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Bert Lown

Musical artist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bert Lown
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Bert Lown (born Albert Charles Lown;[1] 6 June 1903 – 20 November 1962) was an American violinist, orchestra leader, and songwriter.

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Career

Lown was born in White Plains, New York. He began as a sideman playing the violin in Fred Hamm's band, and in the 1920s and 1930s he led a series of jazz-oriented dance bands (the most famous being the Biltmore Hotel Orchestra), making a large number of recordings in that period for Victor Records. In 1925 (or 1930), (with Hamm, Dave Bennett, and Chauncey Gray) he composed the well-known standard "Bye Bye Blues." He also wrote some other songs, including "You're The One I Care For" and "Tired." By the mid-1930s he quit leading the orchestras, becoming a booking agent and manager; eventually he left the music industry and moved on to executive positions in the television industry. He died of a heart attack in 1962 in Portland, Oregon.

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Collaborators

The song writing, Lown's collaborators included Moe Jaffe, Jack O'Brien (pianist with Ted Weems in the 1930s), and Fred Hamm.

Recording history

Selected compositions

  • "Bye Bye Blues"
  • "You're the One I Care For"
  • "By My Side"
  • "Tired"
  • "I'm Disappointed in You"
  • "My Heart and I"
  • "Today and Tomorrow"
  • "Let Me Fill Your Day With Music"
  • "Thumbs Up,"[2] theme song in 1941 of the British War Relief Society[3]

Pseudonym

Bert Lown sometimes used the pseudonym "Bert Lee."[2]

References

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