The Sunday Night Live Big Band
Interview
Live Sundays @ 7PM
EST
Listener questions are always
welcomed!
IF you have a good question for our Special Guest,
please call our LIVE call in number (917) 889-7819 EST
Here are our current listings and
info:
Below you will find our upcoming interviews with
people who are keeping the Big Band spirit alive. PLUS...
Included are all of the original 78's of the music we
love to listen to from 1935 to 1945 which are presented throughout the interview.
You will find interviews
with:
-
Some of the greats
themselves!
-
Those who have performed with the greats
from '35 to '45.
-
Those who have written or arranged
compositions for them.
-
Authors of
Big Band Books.
Every interview includes...
The music of the artist or artists
represented throughout the program
making it an enjoyable listening experience. Plus...
Our best and most requested interviews featured on
WYYR.com are permanantly archived on The Best of Page so anyone worldwide can
listen to them at anytime. And...
A direct and permanant link to
either Amazon for a particular work or a website that enhances a
production will always be available.
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Special
programming is always guaranteed on
WYYR.com
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Special Guest
sometime late June or early July....
The Great Miss Kay
Starr!
 
Biography for Kay Starr
Kay Starr born July 21,
1922
One of the first recordings
Miss Starr ever recorded were two sides for Glenn Miller. But later became an American pop and jazz singer who
enjoyed considerable success in the 1950's.
She is best remembered for introducing two songs that became
#1 hits in the 1950s, "Wheel of
Fortune," and "The Rock And Roll Waltz"
She was born Katherine Laverne
Starks... was born on a reservation
in Dougherty,
Oklahoma. Her father, Harry, was a full-blooded Iroquois Indian; her mother, Annie, was of
mixed Irish and American Indian heritage. When her father got a job installing water sprinkler systems for the Automatical
Sprinkler Company, the family moved to Dallas, Texas. There, her mother
raised chickens, whom Kay used to serenade
in the coop. Kay's aunt Nora was impressed by her 7-year-old niece's singing and
arranged for her to sing on a Dallas radio station, WRR. First she took a talent
competition by storm, finishing 3rd one week and placing first every week thereafter. Eventually she had her
own 15-minute show. She sang pop and "hillbilly" songs with a piano
accompaniment. By age 10 she was making $3 a night, which was quite a salary in
the Depression days.
When Starks' father changed jobs, the family moved
to Memphis,
Tennessee, where she continued performing on
the radio. She sang "Western swing music," still mostly a mix
of country and pop. During this time at Memphis
radio station WMPS, misspellings in her fan mail inspired her and her parents to change her name to 'Kay
Starr.'
At 15, she was chosen to sing with
the Joe Venuti orchestra. Venuti had a contract to play in the Peabody Hotel
in Memphis which called for his band to feature a girl singer, which he did not
have. Venuti's road manager heard Kay Starr on the radio and suggested her to Venuti. She was still in junior high
school and her parents insisted on a midnight curfew.
Although she had brief stints in 1939
with Bob
Crosby and Glenn
Miller (who hired her in July of that
year when his regular singer, Marion
Hutton was sick), she spent most of her
next few years with Venuti, until he dissolved his band in 1942. It was, however, with Miller that she cut
her first record: "Baby Me"/"Love with a Capital You." It was not a great success, in part because the band
played in a key more appropriate for Marion Hutton that, unfortunately, did not suit Kay's vocal
range.
After finishing high school, she moved
to Los Angeles and signed with Wingy Manone's band; then from 1943 to 1945 she sang with Charlie Barnet's band. She then retired for a year because she developed pneumonia and later developed nodes on her vocal cords, and lost her voice as a
result of fatigue and overwork.
In 1946 she became a soloist, and in 1947 signed a solo
contract with Capitol
Records. Capitol had a number of other female
singers signed up (such as Peggy
Lee, Ella Mae Morse, Jo
Stafford, and Margaret Whiting), so it was hard to find her a niche. In 1948 when
the American Federation of
Musicians was threatening a strike,
Capitol wanted to have all its singers record a lot of songs for future release. Since she was junior to all
these other artists, every song she wanted to sing got offered to all the others, leaving her a list of old
songs from earlier in the century, which nobody else wanted to record.
Around 1950 Starr made a trip back home to Dougherty and heard
a fiddle recording of Pee Wee
King's song, "Bonaparte's Retreat". She liked it so
much that she wanted to record it, and contacted Roy Acuff's publishing house in Nashville, Tennessee, and spoke to
Acuff directly. He was happy to let her record it, but it took a while for her to make clear that she was a
singer, not a fiddler, and therefore needed to have some lyrics written. Eventually Acuff came up with a new
lyric, and "Bonaparte's Retreat" became her biggest hit up to that point, with close to a million
sales.
In 1955, she signed with RCA Victor Records. However, at this time, traditional pop music was being superseded
by rock and
roll, and Kay had only two hits, the
aforementioned which is sometimes considered her attempt to sing rock and roll and sometimes as a song making
fun of it, "The Rock And Roll
Waltz". She stayed at RCA Victor until 1959,
hitting the top ten only once more with "My Heart Reminds Me", then returned to Capitol.
Most of her songs have jazz influences, and, like those
of Frankie
Laine and Johnnie
Ray, are sung in a style that sound decidedly
close to the rock and roll songs that follow. These include her smash hits "Wheel of Fortune" (her biggest hit, number one for 10 weeks), "Side by Side", "The Man Upstairs", and "Rock and Roll Waltz". One of her
biggest hits was her version of "The Man with the Bag", a Christmas song, which is heard ubiquitously every holiday season in stores, restaurants, and on the
radio.
As the 1950s drew to a close, Kay Starr's popularity began to
decline. However she recorded several albums including Movin’ (1959), an
up-tempo jazz album. Others included Losers, Weepers… (1960) and I Cry By
Night (1962) in the jazz/blues genre, as well as a country album entitled
Just Plain Country (1962).
After departing from Capitol
Records for a second time in 1966, Starr continued touring concert venues in the U.S. and the UK. She also recorded
several jazz and country albums on small independent labels, including a 1968 album
with Count
Basie, and Back To The
Roots (1975). In the late 1980s she was featured in the revue 3
Girls with Helen O'Connell and Margaret Whiting, and in 1993 she toured the United
Kingdom as part of Pat
Boone’s April Love Tour. Most recently her first "live" album, Live At Freddy's, was released in 1997. Kay Starr performs Blue and Sentimental
with Tony
Bennett on his 2001
album Playing with My Friends: Bennett
Sings the Blues.
In 2006 a remix by Stuhr of
Starr's vocal of the classic "I've Got My Love to
Keep Me Warm" was used in a commercial
for Telus.
As of 2007 she resides
in Bel Air,
California; married six times, she has a
daughter and a grandchild.
She also was one of the first female artists to perform country western swing
music.
Chart hits
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Make sure to check back for
upcoming events
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