Strike up the big band
Claudia Figueroa
The sound took Newport Beach by storm in the 1930s, when legendary
bandleaders like Glenn Miller, Benny Goodman, Count Basie and the Dorsey
brothers introduced the world to a new musical era--as well as unique
dance trends.
As tastes changed over the years, however, the music died down. But the
big-band era will return to Newport-Mesa on Sunday, when radio station
KLAC-AM (570) kicks off the summer with a benefit dance.
KLAC’s morning personalities Charlie Tuna, Fran Tunno and Bill Nesbitt
will host the four-hour event at the Doubletree Hotel in Costa Mesa. Doc
Anello and his Orchestra will play swing and big-band music from the
1930s, ‘40s and ‘50s.
The event started 14 years ago, said KLAC’s Kent Bagdasar. This is the
third year the Glendale station has held the event at the Doubletree
Hotel.
“Believe it or not, there are a lot of listeners in this area who view it
as a novelty--dressing up and playing the part,” he said. “It’s not often
that you can dance to the sound of a live big band.”
Bagdasar said the event drew more than 1,600 people last year.
“I think it’s going to be an ongoing dance event because more people
continue to come back each time,” he said.
Although admission is free, organizers are asking everyone to bring a new
children’s book, which will be donated to the Children’s Hospital of
Orange County.
For the occasion, the hotel has special plans for its newly remodeled
ballroom, which, Bagdasar said, features one of the biggest dance floors
in Orange County.
The ballroom will be decorated with balloons and paper streamers to match
the room’s gold and green decor. And the orchestra will be dressed in
black-and-white tuxedos.
And, of course, there’s the music.
Anello will perform with a nine-piece orchestra, which features pianist
Fred Carroll, drummer Richard Watson, bass player Larry Walters, Jack
Poster and Brian Bettger on trumpets, Dave Woodley on trombone, lead alto
saxophonist Kirsten Edkins, Jason Freese on tenor saxophone and Jim Hahn
on baritone saxophone.
The veteran bandleader will also accompany vocalist Luretta McCray.
Anello played in the 1950s and ‘60s with Eartha Kit and teen idols Bobby
Rydell, Johnny Ray and Frankie Avalon. He continues to record swing
music--last year, he released “Jumpin Jive,” which features a 15-piece
orchestra, on Orange County’s Cexton Records.
He said he will perform several standards such as “La Vie En Rose,” “In
the Mood,” “Little Brown Jug” and “April in Paris.”
For Anello, performing these standards is a way to preserve musical and
American history. But just as tastes are ever-changing, Anello said swing
music constantly reinvents itself.
“It’s wonderful music that has been around for over 60 years now,” he
said. “It has seen many rebirths, especially with the recent recordings
by the Brian Setzer Orchestra and Big Bad Voodoo Daddy.
Anello said he keeps an eye on musical trends and incorporates them in
his performances.
“We play many swing tunes from the swing era, but I guess you can say we
updated them,” he said. “We dressed them up into more contemporary
arrangements using the same instruments, but giving it a more
contemporary rhythmic feel.”
One of those songs is a Russ Columbo tune called “Prisoner of Love,”
which was originally recorded as a ballad. Anello said he changed the
tempo and made it a swing number.
“The song is very sweet and on the beat for musicians, but now it has a
whole different flavor,” he said, letting out a chuckle.
“But some songs are meant to remain in their original structure, the way
they were when they were first performed,” Anello said, citing the
powerhouse swing classic “Sing Sing Sing,” which is on Sunday’s playlist.
Anello also has a deep appreciation for Newport Beach’s musical history.
Long before Sugar Ray and Dick Dale, Newport Beach was a mecca for swing.
“The Balboa Pavilion is where Stan Kenton and Glenn Miller endorsed
big-band music in front of hundreds of people every night,” he said. “And
that’s where the Balboa Hop originated. Back then, people all over the
country knew how to do the Balboa Hop.”
The pavilion also became the site of dance marathons, where couples
performed routines with high kicks and over-the-shoulder lifts.
That’s the kind of atmosphere Anello is hoping for this weekend.
“It’s music that so many people grew up with,” Bagdasar said. “It’s got
melody and some people go nuts when they hear it.”
FYI
WHAT: Big Band Bash featuring Doc Anello
WHEN: 7 to 11 p.m. Sunday
WHERE: Double Tree Hotel, 3050 Bristol St., Costa Mesa
HOW MUCH: Admission is free, but a new book donation for the Children’s
Hospital of Orange County is recommended.
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