‘He was just one of the guys’
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Andrew Glazer
Gordon “Tex” Beneke, 86, who as a sideman in the Glen Miller Orchestra
blew one of the most famous saxophone solos in popular music history,
died Tuesday of respiratory arrest in a Costa Mesa nursing home.
The Texas native will be long remembered for his sax playing, which
textured Miller’s iconic “In the Mood.” His robust singing voice
propelled the record “Chattanooga Choo-choo” to sell more than one
million copies, gilding the first certifiable Gold Record.
“Even though he was famous, he was still a good ol’ Texas boy,” said
Frank Amoss, president of the Orange County chapter of the Musicians
Union, who played drums for Beneke in the 1960s. “I used to run into him
at Norm’s on Harbor Boulevard. That was the kind of place he preferred.
He wouldn’t be seen down at the Ritz.”
Beneke was never one to show off his star status, Amoss said, despite the
musician’s dream of a life he lived.
After high school, Beneke toured with the Ben Young Orchestra. In 1938,
drummer Gene Krupa discovered him in Detroit and urged him to go to New
York City and audition for Glen Miller’s new band, which would become the
biggest of all Big Bands. He got the gig.
While driving with Miller a few years later, he began singing “Ida, Sweet
as Apple Cider.” Miller liked what he heard and made his saxophonist a
singer, backed by the Modernaires.
While Beneke was never entirely comfortable singing or leading a band,
his charisma, handsome rustic appearance and virtuosic singing and horn
blowing pushed him into the forefront.
When Miller disappeared over the English Channel in 1944, Beneke
continued leading the band and eventually formed his own.
“I always tried to promote him as a star,” said Chip Allen, who was
Beneke’s business manager for the last 14 years of his life. “But he
always said ‘no man, I’m just a sideman.’ ”
“His singing had a naive charm about it, the kind shared by the dance
music of the 1930s and 1940s,” said Michael Ullman, a jazz critic based
in the Boston area who teaches jazz history at Tufts University. But
Ullman said Beneke wasn’t entirely suited to be a romantic lead singer, a
la Frank Sinatra.
“It was against all odds that this goofy guy became a romantic figure. He
was the kind of guy who a pretty girl would feel warm feelings for, but
as a big brother or as a protector.”
Beneke’s tenor sax style, which Ullman described as a “polite form of
Coleman Hawkins,” remained with him until his health failed 10 years ago,
ending his horn career.
While Hawkins experimented with bebop in the 1950s, Beneke continued
playing Big Band music and lost some of his celebrity status.
But Beneke kept blowing through the decades, backed by his band, until a
stroke and Parkinson’s disease stopped him from playing five years ago.
However, he continued singing with his band at local benefits and
concerts across the country. His last performance was with the Cleveland
Jazz Orchestra in November.
“He was just one of the guys,” Amoss said. “A pleasure to play with. A
pleasure to know.”
Beneke is survived by his wife, Sandi, who lives in Santa Ana. A memorial
service will be held at 1 p.m. June 10 at the Musician’s Union, 2050 S.
Main St., in Santa Ana.
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