In the mood for a bit of swing? I hope so, because today we celebrate birthday of the First Lady of Song, Ella Fitzgerald.
Ella was born April 25, 1917 in Newport News, Virginia. She moved north to Yonkers during the Great Migration. After falling on hard times as a teenager during the Great Depression, she entered an amateur night at the Apollo Theater in Harlem. Though she originally intended to dance at the show, after feeling intimidated by another dance act, she sang instead, imitating the style of her favorite singer, Connie Boswell, and won the twenty-five dollar prize. In 1935, Chick Webb reluctantly took her on as a vocalist in his band, which she stayed with for the remainder of the decade. When Webb succumbed to his illness in 1939, Ella took over the band, recording under her own name. After Webb’s band broke up, she continued to record as a solo artist, and the rest as they say, is history. After a life of music, her health declined in the 1980s, and Ella Fitzgerald died comfortably in her home on June 15, 1996, her final words were, “I’m ready to go now.”
Decca 1840 was recorded in two sessions in May of 1938, the first on the second and the second on the third. The band consists of Mario Bauza, Bobby Stark, and Taft Jordan on trumpet, George Matthews, Nat Story, and Sandy Williams on trombone, Garvin Bushell on clarinet and alto sax, Louis Jordan (yes, that Louis Jordan) on alto sax, Teddy McRae, and Wayman Carver on tenor sax, Tommy Fulford on piano, Bobby Johnson on guitar, Beverly Peer on string bass, and Chick Webb on drums.
Ella’s first big hit was “A-Tisket A-Tasket”, which she and Al Feldman adapted as a pop tune. The arrangement was written by the recently departed Van Alexander.
The label of the flip-side “Liza (All the Clouds’ll Roll Away)” bears the inscription “”To a Swell Kid, Camilla.” Unseen in the scan is “To Marilyn From Camilla Adams 1938” engraved in the run-out with some sharp instrument.