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ARTIST BIOGRAPHIES
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Gene Krupa (Drums) 1909-1973
Gene Krupa was born 15th January, 1909, in Chicago. He was originally destined for the priesthood but by the mid twenties he was working regularly as a jazz drummer. In 1929 he moved to New York and immediately found work in the upper echelons of jazzmen, most importantly with Red Nichols. He played with many name bands in the early thirties including Mal Hallet and Buddy Rogers. Although he had frequently recorded with fellow Chicagoan Benny Goodman it was not until 1934 after Goodman secured a contract playing at Billy Rose's Music Hall on Broadway that the association assumed a permanence.
Then, as Goodman's star ascended in late 1935 and on the west coast the following year, so did Krupa's fame spread as the tousled haired, flamboyant drummer. The Goodman-Krupa association lasted till just after the legendary Carnegie Hall concert of January 16, 1938, when the drummer decided to form his own orchestra.
In spite of his fame and the quality of his band real commercial success proved elusive until early 1941 when two great talents joined. Trumpeter Roy Eldridge was a well-established trumpet star but Anita O'Day had already failed auditions with Goodman and Raymond Scott but Krupa recognised her worth. The Orchestra recorded several classic recordings such as "Let Me Off Uptown", "The Walls Keep Talking", and "Skylark" which propelled it to the top thanks to the Eldridge and O'Day factor. Then, in early 1943, Krupa fell victim to a drug entrapment case and disbanded. After a short imprisonment he was released and he appeared one night in December 1943 with the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra to great applause and he was back on top. He toured with Dorsey for the next few months.
He then reformed his own orchestra, this time with strings, in mid-1944 which enjoyed some success but proved to be uneconomic and with arrangers Eddie Finckel and George Williams proceeded to feature more advanced arrangements with new exciting soloists like Charlie Ventura and Don Fagerquist. There were new hit discs like "Leave Us Leap", "Lover", and when Anita returned "Boogie Blues!". In the 1946-47 period the band committed a large library to transcription recordings and these reveal the band at near its best. Anita was replaced by Carolyn Grey and modern song stylist Buddy Stewart. Krupa was aware of modern jazz developments and hired young arranger Gerry Mulligan who created the hits "Disc Jockey Jump" and "How High The Moon".
But as the other top bigbands folded in the late forties, Krupa found the financial rewards dwindling and then he just gave up. In the 50s and 60s he devoted his time to teaching and touring with the Norman Granz organisation and leading small groups for special residencies. He even rejoined his old boss Benny Goodman and Teddy Wilson for overseas tours. He died on October 16, 1973.
Krupa remains one of the first names in the history of jazz drumming and has left a considerable recorded legacy.
Available now on Hep:
CD 26 Vol 1: What's This? 1946
CD 46 Vol 2: It's Up To You 1946-47
CD 51 Vol 3: Hop, Skip And Jump 1946
Discography:
1949 Gene Krupa (Columbia)
1949 Dance Parade (Columbia)
1952 Drum Boogie (Columbia)
1953 The Exciting Gene Krupa (Enoch's Music)
1953 The Gene Krupa Sextet/Driving Gene (Verve)
1953 Gene Krupa Trio (Mercury)
1953 Sing, Sing, Sing (Clef)
1953 The Gene Krupa Trio At JATP (Mercury)
1954 The Jazz Rhythms Of Gene Krupa (Verve)
1954 Gene Krupa Sextet Number 1 (Clef)
1954 Gene Krupa Sextet Number 2 (Clef)
1955 Gene Krupa's Sidekicks (Columbia)
1956 Selections From The Benny Goodman Story (Clef)
1956 Krupa And Rich (Clef) with Buddy Rich
1956 The Big Band Sound Of Gene Krupa (Verve)
1957 Hey, Here's Gene Krupa (Verve)
1958 Gene Krupa Plays Gerry Mulligan (Verve)
1958 Krupa Rocks (Verve)
1959 The Gene Krupa Story/Drum Crazy (Proper)
1959 Big Noise From Winnetka:
Gene Krupa At The London House (Verve)
1960 The Gene Krupa Story In Music (Harmony)
1960 Drum Battle (Verve) with Buddy Rich
1961 Percussion King (Verve)
1961 Drummer Man: Gene Krupa In Highest-Fi (Verve)
1961 Gene Krupa Trio (Verve)
1961 Drum Boogie (Verve)
1961 The Driving Gene Krupa (Verve)
1961 The Jazz Rhythms Of Gene Krupa (Verve)
1962 Burnin' Beat (Verve) with Buddy Rich
1962 Perdido (Swing House)
1963 The Mighty Two (Roulette) with Louie Bellson
1963 Together Again (Verve) with Benny Goodman
1964 The Great New Gene Krupa Quartet
Featuring Charlie Ventura (Verve)
1965 The Swingin' Gene Krupa Quartet (Star Line)
1966 That Drummer's Band (Verve)
1971 Jazz At The New School (Chiaroscuro) with Eddie Condon
1998 In Concert (DBK) recording from 1971
Compilations:
1942 Uptown (Columbia) recordings from 1941-1942 with Roy Eldridge and Anita O'Day
1964 The Essential Gene Krupa: Let Me Off Uptown (Verve)
1979 Gene Krupa Volumes 1-14 (Ajax) recordings from 1935-1941
1987 The Gene Krupa Collection - 20 Golden Greats
1988 Gene Krupa - On The Air recordings from 1944-1946
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Three labels covering jazz in depth from 1930 to the present.
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Hep Jazz, P.O. Box 50, Pitlochry, UK. PH16 5YL
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