Tommy Tucker (bandleader)
Tommy Tucker | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Gerald L. Duppler |
Also known as | Tommy |
Born | May 18, 1903 |
Origin | Souris, North Dakota, New York, New Jersey, Sarasota, Florida, United States |
Died | July 11, 1989 |
Genres | Big Band, Dance Band, Jazz |
Occupation(s) | Big Band Leader, Music Professor |
Instruments | piano, accordion, trombone |
Associated acts | Gerry Mulligan, Eydie Gorme |
Introduction
The Tommy Tucker Orchestra entertained many listeners as a big band in the 1930s and 1940s. Popular as a dance band, the Tucker orchestra played concert halls, theatres, hotels and various venues across the country—for a span of 25 years. Recorded for Okeh in June 1941, his biggest hit, I Don't Want to Set the World on Fire, achieved status as a Gold Record. Tucker wrote his own theme song, I Love You (Oh, How I Love You); it was published on four record labels, including Brunswick, in 1935, and MGM, in 1951.[1]
Many listeners were familiar with the Tucker orchestra sound because they tuned into popular radio shows, such as Fibber McGee & Molly in 1936 and the George Jessel show in 1938, and several shows billed as Tommy Tucker Time.[2]
Tommy Tucker opened each performance—on radio or live—with his signature "tic-toc, tic-toc, it's Tommy Tucker time." And he usually ended each session with Time to Go.[3]
Background
Born Gerald L. Duppler, May 18, 1903, in Souris, ND, he changed to his stage name, Tommy Tucker, in 1968. He later received a Bachelor of Arts at the University of North Dakota in 1924, majored in Music and was recognized as Phi Betta Kappa.[4]
Shortly after college, Tucker organized a small band and played at a fairground pavilion in Minot, ND. They played at the Breen Hotel in St. Cloud, MN that winter, and then in the summer of 1926 they played at a popular resort in Detroit, MN—The Pettibone Lodge.[1]
The group began to travel and landed in California. His first recordings were with Crown Records in 1933, and recorded under the name Tommy Tucker and His Californians. He used the name Tommy Tucker and His Orchestra for his next recordings for Brunswick in 1935.[5] With Columbia records dominant, Tucker recorded over one thousand sides for over 10 record companies.[6]
Then the band first toured the country, Tucker devised his own marketing approach. When he planned a route, Tucker would send telegraph messages to various towns announcing that he was traveling through the area, and asked if the proprietor of a venue would like to book him. Later in the early thirties, Joe Galkin became the orchestra's official manager who planned all bookings and arrangements for travel.[1]
Career Highlights and Associated Talent
The Tommy Tucker Orchestra played at the Berkeley-Carteret Hotel in Asbury Park and the Strand Theatre in New York City; the Adams in Newark, NJ; the Earle in Philadelphia; the Oriental in Chicago, and the Shoreham Hotel in Washington, DC—to name a few. Television shows that Tucker appeared on include The Kate Smith Show, Cavalcade of Bands, Arthur Murray House Party, and Strike It Rich.[1]
The musicians associated with Tucker's band included the pianist Hal Dennis, five sax players, including Mac Becker, Roy Underwood, Milton Brodus, Gordon Reanly, Al Little and Gerry Mulligan, clarinetist Clarence Hutchinrider, and trumpeters Carlyle Hall (Sr), Danny Davis, and Clarence Zylman. One of his longtime trumpeters was Carlton "Buster" Brown who played first chair.[7] Vocalists include Amy Arnell, Clare Nelson, Madeline Russell, Kerwin Somerville, Don Brown, Peter Hanley and the Three Two-Timers, reinforcing the clock theme. Eydie Gorme sang with the band when Tucker settled on the east coast near Asbury Park.[8] Many songs recorded over the years were written by Irving Berlin.[1]
When Tucker retired from the band business, he became a professor emeritus in music at Monmouth College in West Long Branch, New Jersey,[9] close to his home in West Allenhurst. He conducted the school's concert band and taught classes for the school's degree programs in music and music education. After twenty years as an educator, he retired to Florida in 1979. Tommy died on July 11, 1989.[10]
Remembered as a "sweet sound" and appreciated as "swing", critiques note that his charts can contrast "exotic effects with jazz-time passages".[11]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 Christopher Popa. http://www.bigbandlibrary.com/tommytucker.html
- ↑ Wayne Knight from Liner notes to the disk Tommy Tucker Orchestra, It's Tommy Tucker Time, produced by Collector's Choice, Itasca, Ill.
- ↑ Trudy Tucker Thomson, daughter, Chapel Hill, NC
- ↑ "Tucker, Tommy," in Who's Who in America: 38th edition 1974-1975 Volume 2 (Chicago: Marquis Who's Who, Inc., 1974)
- ↑ Wayne Knight, from Liner Notes for disk Tommy Tucker Orchestra, It's Tommy Tucker Time, produced by Collectors' Choice Music Catalog, Itasca, IL.
- ↑ Ray Norman 1991 in Liner Notes for Tommy Tucker and his Orchestra More 1941-1947, produced by Circle Records, New Orleans
- ↑ Maxine Brown, widow of Carlton Brown
- ↑ Liner notes written by Tommy Tucker, 1981, for the disk TOMMY TUCKER AND HIS ORCHESTRA 1941-1947, produced by Circle Records, New Orleans.
- ↑ George T. Simon, The Big Bands Songbook, Thomas Y. Crowell Company, 1975. pg 122-123.
- ↑ "Tommy Tucker Dead; Band Leader Was 86," New York Times, Jul. 13, 1989.
- ↑ Tex Wyndham, January 2007, Liner notes for disk Tommy Tucker & HIS ORCHESTRA 1943-47, The Light Turned Green, Produced by Circle Records, New Orleans
External links
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