Billy May: Article 1
Billy May: Article 2

Billy May (1916–2004)

Billy May, born Edward William May Jr in Pittsburgh, was a trumpeter and arranger, initially for the bands of saxophonist Charlie Barnet (1938–40) and trombonist Glenn Miller (1940–2). His arrangement of Ray Noble’s tune ‘Cherokee’ became a major hit for Barnet and was adopted as his band’s signature tune. Work with Barnet, Miller and others gave him the opportunity to hone his arranging skills and be heard on recordings, but with Miller he was more prominent as a trumpeter, with only some of his arrangements being used.

From 1947 he concentrated on arranging and conducting for Capitol studio orchestras in Los Angeles. In the 1950s, and intermittently later, he recorded with his own studio bands. He also wrote arrangements and conducted orchestras for recordings by top stars such as Frank Sinatra, Rosemary Clooney, Anita O’Day, Nat ‘King’ Cole, Peggy Lee, Jeri Southern, Nancy Wilson and Bing Crosby. His arranging credit is on numerous albums by these and other popular and jazz singers, and he also collaborated as an arranger on albums by pianist George Shearing and comedian Stan Freberg.

May claimed that he was interested in arrangement and orchestration from the time he played tuba in his high school band. Certainly, he became one of the most sought-after writers for large orchestras that accompanied American singing stars in the recording studios. His credit is on very many of the most memorable jazz vocal albums of the 1950s and later.

Biography by Roger Cotterrell

 

Biography

A biographical sketch of arranger Billy May.

 

 

Billy May: Article 3

Billy May: Article 2

Image Details

Interview date 1st January 0001
Interview source Jazz Professional
Image source credit
Image source URL
Reference number
Forename Billy
Surname May
Quantity 2

Interview Transcription

Billy May, who won a Grammy in 1958 for his album "Big Fat Brass," was noted for his superb brass and swooping saxophone scores, but his command of styles extended from swing, through Dixieland to Latin American.

He also had a brilliant sense of humor, heard at its best in his "Sorta May" and "Sorta Dixie" LPs, the titles poking light fun at the newly-released Sauter-Finnegan recordings.

The humour emerged once more when he collaborated with the satirist Stan Freberg on Freberg's Grammy-winning 1961 comedy album "The History of the United States, Vol. 1," and 1996's Grammy-nominated "History of the United States, Vol. 2."

Born in Pittsburgh in 1916, May played in several local bands before getting his break in 1938 when he joined Charlie Barnet's orchestra as an arranger and trumpeter. Among his contributions was arranging the Ray Noble song "Cherokee," which became Barnet's signature tune and one of the biggest hits of the swing era. He was soon contributing arrangements characterized by what some critics described as "wailing saxophones voiced in thirds."

During the 1940s, he scored for Alvino Rey, Les Brown and Woody Herman. Later, in the 1950s he worked on Sinatra's acclaimed "Come Fly With Me" album. He also led his own band, worked with, and wrote for Peggy Lee, Nat "King" Cole, and others in radio and television.

In 1939, May joined the Glenn Miller band, where his arrangements included "Take the 'A' Train" and "Serenade in Blue." With Miller, he was perhaps best-known for his trumpet playing, notably on "I dreamt I dwelt in Harlem" in 1941 and "American Patrol" in 1942.

During the 1940s, May also wrote arrangements for the Les Brown, Woody Herman and Alvino Rey orchestras and worked in studios and for NBC.

During the 1950s, he led his own band, which scored successes with his arrangements of "All of Me," "Lulu's Back in Town," "Charmaine," "When My Sugar Walks Down the Street,"and his own compositions. "Lean Baby" and "Fat Man Boogie." 

During the 1950s and 1960s, he also worked for a number of artists, including Frank Sinatra as arranger-conductor on the singer's famous "Come Fly With Me" album in 1958. 

His television work included composing, with Milton Raskin, the theme song for "Naked City," the popular ABC police drama that aired from 1958 to 1963, and music for the Red Skelton and Ozzie and Harriet Nelson shows.

When Billy May was 80 he joined once more with Stan Freberg on his "History of the United States Vol. 2".