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WSWS : Arts
Review : Music
and Literature
Mel Torme, an appreciation
By John Andrews
10 June 1999
Use
this version to print
The last few years have not been good ones for the giants of
American song. First we lost the incomparable Ella Fitzgerald,
then Frank Sinatra and Joe Williams. Now Mel Torme, who died Saturday
from the lingering effects of the debilitating stroke which abruptly
ended his 65-year singing career in August 1996.
Of the same immigrant Russian-Jewish stock which contributed
so many exemplary figures to twentieth century American music
(George and Ira Gershwin, Irving Berlin, Benny Goodman, Stan Getz,
etc.), Torme was born in Chicago on September 13, 1925. A child
prodigy, he began singing publicly at the age of four, acting
by age nine, and playing drums by time he was a teenager. His
first published song, Lament to Love, was recorded
by Harry James when Torme was only 15. He would go on to publish
another 250 songs, mostly in collaboration with Bob Wells. Their
best known effort is, of course, The Christmas Song,
recorded by Nat King Cole in 1945, and a holiday classic ever
since. Torme frequently commented that the song took less than
an hour to write and was not one of his personal favorites.
Torme became quite well known during the World War II years
as the driving force behind the Mel-Tones, a vocal group specializing
in jazzy arrangements, usually backed by the swing band of Artie
Shaw. He went solo in 1947, recording a number of romantic hits,
including the number one Careless Love. His high pitched,
silky-smooth vocal style earned him the sobriquet Velvet
Fog, which he loathed.
During the 1950s, as the elegant musical traditions he represented
were displaced by rock and roll and his popularity with youth
waned, Torme gradually abandoned the commercial path and turned
more and more to jazz. His art reached its first creative peak
on a series of albums arranged by the excellent Marty Paich, one
of the leading figures in West Coast jazz of that period. By the
end of the decade he had become, perhaps, the greatest male singer
in the history of jazz.
Torme's style shared much with that of his idol, Ella Fitzgerald.
Both were firmly rooted in the foundation of the swing era, but
both seemed able to incorporate bebop innovations to keep their
performances sounding fresh and contemporary. Like Sinatra, they
sang with perfect diction and brought out the emotional content
of the lyrics through subtle alterations of phrasing and harmony.
Ballads were characterized by paraphrasing of the original melody
which always seemed tasteful, appropriate and respectful to the
vision of the songwriter. Unlike Sinatra, both Fitzgerald and
Torme were likely to cut loose during a swinging up-tempo number
with several scat choruses, using their voices without
words to improvise a solo like a brass or reed instrument.
The 1960s became increasingly unpleasant for straight-ahead
jazz performers. Their audiences dwindled while the audience for
much simpler rock music grew to staggering proportions. As a result,
Torme made some half-hearted attempts at commercial recordings
(with generally embarrassing results) and pursued other interests,
including acting and writing. He published The Other Side of
the Rainbow about his experience as a writer for the Judy
Garland Show during 1963-64, a novel Wynner, and later
an autobiography and a not entirely flattering biography of jazz
drummer and bandleader Buddy Rich.
The resurgence of interest in jazz which began in the 1970s
was of particular benefit to Torme. During the last 20 years of
his career he recorded frequently in a variety of tasteful settings,
including a very special series of dates with pianist George Shearing.
In addition to producing a steady stream of LPs and CDs, he performed
live up to 200 live dates annually, and appeared regularly on
television.
I was fortunate to have attended a Torme concert not particularly
long ago. Bing Crosby once said that he was the most fantastic
musical performer I think we've ever had, and I can certainly
understand where this opinion comes from. Age seemed not to have
diminished Torme's skills in the slightest, while time clearly
allowed them to grow and deepen. Torme spoke to the audience with
grace, humor and charmsomething Sinatra could never doand
moved through a fascinating variety of musical numbers, including
a quick stint on the drums, flawlessly. My companion and I left
both satisfied and anxious for more.
Our experience was typical. According to his longtime bass
player John Leitham, Torme's consistent level of performance was
astounding. There will be no tapes or videos portraying
him as a singer past his prime. He never sounded better than he
did at the last performance.
The passing of a talent like Mel Torme unavoidably causes one
to wonder whether any others of his immense talents are coming
of age today. Examining the popular music landscape suggest that
this might not be the case. The reason, I think, is that a society
which hails movies like Titanic and The Phantom Menace,
and equally mindless counterparts in popular music, as serious
works is not going to nurture or promote the aesthetic ideals
necessary to produce a Mel Torme.
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