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Sauter Finegan Orchestra

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Active until
  
1957

Active from
  
1952

Sauter-Finegan Orchestra httpsiytimgcomviGdsjEUY5vIhqdefaultjpg

Albums
  
Inside Sauter - Finegan, Inside Sauter-Finegan Revisited

Members
  
Bill Finegan, Eddie Sauter, Harvey Estrin, Joe Venuto, Jimmy Thompson, Sid Cooper

Genres
  
Jazz, Big band, Holiday, Easy listening

Similar
  
Joe Mooney, Nick Travis, Ralph Flanagan, Fritz Reiner, Ray McKinley

The Sauter-Finegan Orchestra was an American swing jazz band popular in the 1950s.

Contents

The orchestra was led by Eddie Sauter and Bill Finegan, who were both experienced big band arrangers. Sauter played mellophone, trumpet, and drums, and had attended Columbia University and Juilliard; Finegan had studied at the Paris Conservatory. They began recording together in 1952, using inventive arrangements that made use of a variety of unusual instruments, including many orchestral instruments as well as oddities like the kazoo and the beaten human chest.

A June 7, 1952, article in the trade publication Billboard described the new group as "a creative band, which will combine dance music as well as mood interpretations."

The group initially had a three-year contract with RCA Victor, with plans "for about 16 sides a year." Their first chart appearance was with "Doodletown Fifers", their version of a Civil War tune called "Kingdom Coming and the Year of Jubilo". "Nina Never Knew" (featuring vocalist Joe Mooney) and "The Moon is Blue" (with Sally Sweetland) soon followed on the charts. With the success of the singles, they put together a 21-member touring ensemble and began playing venues in 1953. Sweetland was the group's female vocalist, and Andy Roberts was the male vocalist. Because the group played in dance halls rather than concert venues, they encountered little success on the road, and quit touring in 1955 after having accrued much debt.

In March 1957, the pair disbanded the group, and Sauter moved to Germany; Finegan continued as an arranger. They reunited in the studio in 1959 to release a new album, Return of the Doodletown Fifers, and to do jingles for advertisers. After Sauter's death in 1981, Finegan revived the name Sauter-Finegan Orchestra for concerts in New York City in the 1980s.

"World Without Time," from "Adventures in Time" was chosen by host Richard Heffner as the theme music for The Open Mind.

The sauter finegan orchestra finegan s wake 1954


Discography

  • New Directions in Music (RCA Victor, 1953)
  • The Sound of the Sauter-Finegan Orchestra (RCA Victor, 1952)
  • Inside Sauter-Finegan (RCA Victor, 1953)
  • Concert Jazz (RCA Victor, 1955)
  • Concerto for Jazz Band and Symphony Orchestra (RCA Victor, 1954) (with Fritz Reiner and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra)
  • The Sons of Sauter-Finegan (RCA Victor, 1954)
  • Adventure in Time (RCA Victor, 1956)
  • Under Analysis (RCA Victor, 1956)
  • Straight Down the Middle (RCA Victor, 1957)
  • Memories of Goodman and Miller (RCA Victor, 1958)
  • Return of the Doodletown Fifers (United Artists, 1960)
  • Pop Concert (United Artists, 1960, or later)
  • Songs

    Midnight SleighrideThe Return of the Doodletown Fifers · 1961
    Doodletown FifersThe Return of the Doodletown Fifers · 1961
    Nina Never KnewDirections in Music · 1989

    References

    Sauter-Finegan Orchestra Wikipedia