The first great arranger in jazz history,
Don Redman's innovations as a writer essentially invented the jazz-oriented big band with arrangements that developed yet left room for solo improvisations.
After graduating from college at the age of 20 with a music degree,
Redman played for a year with Billy Paige's Broadway Syncopators and then met up with
Fletcher Henderson.
Redman became
Henderson's chief arranger (although
Fletcher was often later on mistakenly given credit for the innovative charts) in addition to playing clarinet, alto, and (on at least one occasion) oboe.
Redman, whose largely spoken vocals were charming, recorded the first ever scat vocal on "My Papa Doesn't Two Time" in early 1924, predating
Louis Armstrong. Although his early arrangements were futuristic, they could be a bit stiff, and it was not until
Armstrong joined
Henderson's orchestra that
Redman (learning from the brilliant cornetist) began to really swing in his writing; "Sugar Foot Stomp" and "The Stampede" are two of his many classic charts.
It was a shock to
Fletcher Henderson when
Redman was persuaded in 1927 by
Jean Goldkette to direct
McKinney's Cotton Pickers.
Redman soon turned the previously unknown group into a strong competitor of
Henderson's, composing such future standards as "Gee Baby, Ain't I Good to You" and "Cherry." He sang more, emphasized his alto over his more primitive sounding clarinet (guesting on some famous recordings with
Louis Armstrong's Savoy Ballroom Five in 1928), and made a strong series of memorable records. In 1931,
Redman put together his own big band which lasted (if not prospered) up until 1941. After that, he freelanced as an arranger for the remainder of the swing era, led an all-star orchestra in 1946 that became the first band to visit postwar Europe, and eventually became
Pearl Bailey's musical director. Although he recorded a few sessions in the late '50s,
Don Redman's main significance is for his influential work of the 1920s and '30s. ~ Scott Yanow