Freddy Martin

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Bubbles in the Wine 02:41 Tools
Symphony 03:17 Tools
I've Got A Lovely Bunch Of Coconuts 02:47 Tools
To Each His Own 03:08 Tools
Managua, Nicaragua 02:52 Tools
Bumble Boogie 02:53 Tools
Tonight We Love 03:16 Tools
Piano Concerto In B Flat 03:14 Tools
Doin' What Comes Natur'lly 03:14 Tools
Bubbles In The Wine (Digitally Remastered 96) 02:43 Tools
On A Slow Boat To China 03:06 Tools
Bubbles In The Wine - Digitally Remastered 96 02:43 Tools
The Dicky-Bird Song 03:03 Tools
I Saw Stars 03:10 Tools
Just A Little Bit South Of North Carolina 00:00 Tools
Blue Champagne 03:20 Tools
In A Little Spanish Town 02:26 Tools
Sabre Dance Boogie 02:47 Tools
Tchaikovsky Piano Conc Bb 03:11 Tools
Peano Concerto In B Flat 03:15 Tools
Sleigh Ride 00:00 Tools
April In Paris 02:57 Tools
Piano concerto in b flat minor 03:17 Tools
Czárdás 02:14 Tools
The Hut-Sut Song (A Swedish Serenade) 02:51 Tools
Bumble Boogie (feat. Jack Fina) 02:49 Tools
It's Been So Long 02:56 Tools
Piano Concerto No 1 In B Flat 03:14 Tools
Warsaw Concerto 02:59 Tools
Scatterbrain 03:07 Tools
All I Do Is Dream Of You 03:12 Tools
The Hut-Sut Song 02:46 Tools
The Dickie Bird Song 03:06 Tools
Cumana 03:04 Tools
Johnny Doughboy Found A Rose In Ireland 03:19 Tools
Bubbles In The Wine - Remastered 02:29 Tools
Goody, Goody! 02:54 Tools
White Christmas 03:07 Tools
A Walk In The Black Forest 02:19 Tools
Doin' Whay Comes Natur'lly 03:16 Tools
Dingbat, the Singing Cat 03:11 Tools
Music! Music! Music! 02:55 Tools
Rose O'Day (The Filla-Da-Gusha Song) 02:22 Tools
Intermezzo (Souvenir de Vienne) 03:28 Tools
Magic Is The Moonlight 03:13 Tools
The Way You Look Tonight 02:51 Tools
Now and Forever 03:12 Tools
Intermezzo 02:51 Tools
The Lady From 29 Palms 03:17 Tools
Tales From The Vienna Woods 03:13 Tools
Grieg Piano Concerto 02:42 Tools
Hut Sut Song 02:50 Tools
Cheek To Cheek 02:46 Tools
Rhapsody In Blue - Freddy Martin 03:13 Tools
The Merry Christmas Polka 02:47 Tools
Hut-Sut Song, (A Swedish Serenade) The 02:37 Tools
So Long For Now 02:47 Tools
'Til Reveille 02:42 Tools
Tonight We Love (1942 Version) 03:15 Tools
More Than You Know 00:00 Tools
Essential To Me 02:46 Tools
The Hut Sut Song 02:35 Tools
Jingle, jangle, jingle 03:55 Tools
Clair De Lune 03:55 Tools
Doin' What Comes Naturally 03:15 Tools
? 02:11 Tools
Dancing In The Dark 01:59 Tools
Delilah 03:55 Tools
Laura 03:03 Tools
Miami Beach Rhumba 03:07 Tools
Piano Concerto In B-Flat Minor 00:00 Tools
Minagua Nicaragua 03:07 Tools
Rose O'Day 02:21 Tools
Scatter-brain 02:57 Tools
On The Santa Claus Express 02:21 Tools
My Melancholy Baby 03:06 Tools
Shoo Fly Pie 02:45 Tools
Rhapsody in Blue 03:06 Tools
Smoke Gets In Your Eyes 02:32 Tools
All or Nothing at All 03:26 Tools
Rachmaninoff Concerto No. 2 00:00 Tools
Merry Christmas Polka 00:00 Tools
Till the End of Time 03:06 Tools
The Dickey-Bird Song 03:03 Tools
Piano Concerto In B Flat (Tonight We Love) 03:06 Tools
Bumble Boogie - Freddy Martin 03:03 Tools
Everywhere You Go 00:00 Tools
In the Middle of May 00:00 Tools
Easy to Love 00:00 Tools
Piano Concerto in B-Flat 03:13 Tools
Hut Sut Song, The (A Swedish-Serenade) 02:39 Tools
Sliegh Ride 02:39 Tools
Dream 03:11 Tools
All The Things You Are 00:00 Tools
GRIEG PIANO CONCERTO IN A MINOR 03:11 Tools
Piano Concerto No. 1 In B Flat 03:13 Tools
Shangri-La 03:03 Tools
Yesterdays 02:29 Tools
The Dicky Bird Song [1j9b] 02:29 Tools
Czardas 03:02 Tools
The Dickey-Bird Song feat. Glenn Hughes 03:03 Tools
People Will Say We're In Love 02:18 Tools
Blue Champagne - Freddy Martin 02:18 Tools
Parade of the Wooden Soldiers 02:18 Tools
Bumble Boogie (Featuring Jack Fina) 02:18 Tools
Spin A Little Web of Dreams 02:59 Tools
The Dickey Bird Song 03:03 Tools
More 03:02 Tools
Josephine 02:29 Tools
I've Got A Lovely Bunch Of Cocoanuts 02:46 Tools
Sugar Blues 02:59 Tools
I'M MY OWN GRANDPAW 02:59 Tools
Make Believe 02:43 Tools
Johhny Doughboy Found A Rose In Ireland 02:59 Tools
April In Portugal (The Whisp'ring Serenade) 02:59 Tools
The Aba Daba Honeymoon 02:59 Tools
Music, Music, Music 03:13 Tools
Love Letters 02:29 Tools
Abraham 02:29 Tools
Medley - This Can't Be Love / A Fine Romance / Look for the Silver Lining / How High the Moon 02:29 Tools
A rainy day 02:29 Tools
Look For The Silver Lining 02:29 Tools
Bubbles in the Wine (Remastered) 02:29 Tools
Serenade for Strings 02:29 Tools
(Theme from the) Warsaw Concerto 02:29 Tools
Boo Hoo 02:43 Tools
I've Told Every Little Star 02:29 Tools
Shoo Fly Pie And Apple Pan Douty 02:43 Tools
Piano Concerto In B Flat (Tonight We Love) - Freddy Martin 02:43 Tools
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Freddy Martin Martin in the 1943 film Stage Door Canteen Background information Born December 9, 1906 Origin Cleveland, Ohio, United States Died September 30, 1983 (aged 76) Genres Jazz Occupations Musician, bandleader Instruments Saxophone Frederick Alfred (Freddy) Martin (December 9, 1906 – September 30, 1983) was an American bandleader and tenor saxophonist. Early life Martin was born in Cleveland, Ohio.[1] Raised largely in an orphanage and with various relatives, Martin started out playing drums, then switched to C-melody saxophone and later tenor saxophone, the latter the one he would be identified with. Early on, he had intended to become a journalist. He had hoped that he would earn enough money from his musical work to enter Ohio State, but instead, he wound up becoming an accomplished musician. Martin led his own band while he was in high school, then played in various local bands. After working on a ship's band, Martin joined the Mason-Dixon band, then joined Arnold Johnson and Jack Albin. It was with Albin's "Hotel Pennsylvania Music" that he made his first recordings, for Columbia's Harmony, Velvet Tone, and Clarion 50 cent labels in 1930. Early career Martin in 1943 After a couple of years, his skill began attracting other musicians. One such musician was Guy Lombardo, who would remain friends with Martin throughout his life. After graduation from high school, Martin accepted a job at the H.N. White musical instrument company. When Lombardo was playing in Cleveland, Martin tried giving Lombardo some saxophones, which proved unsuccessful. Fortunately, Lombardo did get to hear Freddy’s band. One night, when Guy could not do a certain date, he suggested that Freddy’s band could fill in for him. The band did very well and that’s how Martin’s career really got started. But the band broke up and he did not form a permanent band until 1931 at the Bossert Hotel in Brooklyn. At the Bossert Marine Room, Freddy pioneered the "Tenor Band" style that swept the sweet-music industry. With his own tenor sax as melodic lead, Martin fronted an all-tenor sax section with just two brasses and a violin trio plus rhythm. The rich, lilting style quickly spawned imitators in hotels and ballrooms nationwide. "Tenor bands", usually with just the three tenors and one trumpet, could occasionally be found playing for older dancers well into the 1980s. The Martin band recorded first for Columbia Records in 1932. As the company was broke and signing no new contracts, the band switched to Brunswick Records after one session and remained with that label till 1938. Afterwards Martin appeared on RCA's Bluebird and Victor Records. The band also recorded pseudonymously in the early '30s, backing singers such as Will Osborne. Martin took his band into many prestigious hotels, including the Roosevelt Grill in New York City and the Ambassador in Los Angeles. A fixture on radio, his sponsored shows included NBC's Maybelline Penthouse Serenade of 1937. But Martin’s real success came in 1941 with an arrangement from the first movement of Tchaikovsky’s B-flat piano concerto. Martin recorded the piece instrumentally, but soon lyrics were put in and it was re-cut as "Tonight We Love" with Clyde Rogers' vocal - becoming his biggest hit. The success of "Tonight We Love" prompted Martin to adopt other classical themes as well, which featured the band's pianists Jack Fina, Murray Arnold and Barclay Allen. At this time Freddy enlarged the orchestra to a strength of six violins, four brasses and a like number of saxes. Musical style Freddy Martin was nicknamed "Mr. Silvertone" by saxophonist Johnny Hodges. Chu Berry named Freddy Martin his favorite saxophonist. He has also been idolized by many other saxophonists, including Eddie Miller. Although his playing has been admired by so many jazz musicians, Freddy Martin never tried to be a jazz musician. Martin always led a sweet styled band. Unlike most sweet bands that just played dull music, Martin’s band turned out to be one of the most musical and most melodic of all the typical hotel-room sweet bands. According to George T. Simon, Freddy's band was, "one of the most pleasant, most relaxed dance bands that ever flowed across the band scene." Martin was probably one of the most respected tenor saxophonists of the dance band era. He used the banner "Music In The Martin Manner." Ironically, Russ Morgan used a similar banner when he finally landed a radio series with his own band in 1936. (Morgan’s title was "Music In The Morgan Manner"!). Russ had been playing in Freddy’s band and the two were good friends for years. Russ even used some of Freddy's arrangements when he started his band. Did Martin let the "Music In The ------ Manner" and the arrangement thing go? Yes. "Freddy Martin is such a nice man," said Larry Barnett. "He’s almost too nice for his own good." Later career Martin also had a good ear for singers. At one time or another, Martin employed Merv Griffin, Buddy Clark, pianists Sid Appleman and Terry Shand, saxophonist Elmer Feldkamp, Stuart Wade (his most impressive male singer), violinist Eddie Stone, and many others. Helen Ward was a singer for Martin just before she joined Benny Goodman's new band. Martin’s popularity as a bandleader led him to Hollywood in the 1940s where he and his band appeared in a handful of films, including Seven Days' Leave (1942), Stage Door Canteen (1943) and Melody Time (1948), among others. In the 1950s and 1960s Martin continued to perform on the radio and also appeared on TV. Untroubled by changing musical tastes, he continued to work at major venues and was musical director for Elvis Presley’s first appearance in Las Vegas. Still in demand for hotel work, Martin entered the 1970s with an engagement at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. In the early 1970s, he was part of two tours of one-nighters that were known as The Big Band Cavalcade. Among the other performers on the show were Margaret Whiting, Bob Crosby, Frankie Carle, Buddy Morrow, Art Mooney and George Shearing. When the tours ended, Martin returned to the West Coast. In 1977, Martin was asked to lead Guy Lombardo’s band when Lombardo was hospitalized with a heart condition. Martin continued leading his band until the early 1980s, although by then, he was semi-retired. Freddy Martin died on September 30, 1983 in a Newport Beach hospital after a lingering illness. He was 76 years old. The 1947 song "Pico and Sepulveda" was recorded by Martin under the alias of "Felix Figueroa and his Orchestra" and was frequently featured on Dr. Demento's syndicated radio show.[2] It was also featured in the surrealist film Forbidden Zone. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.