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Louis Prima
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A tireless showman and an underrated musical talent,
Louis Prima
swung his way to icon status thanks to an irresistible, infectious sound whose appeal translated across generations. Nominally a swing artist,
Prima
's distinctive sound also encompassed New Orleans-style jazz, boogie-woogie, jump blues, R&B, early rock & roll, and even the occasional Italian tarantella. Regardless of what form his music took, it swung hard and fast, with a rolling, up-tempo shuffle beat that helped some of his earlier material cross over
to R&B audiences (his songs were also covered by jump blues artists from time to time). His greatest period of popularity coincided with his marriage to singer
Keely Smith
, whose coolly sophisticated vocals and detached stage manner made a perfect counterpoint to
Prima
's boisterous presence: mugging, clowning, and cavorting around the stage with the boundless enthusiasm of a hyperactive boy.
Prima
's band during this time was anchored by tenor saxophonist
Sam Butera
, whose grounding in jump blues and New Orleans R&B was a perfect match. Perhaps because
Prima
refused to take his music too seriously, sober-minded jazz critics often dismissed him as a mere entertainer, overlooking his very real talent as a jazzman. He was a capable, gravelly-voiced singer modeled on
Louis Armstrong
, boasting a surprising range, and was also a fine trumpet player, again in the irrepressible mold of
Armstrong
; what was more, he wrote
Benny Goodman
's perennial swing smash
"Sing, Sing, Sing."
Prima
's impact on popular culture was also significant; his pronounced ethnicity made it safe for other Italian-American singers to acknowledge their roots, and he was the first high-profile musical act to take up regular residence in the lounges and casinos of Las Vegas, helping to start the city's transformation into a broader-based entertainment capital. His musical legacy proved long-lasting, as covers of his classics became modern-day hits for
David Lee Roth
and
Brian Setzer
; additionally, the '90s swing revival, which sought to re-emphasize the danceability and sense of fun that had largely disappeared from jazz, brought
Prima
's music back into the limelight (as well as the good graces of critics).
Louis Prima
was born December 7, 1911 in New Orleans, LA, to an Italian family who'd emigrated to the U.S. by way of Argentina. He took violin lessons as a youth, but switched to trumpet at age 15 when his older brother went out on tour with a band and left a spare instrument behind. By 17,
Prima
was playing professionally at a New Orleans theater, influenced chiefly by
Louis Armstrong
and
King Oliver
. This was a problem, since the theater was not a jazz venue, and
Prima
was fired. In the early '30s, he caught on with cornetist
Red Nichols
for a time, and moved to New York in 1934 at the urging of star bandleader
Guy Lombardo
, who had been impressed with
Prima
's trumpet playing. Initially struggling to find work,
Prima
formed a Dixieland-style backing group called
the New Orleans Gang
and landed a regular gig at a 52nd Street club known as the Famous Door. The band was a hit, adopting
"Way Down Yonder in New Orleans"
as their signature song, and recorded numerous sides for a succession of labels up through 1939; some of the better-known members included -- at various points -- clarinetist
Pee Wee Russell
, pianist
Claude Thornhill
, guitarist
George Van Eps
, reedman
Eddie Miller
, and trombonist
George Brunies
.
Prima
also traveled to Los Angeles periodically, and made cameo appearances in several Hollywood musicals, starting with the
Bing Crosby
Western Rhythm on the Range in 1936.
Meanwhile,
Prima
was composing original material, and in 1937 he completed a song called
"Sing, Sing, Sing."
Benny Goodman
recorded an instrumental version and had a huge smash with it the following year, spotlighting it in his legendary Carnegie Hall appearance; to this day it remains one of the most readily identifiable melodies of the swing era.
Prima
broke up
the New Orleans Gang
in 1939 to form his own big band, which he dubbed
the Gleeby Rhythm Orchestra
. Following World War II, the band started to take off, landing hits with novelty numbers that often drew upon
Prima
's Italian background and accent. The first was 1944's
"Angelina,"
a major success that paved the way for titles like
"Felicia No Capicia,"
"Bacciagaloop (Makes Love on the Stoop),"
"Please No Squeeza Da Banana,"
and
"Josephina, Please No Leana on the Bell."
Prima
also made the Hit Parade Top Ten with songs like
"Robin Hood"
(1944; covered the next year by
Les Brown
for a bigger hit),
"Bell Bottom Trousers"
(sung by
Lily Ann Carol
in 1945), and
"Civilization (Bongo, Bongo, Bongo)"
(1947). He also wrote
Jo Stafford
's 1947 hit
"A Sunday Kind of Love."
In 1948,
Prima
hired a new female vocalist for his band, a 16-year-old Norfolk, Virginia native named
Dorothy Keely
, who was renamed
Keely Smith
.
Prima
parlayed her initial shyness into a stage routine where he attempted to break down her icily reserved façade. The contrast in their styles made for immediate chemistry, and
Smith
's boyish haircut only added to the duo's distinctive stage presence.
Prima
broke up the big band in 1949, and continued to work with
Smith
as a more streamlined nightclub act. They scored a hit in 1950 with their co-composition
"Oh Babe!"
and toured the country over the next few years. In the summer of 1953,
Smith
became
Prima
's fourth wife.
By late 1954,
Prima
was finding bookings harder and harder to come by. He talked a friend into booking him for an extended stay at the Sahara Hotel in Las Vegas, and while passing through New Orleans, he recruited locally popular tenor saxophonist
Sam Butera
as a possible collaborator if things went well. They did, and
Prima
called
Butera
out to Vegas, asking him to bring a few more musicians; the new group debuted at the Sahara on the day after Christmas, and
Butera
dubbed them
the Witnesses
during
Prima
's first on-stage introduction. Their act quickly became a sensation around Las Vegas, and their engagement turned into a residency, billed as "The Wildest Show in Vegas," which ran up to five times a night.
Prima
and
Smith
's comic banter was riddled with sexual innuendo, and they sometimes rewrote the lyrics to popular standards in the same spirit; meanwhile,
Butera
's jump blues/R&B background kept the music equally lively. Even if the music was aimed at older listeners, it shared a great deal of the spirit of early rock & roll.
In 1956,
Prima
inked a new deal with Capitol, which marked the beginning of the most celebrated and influential period of his recording career. His first album for the label was 1956's
The Wildest!
, which successfully translated the high energy of his live act into a studio recording; it featured many of his best-known latter-day songs, including the
"Just a Gigolo/I Ain't Got Nobody"
medley,
"Jump, Jive an' Wail,"
"Buona Sera,"
"Oh Marie,"
and the jive-talking duet
"The Lip."
Over the next few years, Capitol issued six more
Prima
albums, highlighted by 1957's
The Call of the Wildest
and 1958's concert set
The Wildest Show in Tahoe
. He appeared frequently on The Ed Sullivan Show and other variety programs, and in 1958 he and
Smith
won a Grammy for their hit version of
"That Old Black Magic."
In 1959, they appeared in the film Hey Boy! Hey Girl!, which featured their renditions of the title song,
"Lazy River,"
and
"Banana Split for My Baby,"
among others.
While
Prima
and
Smith
boasted terrific chemistry on stage, their infidelity-riddled marriage was floundering by the close of the '50s. In 1961,
Prima
switched from Capitol to Dot Records, and from the Sahara Hotel to the Desert Inn; with his popularity still running high, both deals netted huge sums of money. However,
Smith
divorced him later that year, scuttling the act and largely negating the deals.
Prima
returned to Capitol for one final album, 1962's
The Wildest Comes Home
, and hired a new female vocalist,
Gia Maione
, who became his fifth wife in 1963. Without
Smith
, he was never again as popular or prolific on record, but he continued to perform in Las Vegas with
Butera
and
the Witnesses
, and toured successfully as well. In 1967, Disney tapped
Prima
to voice the character of King Louie, ruler of the orangutans, in its animated adaptation of The Jungle Book; his featured number, the swinging
"I Wanna Be Like You,"
ranks among the best-loved Disney songs of its era.
Prima
spent much of the late '60s and early '70s playing Vegas casinos and lounges, most notably at the Sands Hotel. With more and more musical acts taking up residence in the city,
Prima
no longer had the drawing power of old, and in the early '70s he and
Butera
returned home to New Orleans, where they made a steadier living playing in the French Quarter for the tourist crowd. In late 1975,
Prima
underwent surgery to remove a brain tumor, and fell into a coma; although he survived for nearly three more years, he never regained consciousness, and died on August 24, 1978.
Prima
's music began to reappear in subsequent years; ex-
Van Halen
singer
David Lee Roth
scored the best-remembered hit of his solo career with a carbon-copy version of
"Just a Gigolo/I Ain't Got Nobody"
in 1985, and onetime
Stray Cat
Brian Setzer
scored a Grammy-winning hit with his cover of
"Jump, Jive an' Wail."
Prima
's original version was featured in a Gap commercial around the same time, and the swing-dancing fad of the time helped bring the rest of his music back into the public eye. Meanwhile,
Sam Butera
continued to perform
Prima
hits from the golden years on the casino circuits in Las Vegas and Atlantic City. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide
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Albums (54)
Hey Boy! Hey Girl!/Swingin' Pretty
(4 songs)
Classic Album Collection
(23 songs)
The Essence of Louis Prima
(22 songs)
Just a Gigolo & Other Hits
(16 songs)
view all
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