No doubt one of the all time great musicians of his time and one of the Greatest Clarinet players ever. He will be remembered for all of his great music plus all of the Great & Grand Ladies he romanced and married.
To: Captain Peter Blood
Born Arthur Warshawsky. In an interview several years back he was asked what he does for fun these days. He replied "there's nothing more enjoyable then a good bowel movement" (I kid you not).
2 posted on
12/30/2004 2:12:35 PM PST by
The Fop
To: Captain Peter Blood
How many of you thought he was already gone?
Show of hands?
3 posted on
12/30/2004 2:15:11 PM PST by
MaryFromMichigan
(We childproofed our home, but they are still getting in)
To: Captain Peter Blood
I will always remember Saturday night as a child. After my mother put me to bed> I would always get back up and crack the door, so I could hear the sounds of big band music playing on the stereo and the murmured conversations of their friends. Begin the Beguine was one of my Father's favorites.
5 posted on
12/30/2004 2:18:04 PM PST by
MKM1960
To: Captain Peter Blood
I remember an interview someone did with him quite a few years ago and he showed the reporter his clarinet. He had turned it into a lamp. One expensive lamp.
6 posted on
12/30/2004 2:23:35 PM PST by
reagandemo
(The battle is near are you ready for the sacrifice?)
To: Captain Peter Blood
To: Captain Peter Blood
The clarinet solo in "Nightmare" is one of my all-time favorites; I also love the arrangement on "Begin the Beguine." Shaw was an interesting fellow; I read his autobiography - he came from nowhere.
To: Corin Stormhands; msdrby
Anyone ask jenb who Artie Shaw was yet?
To: Captain Peter Blood
"You have no idea of the women I didn't marry." Artie Shaw
To: Captain Peter Blood
The absolute greatest! From my grandfathers 78 rpm copy of Begin the Beguine, with Indian Love Call on the flip, I was hooked on Big Band era jazz for the rest of my life. I still have that record somewhere in the attic! I can't believe I did not know he was still alive until after he was dead.
To: Captain Peter Blood
Biography for
Artie Shaw
Birth name
Arthur Jacob Arshawsky
Mini biography
Artie Shaw was the rival of Benny Goodman in the Swing era. With a different style of playing, his sound on clarinet was more liquid than Goodman's sound. After playing in different orchestras in the late twenties and thirties, he formed his own orchestra in 1936 and he added a string quartet to the Big Band. In 1938 he had a famous hit with the recording of the Cole Porter song "Begin the Beguine". After months of success and popularity he disolved his band in 1939. The year after he appeared with a new band.
In the fifties he went into a semi-retirement and wrote two books: "The trouble with cinderella" and "I love you, I hate you, drop dead". His last recordings were in 1954 with a small group with Hank Jones on piano and others. After this he retired from the music scene, except for a brief appearence for a week in the eighties.
IMDb mini-biography by
Eric Nesich (christyjazz45)
Spouse
Evelyn Keyes (1957 - present)
Doris Dowling (1952 - 1956) (divorced)
Kathleen Winsor (1946 - 1948) (divorced)
Ava Gardner (17 October 1945 - 25 October 1946) (divorced)
Elizabeth Kern (1942 - ?) (divorced) 1 child
Lana Turner (13 February 1940 - 12 September 1940) (divorced)
Jane Carns (? - ?) (annulled)
Margaret Allen (? - ?) (divorced)
Trivia
His paintings continue to be shown, at venues like Webster Hall in New York City.
Jazz clarinetist and bandleader.
Inducted into the Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame in 1990.
Was the son-in-law of composer Jerome Kern while married to Kern's daughter Elizabeth
Winner of a Lifetime Achievement Grammy Award, 2004.
19 posted on
12/30/2004 3:10:28 PM PST by
Pharmboy
(Listen...you can still hear the old media sobbing.)
To: Captain Peter Blood
20 posted on
12/30/2004 3:19:28 PM PST by
Mr. Mojo
To: Captain Peter Blood
Wow! Artie Shaw was still alive? I thought he died years ago. Learn something new every day. Love his music, though.
To: Captain Peter Blood
And he was honest enough to say that he was duped by the commies and went on to reject them.
To: Captain Peter Blood
I may be confusing Artie Shaw with someone else, but I think he may have put down his clarinet and picked up a rifle...became a benchrest shooter.
Semper Fi,
24 posted on
12/30/2004 3:37:03 PM PST by
2nd Bn, 11th Mar
(Sniper: "One shot, one kill". Machinegunner: "One shot, one kill...again, & again & again".)
To: Captain Peter Blood
Artie and Ava; 1945 newlyweds
26 posted on
12/30/2004 3:57:22 PM PST by
UnklGene
To: Captain Peter Blood
I was invited to go to a Jr. High "dance" in 1964 and we were to bring a 45 rpm or a 33 rpm album with which to dance. I took an album by Artie Shaw. Needless to say, I lost out to the Beatles and Kinks.
37 posted on
12/31/2004 12:43:45 AM PST by
vetvetdoug
(In memory of T/Sgt. Secundino "Dean" Baldonado, Jarales, NM-KIA Bien Hoa AFB, RVN 1965)
To: Captain Peter Blood
Just got back from out of town, and had to comment on the passing of a great American Icon. On my drive home I listened to a replay of an interview with Shaw from the mid eighties (Ok it was on NPR's Fresh Air). Listening to Shaw shows the depth of his generation of artist, vs the shallowness of the "artists" of today. He was truly a one of a kind artist. I also enjoyed his commentary during the Ken Burns Jazz Series. It hurts when we lose these guys there are not to many left. God Bless Artie Shaw, he will be missed.
43 posted on
01/03/2005 7:26:14 PM PST by
jazzo
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