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James Langton

English born James Langton rose to prominence as the singer and leader of the internationally acclaimed Pasadena Roof Orchestra with whom he toured worldwide for seven years.

Since settling full-time in the USA, James has worked closely with renowned swing clarinetist Dan Levinson to create the New York All-Star Big Band, performing regularly in the Tri-State area and beyond. The band’s repertoire has grown out of the now massive library of arrangements James has collected over the years, many from the archives of the original bands. “… the music we play has actually been gathered together by me from American universities, from the original ‘books of the Big Bands’… You know, I’ve got copies of the actual original arrangements,” he told a journalist for ‘Blues and Soul Magazine’ last year. 2014 was a particularly busy year for James Langton. The New York All-Star Big Band, featuring clarinetist Dan Levinson and singer Molly Ryan, played the only sell-out date at Lincoln Center’s Midsummer Night Swing. James and the band were then invited to perform regularly at the beautiful Art Deco Rainbow Room, atop Rockefeller Center, in its first year re-opening after its fabulous renovation. James Langton also garnered much praise for his weekly radio show This Thing Called Swing and was the recipient of a coveted Audie Award for his contribution to the audiobook Astray for Hachette as well as making regular voice-over appearances on the David Letterman show. His success in radio has led to an invitation to make a weekly three-hour version of This Thing Called Swing for WFDU 89.1 radio to be broadcast on Tuesdays, 12 noon to 3pm. As part of his Master’s Degree studies, James also formed what would become his Solid Senders Orchestra in London, initially to recreate the band of clarinetist Artie Shaw from the original music manuscripts. The band became so popular with listeners and dancers alike that James expanded the repertoire to include Benny Goodman, Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Jimmy Lunceford and many of the great bands of the period. The Solid Senders continue to perform with James at concert halls such as The National Concert Hall, Dublin, Snape Maltings and the Royal Festival Hall, for international festivals and Swing Dance events and movie premieres. The band also recorded soundtracks for television and film, including the movie score of Me and Orson Welles (2008). James Langton earlier paid his musical dues playing with his trio at London’s famous Dorchester Hotel while studying Jazz at the Guildhall School of Music.

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Album Review

The Bix Centennial All-Stars: Celebrating Bix!

Read "Celebrating Bix!" reviewed by Nicholas F. Mondello


Cornetist Leon Bismark “Bix" Beiderbecke, while certainly heavily influenced by Louis Armstrong, developed his own highly stylized way of playing and improvising jazz. One wonders what musical highlights might have been accomplished had he lived beyond his 28 years. Celebrating Bix!, originally released in 2003 as a single CD album, adds selections which, due to size constraints, did not make the original release, but they all certainly “make it" here as a double CD and vinyl release. What ...

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Album Review

The Bix Centennial All Stars: Celebrating Bix!

Read "Celebrating Bix!" reviewed by Jack Bowers


Here's a new album by the Bix Centennial All Stars honoring the legacy of the renowned cornetist Bix Beiderbecke. Sort of. Actually, most of the music on Celebrating Bix! was recorded and released in March 2003, the actual centenary of Beiderbecke's birth in Davenport, Iowa. This expanded twentieth anniversary edition includes a trio of songs not released at that time owing to limited space, and has been reissued on two CDs instead of one. Having said that, ...

194
Album Review

The Bix Beiderbecke Centennial All-Stars: Celebrating Bix!

Read "Celebrating Bix!" reviewed by Jack Bowers


Cornetist Bix Beiderbecke, who considered himself a failure and died (primarily from alcohol abuse) in 1931 at age twenty-eight, would no doubt have been astonished to learn that a group of world- class musicians was assembling to record an album celebrating the hundredth anniversary of his birth. But if Bix was unable to recognize his own genius, others were--and now, seventy-two years onward, he rests comfortably in the pantheon raised to honor such legendary jazz pioneers as Louis Armstrong, King ...

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“James Langton: Internationally renowned as a re-creator of the Big Band Swing Sound” Blues and Soul Magazine

“I’ve been to dozens, if not hundreds of Benny Goodman tributes…This was the best. Ever. …Just amazingly great.” Will Friedwald, American author and music critic

"The ideal repertory band" Alyn Shipton, The Times, London.

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Recordings: As Leader | As Sideperson

Celebrating Bix!

Turtle Bay Records
2023

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