Billy Eckstine
15 Shouts - 494,245 Scrobbles
Biography
Billy Eckstine's smooth baritone and distinctive vibrato broke down barriers throughout the 1940s, first as leader of the original hard bop big beat, then as the first romantic black male in popular music. An influence looming large in the cultural development of soul and r&b singers from Sam Cooke to Prince, Eckstine was able to play it straight on his pop hits "Prisoner of Love," "My Foolish Heart" and "I Apologize." Born in Pittsburgh but raised in Washington, D.C., Eckstine began singing at the age of seven and entered many amateur talent shows. He had also planned on a football career, though after breaking his collar bone, he made music his focus. After working his way west to Chicago during the late '30s, Eckstine was hired by Earl Hines to join his Grand Terrace Orchestra in 1939. Though white bands of the era featured males singing straight-ahead romantic ballads, black bands were forced to stick to novelty or blues vocal numbers until the advent of Eckstine and Herb Jeffries (from Duke Ellington's Orchestra).
Read More...Though several of Eckstine's first hits with Hines were novelties like "Jelly, Jelly" and "The Jitney Man," he also recorded several straight-ahead songs, including the hit "Stormy Monday." By 1943, he gained a trio of stellar bandmates -- Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, and Sarah Vaughan. After forming his own big band that year, he hired all three and gradually recruited still more modernist figures and future stars: Wardell Gray, Dexter Gordon, Miles Davis, Kenny Dorham, Fats Navarro, and Art Blakey, as well as arrangers Tadd Dameron and Gil Fuller. The Billy Eckstine Orchestra was the first hard bop big band group, and its leader reflected hard bop innovations by stretching his vocal harmonics into his normal ballads. Despite the group's modernist slant, Eckstine hit the charts often during the mid-'40s, with Top Ten entries including "A Cottage for Sale" and "Prisoner of Love." On the group's frequent European and American tours, Eckstine also played trumpet, valve trombone, and guitar.
Though he was forced to give up the band in 1947 (Gillespie formed his own hard bop big beat that same year), Eckstine made the transition to string-filled balladry with ease. He recorded more than a dozen hits during the late '40s, including "My Foolish Heart" and "I Apologize." He was also quite popular in Britain, hitting the Top Ten there twice during the '50s -- "No One But You" and "Gigi" -- as well as several duet entries with Sarah Vaughan. Eckstine returned to his jazz roots occasionally as well, recording with Vaughan, Count Basie, and Quincy Jones for separate LPs, and the 1960 live LP No Cover No Minimum featured him taking a few trumpet solos as well. He recorded several albums for Mercury and Roulette during the early '60s (his son Ed was the president of Mercury), and he appeared on Motown for a few standards albums during the mid-'60s. After recording very sparingly during the '70s, Eckstine made his last recording (Billy Eckstine Sings with Benny Carter) in 1986. He died of a heart attack in 1993. ~ John Bush, Rovi
Top Songs
Total plays on Last.fm over the last 6 months- Christmas Eve - (3:04) - 8,085 plays
- Download This Track
Amazon MP3
7digital
iTunes- Ringtone
-
- Download This Track
Amazon MP30.89 USD
7digital0.99 USD
iTunes0.99 USD- Ringtone
My Foolish Heart - (3:04) - 3,036 playsLyricsThe night is like a lovely tune, beware my foolish heart
How white the ever constant moon, take care, my foolish heart
There's a line between love and fascination
That's hard to see on an evening such as this
For they give the very same sensation
- Kiss Of Fire - (2:32) - 2,633 plays
- Download This Track
Amazon MP30.89 USD
7digital0.99 USD
iTunes0.99 USD- Ringtone
- No One But You - (3:09) - 2,025 plays
- Download This Track
Amazon MP30.89 USD
7digital0.99 USD
iTunes0.99 USD- Ringtone
- Everything I have Is Yours - (3:11) - 1,927 plays
- Download This Track
Amazon MP30.89 USD
7digital0.99 USD
iTunes0.99 USD- Ringtone
- I Apologize - (3:15) - 1,947 plays
- Download This Track
Amazon MP30.89 USD
7digital0.99 USD
iTunes0.99 USD- Ringtone
- Caravan - (2:48) - 1,676 plays
- Download This Track
Amazon MP30.89 USD
7digital0.99 USD
iTunes0.99 USD- Ringtone
- Imagination - (4:25) - 1,756 plays
- Download This Track
Amazon MP30.89 USD
7digital0.99 USD
iTunes0.99 USD- Ringtone
- Blue Moon - (3:11) - 1,457 plays
- Download This Track
Amazon MP30.89 USD
7digital0.99 USD
iTunes0.99 USD- Ringtone
- Prisoner of Love - (2:53) - 1,044 plays
- Download This Track
Amazon MP30.99 USD
7digital0.99 USD
iTunes0.99 USD- Ringtone
