
Herman Arnspiger, Bob Wills, Milton Brown, W. Lee O'Daniel.....Much of the Music is based on the Bob Wills era. Bob Wills has been
called the "King" of Western Swing Music, entertaining all throughout the
USA with his famous "Playboys" and "Playgirls. It is through his music that
these organizations have thrived. Dedication is made to Bob Wills the first
weekend in March each year, as we celebrate his birthday at Cains Ballroom
in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
THE DEVELOPMENT OF WESTERN SWING
.... Born and raised in Alabama, Hank Penny was turned off by the relatively
stilted and stodgy sounds coming from the Grand Ole Opry and gravitated
toward the freewheelin' sounds coming from WBAP in Fort Worth. It was the
band led by Milton Brown that struck Penny's fancy, a band that played such
songs as "NOBODY'S SWEETHEART", "TIGER RAG", and "I'LL BE GLAD WHEN YOU'RE
DEAD YOU RASCAL YOU".
Penny had to distinguish the vital jazz-string band combination from the Gid
Tanner and His Skillet Lickers sound coming from nearby Georgia, and so
"western swing" bands became known to Penny (and other Easterners) as "Texas
Fiddle Bands." But to Texans, that or any other term was unknown throughout
the first decade of Western Swing's existence (1932-42). It wasn't until
1944-45 that promoter Foreman Phillips actually coined the term "Western
Swing," creating a title for his star act, Spade Cooley. Cooley then became
"The King of Western Swing," in reaction to Roy Rogers' title of "King of
the Cowboys."
It is ironic that Phillips would come up with the term which now defines the
music whose entire make-up is made of freedom of expression and jazz
improvisation, since Phillips himself put signs up at his places of
exposition proclaiming "WHERE'S THE MELODY" and even went so far as to fire
one Hank Penny for instructing musicians Harold Hensley, Noel Boggs, and
Jimmy Wyble to jazz it up and ignore Phillips' edict. ....
So, if the term "Western Swing" did not originate until after World War II,
what did they call it, the band members themselves and the people in Texas
who lived with the music throughout the depression? Unlike Bluegrass, there
was no one band or bandleader who spearheaded the audio assault on
audiences. (Bluegrass taking its name from Bill Monroe's organization in the
1940's.)
In fact, there was a different driving force in each major section of Texas,
Oklahoma, and Louisiana. In Fort Worth, Milton Brown and the Light Crust
Doughboys were the kingpins. Dallas was ruled by three bands: The Wanderers,
Roy Newman and his Boys, and Bill Boyd's Cowboy Ramblers. Tulsa had Bob
Wills' Texas Playboys and Dave Edwards & The Alabama Boys; San Antonio had
The Tune Wranglers and Jimmie Revard's Oklahoma Playboys; Houston had Cliff
Bruner 's Texas Wanderers, who later invaded and conquered Port Arthur.
It was the Shelton Brothers' outfit that ruled Shreveport, along with Leon
Chappelear's Lone Star Cowboys. In other words, it was a city-by- city
assault on the Southwest, with each band holding court over its terrain like
Middle-Ages war-lords. In interviewing musicians from each of the above
organizations, as well as numerous minor groups, the consensus was that
there was never a name for Western Swing in the 30's, although Milton Brown
and his Musical Brownies were universally recognized as being the #1 band in
the Southwest and the other groups' inspiration.
The record companies that distributed Western Swing recordings were also at
a loss to describe the music. The three labels (Vocalion, Bluebird, and
Decca) made feeble attempts to encompass the cumulative repertoire under the
banners of: "Old-Time," "Hot String Band," "Fox Trot," "Novelty String
Band," "Hot Dance," and the like, but none caught on with the public. ....
The reason there was no one term to describe Western Swing in the 1930's was
relatively simple. Getting out of Texas was still next to impossible in the
30's. With the Depression enveloping the people like a sodden blanket,
airplane travel was out of the question, train travel was too expensive, and
automobile travel too arduous on the long, dusty Texas "highways" to attempt
by all except the most adventurous. Therefore, Texas was in essence a
gigantic fishbowl in which there was no escape to the "civilized" world of
Bing Crosby, Paul Whiteman, and Rudy Vallee.
The only sounds that crept in from the outside were from the radio networks
and the powerful stations beaming their signals down from Chicago or up from
New Orleans. These stations featured the pulsating sounds of jazz: Louis
Armstrong, Earl Hines, and Jack Teagarden were three of the favorites. This
being the only outside influence on Western Swing, Southwestern musicians
drew from their own cultures for material and soon, the rich mixture of
Blues, Ragtime, Dixieland, Cajun, Mexican, German, Anglo-American, and
Cowboy Traditions began to churn and blend. The result was a brand of music
that was so all-encompassing, so pervasive throughout the area, that there
was no need to distinguish it from any other kind of music. It all became
one. The repertoires varied from city to city, but basically? it was the
same sound. And when there is only one choice, there is no need for a label
to distinguish it from another genre. It was simply music to dance to. ....
The development of Western Swing was as complicated as the definition of the
genre itself. (I will be referring to the music as "Western Swing" because,
despite there being no term for the music in the 30's it is a most befitting
term today. Those that may still argue are requested to witness whether
Johann Sebastian Bach called his music of the 17th and 18th centuries
"Baroque.") ....The popular opinion today is that Bob Wills was the creator
and disseminator of Western Swing, its biggest asset and most popular
bandleader. The Bob Wills story has turned into legendary, thanks to the
colorful makeup of the Wills persona and his long-lasting popularity in the
Southwest and his migration to Hollywood after 1940. It is time that this
assumption is put to rest. Although Bob Wills was one of the key musicians
to appear in a Western Swing band and who later formed one of the best
organizations in the Southwest, his was not the first, nor the most listened
to for most of the 1930's. He was master bandleader and showman, and
possessed a unique talent for picking talent. Wills started out by teaming
with guitarist Herman Arnspiger as a two-man "fiddle band", playing
breakdowns and waltzes in the late 20's for house parties and other social
get-togethers. The two hailed from the counties in the Texas Panhandle which
thrived on cotton rather than cattle for economic survival. Wills was from a
musical family; his father, both grandfathers, nine uncles, and five aunts
all played the fiddle and young Wills, along with his three brothers, was
encouraged to follow in the footsteps of his ancestors and take up the
fiddle. ....Frontier fiddling in Texas was similar to its Eastern
counterpart in the Appalachian region with its repertoire of breakdowns,
waltzes and occasional rags as many Texans had migrated from that and other
Eastern regions at the turn of the century. But by the late 1920's, here
were other influences that crept into young Bob Wills' ear and soon these
began to affect his repertoire.
The blacks that picked cotton in and around the Wills ranch would sing field
hollers, blues, and popular numbers during their labors and Wills' already
keen sense of rhythm was drawn to this music which was so different from the
relatively stolid, straightforward strains of Bob's ancestors. By the late
20's, Bob Wills' breakdowns were becoming more and more danceable and
partner Arnspiger began emphasizing the off-beat in his rhythm
accompaniment; the two and the four of the four-four fox trot beat that was
the rage of the Roaring 20's. Western Swing reached its key developmental
stage when the two musicians were joined by vocalist Milton Brown. An
erstwhile cigar salesman, Brown was a fan of popular jazz and blues
recording artists and was an avid record listener with a remarkable ear.
(Brown band member Ocie Stockard remembered that Brown could listen to a
jazz record no more than twice before being able to memorize the jazz licks
and take-offs played in it.) After singing W. C. Handy's "ST. LOUIS BLUES"
with Wills at a medicine show, Milton Brown was welcomed in as the third
member of the band. ....
After several band name changes, the three were joined by Milton Brown's
younger brother Durwood, whose rhythm guitar joined Arnspiger's in
furthering the insistent beat. This band found a sponsor in the Burrus Mill
and Elevator Company in Fort Worth and in 1931 became the Light Crust
Doughboys. ....It was at this point that the development of Western Swing
became an epidemic that spread like wildfire throughout the Southwest. Bands
sprung up instantaneously which purported to exploit, imitate and refine the
Doughboys' sound. Record companies caught wind of the popular new sound and,
searching wildly for a way out of the Depression sales doldrums, snatched up
Western Swing bands by the armful to release records on their new, cheaper
subsidiary labels aimed at the rural market. By the end of the decade, some
75 bands had recorded for the three major labels, a repertoire on disc of
some 2000 sides. ....
Milton Brown split off from the "Light Crust Doughboys" in 1932, creating
"Milton Brown & His Musical Brownies" with Bob Wills forming his own band,
"Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys" a year later. The innovations created by
Brown while no longer under the iron fist of Burrus Mill mogul W. Lee
O'Daniel were the most important and influential additions to any band in
the 1930's. The first and some say the best swing fiddler to play with a
Western band was Cecil Brower. Classically trained in Fort Worth, Brower was
taught the art of breakdown fiddling by Milton Brown's banjoist, Ocie
Stockard. Brower soon consolidated the two styles and developed a freely
swinging, Joe Venuit-inspired style which became the cornerstone of fiddlers
in Western Swing bands. Durwood Brown was the rhythm guitarist, but thanks
to the influence of black ragtime guitarists of Dallas and Fort Worth, began
to take lightning fast solos on the guitar. The bass man was Wanna Coffman,
who, to make up for Durwood's abandoning the rhythm for take-offs was forced
to reinforce the rhythm by slapping the bass fiddle a la New Orleans and
Chicago jazz musicians. ....
The next three additons to Milton Brown's band were vital. The first came in
late 1933 when pianist Fred Calhoun joined the Brownies. Calhoun had no
hillbilly background whatsoever in his playing, he was the first strictly
jazz musician to join a Western Swing band. Calhoun was a fan of Earl "Fatha"
Hines who was then broadcasting his network program out of Chicago. Calhoun
was nicknamed "Papa" due to his affinity for the great jazz pianist and
bandleader. Calhoun soon became a favorite of dancers at Milton Brown's
showplace at Crystal Springs, just outside of downtown Fort Worth. .... In
late 1934 Milton Brown added another who was to change not only the sound of
Western Swing, but the sound of Country and Western Music for years to come.
Bob Dunn brought amplification to Western Swing through the homemade pick-up
attached to his steel guitar. Dunn's electrifying wailings on the steel
reflected his experience as a trombone player and the inclusion of this
novelty item (for 1934!) revolutionized Western Swing and introduced the
steel guitar to the Country Music World in an entirely new light. ....
The final addition to Milton Brown's band was a second fiddler, a kid Milton
Brown had heard about who was playing with traveling medicine shows in the
Houston area. Soon, 19-year old Cliff Bruner was on his way to Fort Worth to
be a Musical Brownie. Bruner brought an uninhibited jazz/blues style to the
Brownies that was never equalled. He never did like breakdowns and spent
years learning jazz tunes and perfecting take-offs with his friend,
mandolinist Leo Raley in medicine shows such as Doctor Scott's. ....
The Milton Brown band, with its collection of standout solo performers, each
capable of taking superb, jazz-oriented solos, combined with Milton Brown's
slick, suave charisma and crooning ability became the band of the Southwest.
By comparison, Bob Wills as late as 1935 was still struggling to form a
similar outfit, collecting and discarding musicians, and finally being
driven out of Texas by W. Lee O'Daniel before settling in at KVOO in Tulsa.
But by leaving Texas, Wills abandoned it to Milton Brown. When O'Daniel left
the Burrus Mills in 1935, his "Light Crust Doughboys" were revamped through
raids on the "Texas Wanderers Band" out of WRR Dallas and Fort Worth's
"Southern Melody Boys".
Each band that popped up in that crucial year of 1935 emulated the Musical
Brownies by adding a Bob Dunn-influenced steel guitar, a Fred
Calhoun-influenced piano, a Wanna Coffman-influenced bass, an Ocie Stockard-influenced
banjo, a twin-fiddle lead a la the Bruner/ Brower combination, and a
crooning Crosby/Teagarden influenced vocalist, a la Milton Brown. Although
Milton Brown was killed in a tragic automobile accident in April 1936, which
splintered his band, the die had been cast. Bob Wills took over as the
guiding force behind Western Swing and with his personnel now relatively
stable, easily took over as the model for Western Swing bands.
(excerpts from "The Devils Box" Spring 1984 article by Cary Ginell)
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