on November 26, 1956 at his home in Greenwich, Connecticut, a week after his 51st birthday. He had begun taking sleeping pills regularly at this time, causing him to become heavily sedated; he choked to death in his sleep after having eaten a large meal. Jimmy Dorsey led his brother’s band until his own death from lung cancer the following year. At that point, trombonist Warren Covington became leader of the band with Jane Dorsey’s blessings as she owned the rights to her late husband’s band and name. Billed as the “Tommy Dorsey Orchestra Starring Warren Covington”, they topped the charts in 1958 with “Tea for Two Cha-Cha”. The band was also fronted by Urbie Green after Dorsey’s death in 1956.
After Covington led the band, tenor saxophonist Sam Donahue led it from 1961, continuing until 1966. Frank Sinatra Jr. made his professional singing debut with the band at Dallas Memorial Theater in Texas in 1963. Later, trombonist and bandleader Buddy Morrow led the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra from 1977 until his death on September 27, 2010. Jane Dorsey died of natural causes at the age of 79, in Miami, Florida, in 2003. Tommy and Jane Dorsey are interred together in Kensico Cemetery in Valhalla, New York.[60]
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