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Benny Goodman, The Great Innovator—This week on Riverwalk Jazz

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To celebrate Benny Goodman's innovative style, Riverwalk Jazz has assembled performances and stories from our stable of jazz greats drawn into his orbit—Lionel Hampton, Doc Cheatham, Helen Ward—and our own Ron Hockett and Jim Cullum Jr.. In 22 years of Riverwalk Jazz radio broadcasts, we've welcomed several artists closely associated with Goodman—or deeply influenced by his music—to The Landing in San Antonio.

The weekly hour-long public radio show is distributed in the US by Public Radio International, Sirius/XM satellite, and can be streamed starting today from the Rivewalk Jazz website.

One of the finest female vocalists of the era, Helen Ward joined Benny Goodman's Let's Dance radio program in 1934 and quickly became one of its star attractions. Ward stayed with Benny through his meteoric rise to fame a couple years later. Her voice came across well on radio, and she was a heartthrob for the thousands of college boys who followed the band.

Late in her life, Helen Ward (pictured here with Goodman) spoke with us about Goodman with great warmth: “Everyone who has worked with him...said that he was very difficult to get along with but Benny was a perfectionist, and I will stand up for him as long as I live that he was the fairest and most down-to-earth real kind of guy...I can recall so many things that nobody knows about, how many people Benny has helped financially, and Benny did it very quietly and I want that known, he was very generous that way."

Doc Cheatham (1905-1997) had a whole history of jazz under his belt—working with, among others, Gertrude 'Ma' Rainey, Cab Calloway and Teddy Wilson—before he signed on to play in Benny Goodman's Orchestra in the 1960s. Talking with us at The Landing, Doc recalls Goodman's legendary perfectionism on the bandstand and his tendency to fire sidemen for perceived performance flaws. “He was like that—he wasn't a tough guy, he was a genius. His problem was he would hire sidemen like me, and we weren't geniuses."

Goodman was in Los Angeles performing at the Palomar Ballroom with his Orchestra in 1936 when his friend,the producer and concert promoter John Hammond, took him to see a young vibes player at a local club. They jammed together. The next day the Benny Goodman Quartet became official when Lionel Hampton joined pianist Teddy Wilson and drummer Gene Krupa on a recording session that produced “Moon Glow" and “Dinah."

Lionel commented on Goodman's style as a bandleader: “You had to be very punctual when you played with Benny. You had to have your shoes shined and your suit pressed and come in with the brightness to play the best performance you could on your instrument. And I like that. That's the kind of band I try to have every day."

Jim Cullum Jazz Band reedman Ron Hockett explains Benny's career-long fondness for recording with small groups. “Benny really experienced the joy of making jazz in an intimate setting with his trio. I think he enjoyed that more than playing with the big band."

Clarinetist Allan Vaché was withThe Jim Cullum Jazz Band from 1975-1992 and recalled this story, told to him by his brother, cornetist Warren Vaché—who toured with Goodman in the 1970s. ..."when Benny would rehearse in the back room, he'd sit back and pull out several reeds, and try each reed, one at a time. He'd put the reed on and hit a single tone and Warren told me it was the most pure tone he'd ever heard in his life. He said to Benny, 'How in the world do you do that?' Goodman said, 'Well you have to hear the sound in your head before you place it on the instrument.'"

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