Concert to honor Kenton’s memory
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Young Chang
NEWPORT BEACH -- Jim Thobe was here when life was more intimate, when
he could walk right up to Stan Kenton himself on the Rendezvous Ballroom
bandstand and ask him to play a song.
Thobe would get close enough to make out the pinstriped lines on the
late jazz legend’s double-breasted, one-button roll suit.
He’d talk to him afterward -- giggle with him too.
Thobe was favored in part because Kenton’s baritone sax player married
his best friend’s sister.
“It was the experience of a lifetime, you’d never forget it,” the
75-year-old Crystal Cove resident said. “I can still see the room going
up and down and all the young, suntanned faces.”
Exactly 60 years since Kenton first performed at the Rendezvous
Ballroom on the Balboa Peninsula, the Los Angeles Jazz Institute will
hold a celebration of the musician’s local legacy tonight with the Balboa
Bandwagon 2001 at the Balboa Pavilion.
“It was during the Rendezvous engagement that Stan composed and
arranged ‘Artistry and Rhythm,”’ said Howard Rumsey, an original 1941
band member and Newport Beach resident. “Which became his theme song and
forever identified him as the unique composer and band leader that he
really was.”
Ken Poston, director of the Los Angeles Jazz Institute, said this
history at the ballroom is what they’re celebrating.
“That summer at the Rendezvous was where they made it big time,”
Poston said.
Buddy Childers, Conte Candoli, Bill Perkins, Anita O’Day and other
alumni from different eras of the Stan Kenton Orchestra will perform as
an all-star band at tonight’s gala. Pete Rugolo, one of Kenton’s better
known arrangers, will direct the orchestra along with Rumsey.
Kenton and his 22-piece band, famed for such classics as “Malaguena,”
“Collaboration” and “Artistry in Rhythm,” played regularly at the
ballroom and radio-broadcasted their music around the country from that
stage.
Paul Ramsey, a Newport Beach resident and huge Kenton fan, remembers
hearing the broadcasts as a child from his Des Moines, Iowa, home. After
World War II, having served on the West Coast, he hitchhiked down to
Hollywood and then to Newport Beach just to hear Kenton play live.
His first date with his wife was at the Ballroom on a night when
Kenton played. Nat King Cole was there too.
“He had a very unique style,” Ramsey said of Kenton. “And with the
kids in those days, he was probably the most popular. He was an imposing
figure.”
Thobe said the ‘40s and ‘50s was a time of heightened emotions. When
Stan Kenton was loved, he was really, really loved. When people danced,
they did it intensely. When people heard Kenton live, it was a once in a
lifetime experience.
At the same time, Thobe’s high school newspaper featured a column on
the front page every other Friday headlined “Classmates Killed in
Action.” Every frivolous perk became a thrill, and life was more
appealing because of its potential end.
“You’d think, ‘Oh my gosh, I’m gonna be the next one,”’ Thobe said.
“Everything was magnified and moving fast . . . that was a wonderful
time.”
FYI
WHAT: Balboa Bandwagon 2001
WHEN: Dinner will start at 7:30 p.m., concert at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday
WHERE: Balboa Pavilion, 600 Main St., Newport Beach
COST: $125, dinner included
CALL: (909) 593-4180
BOX
CELEBRITIES GALORE
WHO’S PLAYED AT THE RENDEZVOUS BALLROOM?
Benny Goodman
Lionel Hampton
Woody Herman
Arty Shaw
Ozzie Nelson
The Dorsey Brothers
Harry James and his Music Makers
Nat King Cole
Johnny Mercer
Bob Hope, when he sang with Guy Lombardo
Jerry Colonna
Bob Crosby and his Bobcats
Billy Butterfield
Matty Matlock
Dick Dale
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