
Opus Number One
Opus Number One
Tommy Dorsey and Sy Oliver Favorites
Played by Francis Bay and His Orchestra
Cover Design: Mike Johnson
Cover Photo: George Jerman / Photography 2
Omega Records OSL-16
Tommy Dorsey and Sy Oliver Favorites
Played by Francis Bay and His Orchestra
Cover Design: Mike Johnson
Cover Photo: George Jerman / Photography 2
Omega Records OSL-16
From the back cover: FRANCIS BAY has been quietly perfecting his orchestra for more than five years. They play every week on programs of the Brussels Radio and during the past year they have burst forth throughout Europe as THE most talked about orchestra. Any jukebox in Belgium, France, or England is likely to include two or three records by the Bay Orchestra. His recording of "Eso Es El Amor" is the biggest hit of many latin-styled best sellers during the past few years. The Bay Orchestra recently won the highly coveted "Golden Gondol" trophy in a battle of the bands from all over the world held in Venice. The precision section work and fluid jazz improvisation of the soloists are a product of years of rehearsal and development shared by the same group of musicians with very few replacements in the ranks of the musicians. The result is an orchestra in which the musical rapport between musicians is amazing. All of the members of the Bay Orchestra have invested the greatest care in making a danceable, jazz-flavored, fresh group of recordings, but the driving force that makes the Bay Orchestra function as a musical unit is Francis Bay himself. He already has large following of fans in Europe who know him affectionately as "Francis." Recently his fame has spread to Japan, Mexico, and Canada as well as the United States. People everywhere who have come to appreciate good music are enthusiastic in their praise of Francis Bay because of his most distinctive contribution to popular music... perfection.
Also from the back cover: The shock of Tommy Dorsey's death in November, 1957, is just beginning to wear off and only now are we beginning to look back at his work to measure his achievement. Examining the various Dorsey bands over a 20-year period as it jumped in and out of the public spotlight, gives us a proper perspective of TD for the first time, and only with a backward glance can we begin to understand what his music meant to us.
After threading back through the years in your mind's ear, through the hundreds and hundreds of Dorsey recordings, one vital thing presents itself... and that is that TD's band has an enduring quality.
For some music lovers who may be more jazz-oriented, the early Tommy Dorsey recordings might seem most memorable. Primarily, the early sides were two-beat with a distinct Dixie flavor. They hark back to Tommy's beginnings as a Chicago jazzman and are mindful of Max Kaminsky and Miff Mole and other greats of that era. But in the main, most of us think of TD as the band of the early 40's... the band that had left its Dixieland heritage behind and became a sleek, swinging band in the Jimmie Lunceford tradition. That was the band of the powerhouse jazz, of the screeching brass and driving rhythm. It was the band that played "swing"...a kind of musical corollary to jazz that was good to dance to and good to listen to.
It is this part of the Dorsey band library that Omega has selected to record in thrilling stereo as a musical tribute to TD's memory. Recorded by the Bay Big Band at the Brussels World's Fair as an international salute to American music, the group has captured all of the full-throated, wonderfully rhythmic, musical distinction of the Dorsey band sound. Originally, when these sides were made by Tommy Dorsey, they were recorded when the dance orchestra was looked upon as an organization that reflected top musicianship... a group capable of great flexibility, from playing excellent jazz to swinging a ballad. As they are recorded today, something more is added by the Bay Big Band. These arrangements take on a new flavor with more contemporary solo techniques and advanced ideas about harmony. The pep and vigor of the Dorsey band is still there, but it is brought up to date by providing a free range for the soloists and blendings of brass that ring more modern than the actual ensemble sound of 15 or 20 years ago.
Opus Number One
Daybreak
Love For Sale
This Love Of Mine
Hawaiian War-Chant
No So Quiet Please
There Are Such Things
Well Git It
I'll Never Smile Again
Yes Indeed
Opus Number One
Daybreak
Love For Sale
This Love Of Mine
Hawaiian War-Chant
No So Quiet Please
There Are Such Things
Well Git It
I'll Never Smile Again
Yes Indeed





















