Saxie Dowell

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Horace Kirby "Saxie" Dowell (May 24, 1904 July 22, 1974) was an American jazz and pop music bandleader and singer and songwriter.

Biography

Dowell was born in Raleigh, North Carolina, and attended the University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, where he met Hal Kemp. He joined Kemp's orchestra as a reed player (tenor saxophone, clarinet, and flute) and vocalist in the fall of 1925. Dowell composed "I Don't Care", which was recorded by Kemp for Brunswick in 1928. When the band's style changed in the early 1930s to that of a dance band, Dowell became the group's comedic vocalist. He wrote "Three Little Fishes" in 1939, which became a smash hit, and Dowell was embroiled in lawsuits over charges of plagiarism. Due to the success of the song, Dowell left Kemp that same year and organized his own band. In 1940 he wrote the popular song "Playmates", which was set to a plagiarized melody. During World War II he served heroically in the navy aboard the ill-fated aircraft carrier USS Franklin (CV13). Around 1946 he led a naval air station band, with the then 14-year-old Keely Smith as a singer. After the war he reorganized his orchestra and got some good bookings, mostly around the Chicago area, appeared in a short and made a few recordings for the Sonora label. He became a disc jockey for Chicago radio station WGN around 1949.

Saxie Dowell's song credits include "I Don't Care", "Your Magic Kisses", "Three Little Fishes", "Playmates" ("Come Out and Play With Me"), "The Canasta Song", "Tonight I'm Thinking Of You", "All I've Got Is Me" and "Turnabout is Fair Play".

He retired in the 1960s and moved to Scottsdale, Arizona.

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