Posted on 12/15/2014 10:09:30 AM PST by smoothsailing
DECEMBER 15, 2014 4:00 AM
On the stormy day of December 15, 1944, a military plane transporting big-band superstar Major Glenn Miller to Paris for a Christmas broadcast disappeared over the English Channel. Its worth taking a moment, on the 70th anniversary of that event, to consider whom America lost.
What Miller accomplished in his 40-year lifetime is astonishing. During the 1930s, Miller was among a handful of innovators, along with Duke Ellington and Benny Goodman, who brought the big-band era to its artistic peak. He also modernized military music during World War II. By the 1940s, John Philip Sousas marches sounded stale to many. Miller infused jazz elements into his wartime compositions such as St. Louis Blues March. This added a bit of zip without flouting too many conventions.
A band ought to have a sound all of its own, Miller said. It ought to have a personality.
The personality of Millers band stressed harmony, and the effect of his music was to promote national harmony. The appeal of such tunes as Moonlight Serenade, Tuxedo Junction, and In the Mood transcended not only the racial barrier but also perhaps more impressively the generational barrier.
I dont suppose there was a single listener in the United States, unless he was tin-eared and tone-deaf, who didnt love and appreciate the music of the Miller band, observed Bing Crosby.
Millers accomplishments are all the more dramatic in light of his humble origins.
Alton Glenn Miller was born to Lewis Elmer Miller and Mattie Lou Miller on March 1, 1904, in Clarinda, Iowa. Glenn (who, like all members of his family, went by his second name) would be the second of four children, all of whom had musical proclivities. Unfortunately, the family patriarch could hold neither a tune nor a job. He even seems to have been a bad janitor. So the Millers were constantly moving, unable to escape poverty.
When the Millers moved to Grant City, Mo., in 1915, Glenn tagged along with elder brother, Deane, who played trumpet for the city band. Jack Mossberger, the band leader, saw Glenns potential. He offered to let Glenn play in the band and earn a trombone in exchange for shining the shoes in his store. The rest, as they say, is history. The trombone survives to this day in the Glenn Miller Archive at the University of Colorado, Boulder.
Another move landed the Miller family in Fort Morgan, Colo., where Glenn graduated from high school in 1921.He then enrolled at the University of Colorado, where he met his wife-to-be, Helen Burger. The match was a good one. Alan Cass, the curator of the Glenn Miller Archive, described Helen as the rudder in Glenns life. The 1954 film The Glenn Miller Story depicts their budding romance. Helen picked Jimmy Stewart to play the role of Glenn.
Miller left college after only three semesters to pursue his music career, first in California, then in New York. There is a myth that he flunked his harmony class, but the transcript shows that he was in good standing with the university. He got an incomplete not a fail in that harmony class and intended to finish his studies after the war was over. Tragically, that never happened, but the university did posthumously bestow an honorary doctorate on him in 1984.
Millers whirlwind career in the 1930s brought him fruitfully into contact with such artists as Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey, Benny Goodman, and Bing Crosby, among others. Miller could be a harsh taskmaster and struck many as cold his sour relationship with Bill Finegan was a case in point. Nonetheless, he was known for his integrity. His business records, preserved at the Glenn Miller Archive, support his reputation for honesty, Cass said.
An anecdote recorded by George T. Simon in Glenn Miller and His Orchestra speaks volumes about Millers character. Simon describes his 1936 self as the family lowbrow in a closely knit, slightly snobbish, and somewhat intolerant upper-middle-class Jewish clan that lived on Manhattans Upper West Side. Dinner guests included George Gershwin and Will Durant.
Simon, an amateur jazz aficionado, didnt dare seat the dregs of speakeasy society at his parents dinner table. But when he found the courage to display Glenn, his family was charmed. I think it was more that they never expected a jazz musician to be so down to earth, to talk so directly and so clearly, and just to talk so much good, common sense, Simon said.
That pretty much summarizes Glenn Millers image: He struck people as the kind of jazz musician you could bring home to Mom and Dad. The down-to-earth quality was one star in a unique constellation of traits that helped catapult Miller to international fame.
In addition to being a trombonist, Miller succeeded as a band leader, a composer, and an arranger. He had an eye for spotting others talents. And, unlike other musicians, Miller saw himself as an entrepreneur. He was his bands own agent. At one point, his business office funded four different bands, all successfully.
In many ways, he was the Vince Lombardi of the band leaders cool, calculating, self-assured, and immensely successful, Simon wrote.
Miller received the first-ever RCA golden record signifying 1 million sold for Chattanooga Choo Choo in 1942. That was also the year he joined the Army and relentlessly poured his talents into the war effort. Miller was famously the head of the Glenn Miller Army Air Forces Band. He was also, among other things, director of bands for the Army Air Forces training command and host of a radio broadcast called I Sustain the Wings.
Miller never lost sight of his mission. His dedication to improving troop morale sometimes put him at loggerheads with superiors and pushed him to the point of physical exhaustion. In his two years in the Army, Miller was sick with pneumonia three times and had chronic sinus issues as well. Still, he took a modest view of himself.
We didnt come here to set any fashions in music, Miller wrote in a 1944 letter to Simon. We merely came to bring a much-needed touch of home to some lads who have been here a couple of years.
When Miller did not materialize for the Christmas broadcast, the nation was gripped by the tragedy of his disappearance. Conspiracy theories ran rampant the tale that he died in a French bordello was concocted by Nazi propagandists and is still circulated on the Internet. Dennis Spragg, senior consutant to the Glenn Miller Archive, argues persuasively in a forthcoming book, Resolved, that a plane crash due to bad weather and human error was the true cause Millers demise.
While well never know what he would have given us had he survived the war, his music still finds appreciative listeners. Fans are especially excited that the Glenn Miller Archive is in the process of digitizing recordings of Miller band performances, some of which are in excellent condition and havent been heard since the original broadcasts. Cass told National Review Online that he is optimistic about the prospect of releasing new albums based on these recordings.
Perhaps America has not yet heard the last of Glenn Miller.
Spencer Case is a philosophy graduate student at the University of Colorado. He is a U.S. Army veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan and an Egypt Fulbright alumnus.
How about that! Neat! B^)
I love Glenn Miller , I actually drive around listening to his music quite a bit these days . It reminds of of a time ( my father’s era) when America was great , and traditional and wholesome . Miller’s sound / music is uplifting and puts me in a good mood , the perfect music to listen to before going in to a long shift at work . Nice to relax to on the way home as well . Glenn Miller may have died long ago , but his music is deathless .
It’s funny how some things like that stay with you over many years.
Glad you posted the words, I didn’t know there was a lyrics translate site. Thanks.
like in “Mars Attacks”! LOL!
You might enjoy this thread.
The band I played in in High Skook played a couple of Glenn Miller numbers, the St. Louis Blues March and Moonlight Serenade.
Of course WE did them better than GM ever did! (kidding, of course).
Can’t they report his plane crashed into the Atlantic? “Disappeared” sounds like it magically went poof or aliens beamed it into a mothership.
Skool (not skook). /facepalm
What an excellent choice that turned out to be.
I hosted a couple of Big Band shows in the 70's, 80's and early 90's. When I first started in 1978, I was 23. I barely knew the music but quickly fell in love with Glenn and his sound. And of course with Marion Hutton.
LOL, of course your band was better, no doubt about it! :-)
I grew up listening to Glenn Miller and once visited the American Cemetary in Cambridge,England where he is memorialized.
An awesome place.
.
I love the BIG BAND sounds!
Toss in a little Bluegrass and I’m your huckleberry. You have good taste.
I don’t know much about him except he played the sax, piano, etc. if I remember correctly, he left the orchestra to go back to Italy to attend medical school. He became a Dr. but died at an early age from heart problems. Hadn’t thought about him in years until I read this thread!
Well, maybe not, but we had a ball playing them, especially this one (the Tex Beneke arrangement)...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Jfvxd7qG0U
It’s sad he had a short life, but being good enough for the Glenn Miller Orchestra! Man, that’s something!
I’m playing “In The Mood” in his honor. One of my favorite songs.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xPXwkWVEIIw
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