
Jasmine Records Hal KEMP & His Orch. - Remember Me? CD Hal Kemp & His Orch.
Jasmine Records Hal KEMP & His Orch. - Remember Me?, CD, Hal Kemp & His Orch., Physical media, Adult, 1 discs, 5/1/2001
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In 1922 young Hal entered UNC university where he soon met three freshmen who were to become important to him a few years later - Horace Dowell, Robert Ennis and John Trotter. In 1924 Kemp assembled a ten-piece band and secured an engagement to play on ocean liners. Kemp returned to UNC in 1926 but the lure of music was too great and along with Dowell, Ennis and Trotter, he put together another band. Then in 1932 yet another long engagement came their way when they opened at Chicago’s famous Blackhawk Restaurant. They broadcast four nights a week, usually for two hours at a time, over the powerful WGN station which could be heard on the West Coast. It was during the time in Chicago that the band’s unique style was perfected. John Trotter (the middle ‘Scott’ came later) left the band at the end of 1935 to go to Hollywood, as did Skinnay Ennis in late 1937 to form his own band. There was a brief foray into Hollywood when the band appeared in the moderately successful RKO movie Radio Revels, released early in 1938. Kemp’s last engagement was at the Cocanut Grove in Los Angeles’ Ambassador Hotel in 1940. The band closed on December 19 and Hal decided to drive overnight to be in San Francisco the next day where they were due to open at the Mark Hopkins Hotel. He was fatally injured in a head-on crash and died two days later. Trotter and Ennis rushed to San Francisco to help out with the band during its appearance at the Hopkins, and singer Bob Allen also took over for a short while afterwards, followed by Art Jarrett, but without the man himself leading, the Kemp magic had gone.
Some of the magic created by that tall, slender, softly-spoken Southern gentleman and his orchestra can be heard once more in the recordings in this collection. Those stuttering, staccato trumpets are particularly prominent on such titles as Shuffle Off To Buffalo, Got A Date With An Angel and Pocketful Of Dreams, as well as the intricate reed figures. Trotter’s piano is simplistically displayed on Torch Song, Heart Of Stone and Strange. What a delight it is to hear Skinnay Ennis at his out-of-breath best on Hands Across The Table and Remember Me, whilst still in the vocal department, note Fredda Gibson on If It’s Good - she later became known as Georgia Gibbs. The last track was Kemp’s sign-off. Never again will it be ‘The same time, the same place’.
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