JOSEPH N. BELL -- The Bell Curve
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Although Peter Buffa has already dealt warmly with Tex Beneke in the
Pilot last week, I can’t allow his recent passing to go unnoticed here.
He not only symbolized an entire, wonderful prewar period of my life, but
I was also privileged to know him a little and talk with him at some
length during the years he lived among us in Costa Mesa. So I have to
offer up a send-off of my own in this space.
The numbers are fast dwindling of those of us who saw Tex work in the
Glenn Miller days and remember what a presence he was on the bandstand.
That’s when the Big Bands played one-nighters in venues as disparate as
the Glen Island Casino and the ramshackle dance hall at Shriner Lake in
northern Indiana where I last saw Tex with Miller in 1941.
I may sometimes forget my children’s names, but I remember Tex Beneke in
that Shriner Lake dance hall in vivid detail. The stainless steel music
stands said “GM” with the letters intercut, and there was a derby hat
perched on each stand. The 15 musicians were bunched together tightly on
a raised platform flanked at stage left by a half-dozen straight chairs
for the singers when they weren’t performing.
Dancing was difficult because the dancers were massed around the
bandstand, holding one another and swaying in tightly packed unison to
the music, but mostly listening.
The leader was a slim, owlish, unsmiling man holding a trombone like a
sceptre. And at extreme stage right was a tenor sax player with a face as
open as the Texas prairie where he was raised and a voice like gravel
being sluiced in a stream.
When the singers came stage center, he’d usually join them, and at least
once a night he would sing “Chattanooga Choo Choo” and “Kalamazoo.” His
named was Gordon, but his boss called him “Tex” and it stuck. For a
lifetime.
Tex Beneke was a Navy aircraft maintenance chief petty officer on leave
in New York when the news came of Miller’s disappearance in an Air Force
plane over the English Channel. Miller had urged his musicians to hang
tight until he could reform the band after the war. So in accord with her
husband’s wishes, Miller’s wife asked Tex to take over the band, billed
as the Glenn Miller Band directed by Tex Beneke.
That honeymoon lasted for six years -- until Tex, restless with the
addition of strings to a swing band and wanting to move out from under
the Miller umbrella, changed the name to the Tex Beneke Band.
Instantly, Tex told me when I last visited him at his home in 1986 (I
kept the notes of that day), the Miller estate sent plainclothes officers
backstage to impound all the music and other Miller material, thus
creating a rift between Tex and Helen Miller that had still not healed
when she died two decades later.
“That’s why I never appeared in ‘The Glenn Miller Story,’ the movie in
which James Stewart played Glenn,” Tex explained.
Tex remembered Miller respectfully but not warmly. “He was smart -- very
smart. In the beginning, he did all his own arrangements and he just kept
updating all the time until he got the full sound he wanted. But with his
musicians, he could be tough and often cold. If Glenn heard somebody he
thought was better than one of his own musicians, he’d just give the boy
two weeks’ notice. It was as simple as that.”
When Tex’s wife died in 1978, he wanted out of the rugged Midwestern
weather and moved to Costa Mesa where his mother was then living. He
bought a house in the country club district where he lived for more than
two decades in near anonymity.
He had recently remarried when I last talked with him, and his new wife,
Sandra, told me: “He’s been around crowds all his life, and when he isn’t
working, he likes peace and solitude.”
He was 72 then, still playing a half-dozen gigs a month and indulging
some living habits left over from his Big Band days -- like smoking and
no exercise -- that would do in most of us. Except for a belly visible in
a sports shirt, he looked an astonishing lot like he did that night at
Shriner Lake.
He was surrounded in his home by a prodigious supply of memorabilia,
ranging from an old Philco console radio that belonged to his parents to
dozens of photos of Tex with big-name entertainers of his day and stacks
of priceless audio tapes.
He talked easily and comfortably about the past, but he didn’t live
there. He lived in his music. “I can get on that bandstand with a
bellyache,” he said, “but once I find my audience is with me, it picks me
right up.”
Tex adjusted to the demise of the two main sources of Big Band bookings,
Vaudeville houses and ballrooms, by concentrating on concerts and private
dances, where his name was always a drawing card that offered a kind of
immortality to folks of my generation.
Tex told me 14 years ago: “We will never see another era like the ‘30s
and ‘40s. The young kids made the Big Bands, and for a few years, it was
the greatest thing that ever happened to all of us.
“When I play dances these days, so many couples -- sometimes with tears
in their eyes -- tell me the greatest stories about how they got engaged
after a Miller dance or how this music was the last thing they shared
before he went off to war.
“The kids who are discovering Big Band music today are a very different
breed. But at least they’re finding out that their grandparents aren’t
quite the squares the kids thought they were.”
So if you hear a tenor sax instead of a horn blowing you into Nirvana one
day, don’t be alarmed. It’s just Tex sitting in for Gabriel.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column appears
Thursdays.
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