Benny's aptitude on the clarinet
was immediately apparent. While he was still very young,
he became a professional musician and played in several
bands in Chicago. He played with his first pit band at
the age of 11, and became a member of the American
Federation of Musicians when he was 14, when he quit
school to pursue his career in music. When his father
died, 15-year-old Benny used the money he made to help
support his family. During these early years in Chicago,
he played with many musicians who would later become
nationally renowned, such as Frank Teschemacher and Dave
Tough.
When Benny was 16, he was hired by the Ben Pollack band
and moved to Los Angeles. He remained with the band for
four years, and became a featured soloist. In 1929, the
year that marked the onset of the Great Depression and a
time of distress for America, Benny left the Ben Pollack
band to participate in recording sessions and radio
shows in New York City.
Then, in 1933, Benny began to work with John Hammond, a
jazz promoter who would later help to launch the
recording careers of Billie Holiday and Count Basie,
among many others. Hammond wanted Benny to record with
drummer Gene Krupa and trombonist Jack Teagarden, and
the result of this recording session was the onset of
Benny's national popularity. Later, in 1942, Benny would
marry Alice Hammond Duckworth, John Hammond's sister,
and have two daughters: Rachel, who became a concert
pianist, and Benji, who became a cellist.
Benny led his first band in 1934 and began a few-month
stint at Billy Rose's Music Hall, playing Fletcher
Henderson's arrangements along with band members Bunny
Berigan, Gene Krupa and Jess Stacy. The music they
played had its roots in the Southern jazz forms of
ragtime and Dixieland, while its structure adhered more
to arranged music than its more improvisational jazz
counterparts. This gave it an accessibility that
appealed to American audiences on a wide scale. America
began to hear Benny 's band when he secured a weekly
engagement for his band on NBC's radio show "Let's
Dance," which was taped with a live studio audience.
The new swing music had the kids dancing when, on August
21, 1935, Benny's band played the Palomar Ballroom in
Los Angeles. The gig was sensational and marked the
beginning of the years that Benny would reign as King:
the Swing Era.
Teenagers and college students invented new dance steps
to accompany the new music sensation. Benny's band,
along with many others, became hugely successful among
listeners from many different backgrounds all over the
country.
During this period Benny also became famous for being
colorblind when it came to racial segregation and
prejudice. Pianist Teddy Wilson, an African-American,
first appeared in the Benny Goodman Trio at the Congress
Hotel in 1935. Benny added Lionel Hampton, who would
later form his own band, to his Benny Goodman Quartet
the next year. While these groups were not the first
bands to feature both white and black musicians, Benny's
national popularity helped to make racially mixed groups
more accepted in the mainstream. Benny once said, "If a
guy's got it, let him give it. I'm selling music, not
prejudice."
Benny's success as an icon of the Swing Era prompted
Time magazine in 1937 to call him the "King of Swing."
The next year, at the pinnacle of the Swing Era, the
Benny Goodman band, along with musicians from the Count
Basie and Duke Ellington bands, made history as the
first jazz band ever to play in New York's prestigious
Carnegie Hall.
Following the concert at Carnegie Hall, the Benny
Goodman band had many different lineup changes. Gene
Krupa left the band, among others, and subsequent
versions of the band included Cootie Williams and
Charlie Christian, as well as Jimmy Maxwell and Mel
Powell, among others.
The Swing Era began to come to a close as America got
more involved in World War II. Several factors
contributed to its waning success, including the loss of
musicians to the draft and the limits that gas rationing
put on touring bands. However, though the big band days
were drawing to a close and new forms of music were
emerging, Benny continued to play music in the swing
style. He dabbled in the "bop" movement of the 1940s,
but never succumbed, as the rest of the world did, to
the allure of rock and roll influences in the 1950s and
1960s. Instead, Benny tried his hand at classical music,
doing solos with major orchestras, and studying with
internationally acclaimed classical clarinetist Reginald
Kell.
These appearances further demonstrated Benny's range as
a musician. His talent was unquestionable from the time
he was 10 years old, and in recording sessions
throughout his career, he very rarely made mistakes.
Krell had helped him to improve some of his techniques,
making Benny's playing even stronger.
In 1953, Benny's band planned to join Louis Armstrong
and his All Stars in a tour together, but the two band
leaders argued and the tour never opened at Carnegie
Hall, as had been planned. It is not certain whether the
tour was canceled due to Benny's illness or the conflict
between the band leaders. The rest of the decade marked
the spread of Benny's music to new audiences around the
world. The Benny Goodman Story, a film chronicling his
life, was released in 1955, exposing new and younger
audiences to his music. Benny also toured the world,
bringing his music to Asia and Europe. When he traveled
to the USSR, one writer observed that "the swing music
that had once set the jitterbugs dancing in the
Paramount aisles almost blew down the Iron Curtain."
During the late 1960s and 1970s, Benny appeared in
reunions with the other members of his quartet: Teddy
Wilson, Gene Krupa and Lionel Hampton. In 1978, the
Benny Goodman band also appeared at Carnegie Hall again
to mark the 30th Anniversary of when they appeared in
the venue's first jazz concert.
In 1982, Benny was honored by the Kennedy Center for his
lifetime achievements in swing music. In 1986, he
received both an honorary doctorate degree in music from
Columbia University and the Grammy Award for Lifetime
Achievement. He continued to play the music that defined
his lifetime in occasional concert dates until his death
in June 1986, of cardiac arrest. He was laid to rest
after a short nonsectarian service with around 40 family
members and friends in attendance on June 15, 1986 at
Long Ridge Cemetery in Stamford, Connecticut. Through
his amazing career, Benny Goodman did not change his
style to conform to the latest trends, but retained the
original sound that defined the Swing Era and made him
the world renowned King of Swing.
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