Everything about Billy May totally explained
William E. May, better known as
Billy May (
10 November,
1916 –
22 January,
2004) was an
American composer,
arranger and
musician. He died of
heart failure at the age of 87 in his home in
San Juan Capistrano, California.
One of May's most popular compositions was the theme music of the
Naked City television series in the early 1960s, "Somewhere in the Night". Along with
Nelson Riddle, he was also involved in scoring the television series,
Emergency!
Early life
May was born in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He played
trumpet professionally in
big bands such as those of
Charlie Barnet starting in
1939, but became best known as a talented arranger. His arrangement of the
Ray Noble composition
Cherokee became a major hit of the
swing music era. During the Barnet days, May revealed a significant flair for satire on a composition titled
The Wrong Idea that ridiculed the bland
Mickey Mouse style of safe big band music with specific musical mockery of bandleader
Sammy Kaye, known for his
swing and sway trademark. May's caustic lyrics to the song called it
swing and sweat with Charlie Barnet.
May worked as an arranger for the bands of
Glenn Miller and
Les Brown before being hired as staff arranger first for the
NBC radio network, then for
Capitol Records.
With Capitol Records
At Capitol, May wrote arrangements for many top artists. These included
Frank Sinatra on the albums
Come Fly With Me,
Come Dance with Me! and
Come Swing With Me;
Nat King Cole on the albums
Just One Of Those Things and
Let's Face the Music!, as well as numerous singles (all his work with Cole being packaged later on the 2CD set
The Billy May Sessions);
Stan Freberg, with whom he was a longtime collaborator, featuring on many of the artist's comedy recordings;
Peggy Lee on the album
Pretty Eyes;
Sue Raney on her second album
Songs for a Raney Day;
Vic Damone on the albums
The Lively Ones and
Strange Enchantment;
Jeri Southern on the album
Jeri Southern Meets Cole Porter;
Keely Smith on the album
Politely and on a duet single, "Nothing In Common"/"How Are Ya Fixed For Love?", with Sinatra;
Bobby Darin on the album
Oh! Look At Me Now;
Nancy Wilson on the albums
Like In Love,
Something Wonderful,
Tender Loving Care,
Nancy - Naturally! and various tracks from the albums
Just For Now and
Lush Life;
Matt Monro on several tracks from the albums
Invitation to the Movies,
Invitation to Broadway, and
These Years;
Bing Crosby and
Rosemary Clooney on the album
That Travelin' Two-Beat; and Sir
George Shearing on the albums
Satin Affair and
Burnished Brass, co-arranged with Shearing (May also conducted Shearing's album
Concerto For My Love, on which Shearing had sole credit for the arrangements).
Additionally, May's orchestra was featured on many Capitol Records children's projects. He also worked closely with early 1950s satirist
Stan Freberg, using his arranging skills to help Freberg create his spoofs of current hits by creating musical backing often stunningly close to the original hit single. On Freberg's
Wunnerful! Wunnerful! a lacerating spoof of bandleader
Lawrence Welk, May hired some of the best jazz musicians in Hollywood for his recording sessions, and they relished the idea of mocking the musically awful (if financially successful) Welk sound. The result was a note-perfect recreation of Welk's sound as Freberg and a group of vocalists created parodies of Welk's
musical family. Freberg has recounted that Welk was less than amused by the results, which he couldn't have achieved without May.
May also composed and conducted the music for Freberg's short-lived comedy radio series on CBS, which ran for fifteen episodes in 1957.
In 1959, May won the
Grammy Award for
Best Performance by an Orchestra.
With other record labels
The Crosby-Clooney collaboration was a sequel to their earlier album on RCA Records,
Fancy Meeting You Here, also arranged by May.
May’s other non-Capitol work included another Bing Crosby duet album, this time with
Louis Armstrong, entitled
Bing & Satchmo; a further duet album twinning
Bobby Darin with
Johnny Mercer, called
Two Of A Kind; the sixth in
Ella Fitzgerald's acclaimed series of
Song Books for
Verve Records,
Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Harold Arlen Songbook; a similar dip into the
Rodgers and Hart opus with
Anita O'Day, entitled
Anita O'Day and Billy May Swing Rodgers and Hart;
Mel Tormé’s Latin-flavoured album ; early albums by
Jack Jones (
Shall We Dance?) and
Petula Clark (
In Hollywood); one solitary session with
Sarah Vaughan for
Roulette Records in
1960, to record the single
The Green Leaves of Summer and three other tracks; and two more albums with
Keely Smith, recorded nearly forty years apart –
CheroKeely Swings from
1962 and
Keely Sings Sinatra, one of May’s last pieces of work, from
2001.
After Sinatra left Capitol to start his own label,
Reprise Records, May continued to provide arrangements for him, off and on, for nearly thirty more years, working on the albums
Sinatra Swings,
Francis A. & Edward K. (with
Duke Ellington) and, as well as the chart for what is thought to be Sinatra's last ever solo recording, "
Cry Me a River" (
1988), which was eventually released on the 20 CD Box Set
Frank Sinatra - The Complete Reprise Studio Recordings. In addition, May was the natural choice to arrange Sinatra's knockabout duet with
Sammy Davis Jr.,
Me And My Shadow, which was a hit single on both sides of the Atlantic in
1962, whilst he also contributed to Sinatra's ambitious "
Reprise Musical Repertory Theatre" project, providing a few arrangements for three of its four albums,
South Pacific,
Kiss Me, Kate and
Guys and Dolls, May's charts being variously performed by Sinatra, Davis, Crosby,
Dean Martin,
Jo Stafford and
Lou Monte and yielding a perennial Sinatra concert favourite, "
Luck Be A Lady" from
Guys and Dolls.
In 1958, May arranged a
holiday album on
Warner Bros. Records featuring the
Jimmy Joyce Singers, titled
A Christmas to Remember.
Musical style
May's charts often featured brisk tempos and intricate brass parts. One distinctive feature of his style is his frequent use of trumpet mute devices; another, a saxophone glissando, is widely known as his "slurping saxes". However, May was also an accomplished writer in slower tempos, sometimes using string arrangements. Good examples of this aspect of his work include his brass chart for "These Foolish Things" on the Cole album
Just One Of Those Things and his string arrangement of "April In Paris" on Sinatra's
Come Fly With Me album.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Billy May'.
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