Woody Herman

Albums

15 Recordings Sort by Title or Popularity
Music for Tired Lovers
#8015678
Woody Herman
Label: Columbia
Number of Discs: 1

In 1954 Woody Herman recorded one of his most unusual sets, a purely vocal album in which he was accompanied by the Erroll Garner Trio. Herman, who originally sang on half of [more]

  • Member Price: $17.98
Concord Jazz Heritage Series
#8015392
Woody Herman
Number of Discs: 1

Woody Herman spent his twilight years recording for the Concord label, both with his big band and in all-star groups that he sponsored. For this 1998 sampler CD, Herman [more]

  • List Price: $17.98
  • Member Price: $11.98
You Save: $6.00
Thundering Herds 1945-1947
#5170130
Woody Herman
Label: Columbia
Number of Discs: 1

Woody Herman's First and Second Herds were his most important and exciting bands. Herman, who played clarinet and alto sax in addition to taking an [more]

SALE ends Mar 22nd
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Woody Herman Memorial: The 40th Anniversary Carnegie Hall Concert
#5181851
Woody Herman
Release Year: 1988
Label: Jazz Heritage
Number of Discs: 1

Woody Herman had many talents, including being a fine clarinetist, altoist and singer. But perhaps his greatest [more]

SALE ends Apr 22nd
  • List Price: $16.99
  • Member Price: $7.99
You Save: $9.00
Blues on Parade [GRP]
#20924736
Woody Herman
Label: GRP
Number of Discs: 1

This single CD gives a definitive look at Woody Herman's first orchestra, the Decca ensemble he led during 1936-1942 billed "the Band That Plays the Blues." Although he also [more]

Available in U.S. only.
  • Member Price: $11.98
My Kind of Broadway
#21508167
Woody Herman
Label: Columbia
Number of Discs: 1

Herman's Swinging Herd of the '60s was so successful they were signed up by their old label, Columbia. Their first CBS release (which, like the others, has yet to be reissued on [more]

Available in U.S. only.
  • Member Price: $10.98
Road Band
#21525871
Woody Herman
Label: Capitol
Number of Discs: 1

This out-of-print LP finds Herman's Third Herd in its prime. Rather than just revisiting his celebrated past, he and his orchestra primarily perform then-recent material, much of it [more]

Available in U.S. only.
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Northwest Passage, Vol. 2
#21523597
Woody Herman & The First Herd
Label: Jass
Number of Discs: 1

Unlike the first volume in this CD series, Volume 2 does not find The First Herd in transition but instead in its early prime. Taken from five separate radio [more]

Available in U.S. only.
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Ready-Get Set-Jump
#21953391
Woody Herman & His Orchestra
Label: Delta
Number of Discs: 1
Available in U.S. only.
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Rarest [CD/DVD]
#21909199
Woody Herman
Label: Group 7
Number of Discs: 1
Available in U.S. only.
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15 Recordings Sort by Title or Popularity

Appearances

39 Recordings Sort by Title or Popularity
Complete Johnny Mercer Songbook
#8002520
Various Artists
Label: Polygram
Number of Discs: 3

One of the giants of American popular song gets his due with this three-disc Verve box, comprising a trio of separately released compilations. Though Mercer's [more]

  • Member Price: $49.98
Music for Tired Lovers
#8015678
Woody Herman
Label: Columbia
Number of Discs: 1

In 1954 Woody Herman recorded one of his most unusual sets, a purely vocal album in which he was accompanied by the Erroll Garner Trio. Herman, who originally sang on half of [more]

  • Member Price: $17.98
70: A Seventieth Birthday Celebration
#8015365
Rosemary Clooney
Number of Discs: 1

This is an OK sampler celebrating both singer Rosemary Clooney's 70th birthday and her 20th year associated with the Concord label. Only two of the 19 songs [more]

SALE ends Mar 22nd
  • List Price: $17.98
  • Member Price: $9.98
You Save: $8.00
Concord Jazz Heritage Series
#8015392
Woody Herman
Number of Discs: 1

Woody Herman spent his twilight years recording for the Concord label, both with his big band and in all-star groups that he sponsored. For this 1998 sampler CD, Herman [more]

  • List Price: $17.98
  • Member Price: $11.98
You Save: $6.00
Great Swing Classics in Hi-Fi
#5165664
Various Artists
Number of Discs: 1

Great Swing Classics in Hi-Fi collects the best moments from the '50s album series from Capitol Records, which featured state-of-the-art re-recordings of many great [more]

Available in U.S. only.
SALE ends Mar 22nd
  • List Price: $15.99
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You Save: $11.01
Knockin' on Wood
#8008720
Red Norvo
Label: ASV
Number of Discs: 1

This Living Era portrait of Red Norvo presents some of the very best recordings he made between 1933 and 1946. The journey begins with three early "chamber music" sides featuring [more]

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Thundering Herds 1945-1947
#5170130
Woody Herman
Label: Columbia
Number of Discs: 1

Woody Herman's First and Second Herds were his most important and exciting bands. Herman, who played clarinet and alto sax in addition to taking an [more]

SALE ends Mar 22nd
  • List Price: $16.99
  • Member Price: $4.98
You Save: $12.01
Woody Herman Memorial: The 40th Anniversary Carnegie Hall Concert
#5181851
Woody Herman
Release Year: 1988
Label: Jazz Heritage
Number of Discs: 1

Woody Herman had many talents, including being a fine clarinetist, altoist and singer. But perhaps his greatest [more]

SALE ends Apr 22nd
  • List Price: $16.99
  • Member Price: $7.99
You Save: $9.00
Songs That Got Us Through WW2, Vol. 2
#5178196
Various Artists
Number of Discs: 1

Songs That Got Us Through WW2, Vol. 2 collects more early-'40s pop favorites like Dinah Shore's

  • List Price: $17.98
  • Member Price: $11.98
You Save: $6.00
Blues on Parade [GRP]
#20924736
Woody Herman
Label: GRP
Number of Discs: 1

This single CD gives a definitive look at Woody Herman's first orchestra, the Decca ensemble he led during 1936-1942 billed "the Band That Plays the Blues." Although he also [more]

Available in U.S. only.
  • Member Price: $11.98
39 Recordings Sort by Title or Popularity

Biography

  • Born May 16th 1913 in Milwaukee, WI
  • Died Oct 29th 1987 in Los Angeles, CA

A fine swing clarinetist, an altoist whose sound was influenced by Johnny Hodges, a good soprano saxophonist, and a spirited blues vocalist, Woody Herman's greatest significance to jazz was as the leader of a long line of big bands. He always encouraged young talent and, more than practically any bandleader from the swing era, kept his repertoire quite modern. Although Herman was always stuck performing a few of his older hits (he played "Four Brothers" and "Early Autumn" nightly for nearly 40 years), he much preferred to play and create new music.

Woody Herman began performing as a child, singing in vaudeville. He started playing saxophone when he was 11, and four years later he was a professional musician. He picked up early experience playing with the big bands of Tom Gerun, Harry Sosnik, and Gus Arnheim, and then in 1934, he joined the Isham Jones orchestra. He recorded often with Jones, and when the veteran bandleader decided to break up his orchestra in 1936, Herman formed one of his own out of the remaining nucleus. The great majority of the early Herman recordings feature the bandleader as a ballad vocalist, but it was the instrumentals that caught on, leading to his group being known as "the Band That Plays the Blues." Woody Herman's theme "At the Woodchopper's Ball" became his first hit (1939). Herman's early group was actually a minor outfit with a Dixieland feel to many of the looser pieces and fine vocals contributed by Mary Ann McCall, in addition to Herman. They recorded very frequently for Decca, and for a period had the female trumpeter/singer Billie Rogers as one of its main attractions.

By 1943, the Woody Herman Orchestra was beginning to take its first steps into becoming the Herd (later renamed the First Herd). Herman had recorded an advanced Dizzy Gillespie arrangement ("Down Under") the year before, and during 1943, Herman's band became influenced by Duke Ellington; in fact, Johnny Hodges and Ben Webster made guest appearances on some recordings. It was a gradual process, but by the end of 1944, Woody Herman had what was essentially a brand new orchestra. It was a wild, good-time band with screaming ensembles (propelled by first trumpeter Pete Candoli), major soloists in trombonist Bill Harris and tenorman Flip Phillips, and a rhythm section pushed by bassist/cheerleader Chubby Jackson and drummer Dave Tough. In 1945 (with new trumpeters in Sonny Berman and Conte Candoli), the First Herd was considered the most exciting new big band in jazz. Several of the arrangements of Ralph Burns and Neal Hefti are considered classics, and such Herman favorites entered the book as "Apple Honey," "Caldonia," "Northwest Passage," "Bijou" (Harris' memorable if eccentric feature), and the nutty "Your Father's Mustache." Even Igor Stravinsky was impressed, and he wrote "Ebony Concerto" for the orchestra to perform in 1946. Unfortunately, family troubles caused Woody Herman to break up the big band at the height of its success in late 1946; it was the only one of his orchestras to really make much money. Herman recorded a bit in the interim, and then, by mid-1947, had a new orchestra, the Second Herd, which was also soon known as the Four Brothers band. With the three cool-toned tenors of Stan Getz, Zoot Sims, and Herbie Steward (who a year later was replaced by Al Cohn) and baritonist Serge Chaloff forming the nucleus, this orchestra had a different sound than its more extroverted predecessor, but it could also generate excitement of its own. Trumpeter/arranger Shorty Rogers and eventually Bill Harris returned from the earlier outfit, and with Mary Ann McCall back as a vocalist, the group had a great deal of potential. But, despite such popular numbers as Jimmy Giuffre's "Four Brothers," "The Goof and I," and "Early Autumn" (the latter ballad made Getz into a star), the band struggled financially. Before its collapse in 1949, such other musicians as Gene Ammons, Lou Levy, Oscar Pettiford, Terry Gibbs, and Shelly Manne made important contributions.

Next up for Woody Herman was the Third Herd, which was similar to the Second except that it generally played at danceable tempos and was a bit more conservative. Herman kept that band together during much of 1950-1956, even having his own Mars label for a period; Conte Candoli, Al Cohn, Dave McKenna, Phil Urso, Don Fagerquist, Carl Fontana, Dick Hafer, Bill Perkins, Nat Pierce, Dick Collins, and Richie Kamuca were among the many sidemen. After some short-lived small groups (including a sextet with Nat Adderley and Charlie Byrd), Herman's New Thundering Herd was a hit at the 1959 Monterey Jazz Festival. He was able to lead a big band successfully throughout the 1960s, featuring such soloists as high-note trumpeter Bill Chase, trombonist Phil Wilson, the reliable Nat Pierce, and the exciting tenor of Sal Nistico. Always open to newer styles, Woody Herman's bop-ish unit gradually became more rock-oriented as he utilized his young sidemen's arrangements, often of current pop tunes (starting in 1968 with an album titled Light My Fire). Not all of his albums from this era worked, but one always admired Herman's open-minded attitude. As one of only four surviving jazz-oriented bandleaders from the swing era (along with Duke Ellington, Count Basie, and Stan Kenton) who was still touring the world with a big band, Herman welcomed such new talent in the 1970s as Greg Herbert, Andy Laverne, Joe Beck, Alan Broadbent, and Frank Tiberi. He also recorded with Chick Corea, had a reunion with Flip Phillips, and celebrated his 40th anniversary as a leader with a notable 1976 Carnegie Hall concert.

Woody Herman returned to emphasizing straight-ahead jazz by the late '70s. By then, he was being hounded by the IRS due to an incompetent manager from the 1960s not paying thousands of dollars of taxes out of the sidemen's salaries. Herman, who might very well have taken it easy, was forced to keep on touring and working constantly into his old age. He managed to put on a cheerful face to the public, celebrating his 50th anniversary as a bandleader in 1986. However, his health was starting to fail, and he gradually delegated most of his duties to Frank Tiberi before his death in 1987. Tiberi continued to lead a Woody Herman Orchestra on a part-time basis but it never had the opportunity to record. Fortunately, Herman was well documented throughout all phases of his career, and his major contributions are still greatly appreciated. ~ Scott Yanow, All Music Guide