Wednesday, August 1, 2018
Glenn Miller records "In The Mood" 1939
Glenn Miller and his orchestra entered the RCA studios in New York City on August 1, 1939, and recorded one of the best-known, most-beloved instrumentals of all time, In the Mood.
In the Mood was an arrangement by Joe Garland (African-American composer and arranger) based on a pre-existing melody and Andy Razaf (African-American composer and lyricist) wrote the lyrics. Edgar Hayes and his orchestra recorded In the Mood first in 1938, and featured bari saxophones instead of tenor saxes.
Garland sold his arrangement to Artie Shaw in 1938, who did not record it but did perform it in a concert. The audience was under-whelmed.
Miller bought the tune in 1939, who played with the arrangement for a while, before recording on August 1.
It became an instant hit and stayed at the top of the Record Buying Guide for 13 weeks and the Billboard charts for 30 weeks.
Glenn Miller's recording of In the Mood was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1983.
Labels:
1939,
Andy Razaf,
Artie Shaw,
Billboard,
debut,
Glenn Miller,
Grammy Hall of Fame,
In the Mood,
jazz,
Joe Garland,
music,
Record Buying Guide
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