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Big Band’s Top Tunes and Names

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Joe Graydon doesn’t think he’s being nostalgic when he hums Glenn Miller’s “In the Mood,” gives a soft rendition of “Slow Boat to China” or whistles some other hit tune from the big-band era of the 1930s and 1940s.

As far as Graydon is concerned, he’s very much in the present.

“To me, it’s like big band never left. It’s very current to me,” said the Glendale resident and concert producer. “I feel like I know every note of every arrangement that was a hit in those days.”

Other fans of big band can be thankful Graydon doesn’t keep those notes to himself. Since 1978, Graydon has been producing big-band concerts, with many of the original players, for Columbia Artists Management Inc., the New York-based concert-touring agency.

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His latest is the Battle of the Big Bands--Round 2, a sequel to a 1995 concert tour, featuring the Big Band Alumni Orchestra and a selection of other musicians who are still keeping busy 50 years after the music’s heyday.

The Battle of the Big Bands-Round 2 kicked off a 53-concert tour Friday in Thousand Oaks and stops tonight at the Cerritos Center for the Performing Arts.

The show, in reality, is not a battle of bands, but rather one band assuming the identities of some of the most-loved big bands ever. It will also make stops in Escondido, Glendale and several other California spots before heading off to Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Florida and up the East Coast.

“You can expect the very biggest hits,” said Graydon, who was a big-band vocalist himself, a regular on “The Lucky Strike Hit Parade” radio show. “People who go to a big-band concert and haven’t heard Glenn Miller’s version of ‘In the Mood’ by the time they leave, go away ticked.”

The alumni band, made up of 13 veteran big-band musicians of an average age of about 65 will play the music made popular by the bands of Glenn Miller, Jimmy Dorsey, Kay Kyser and Gene Krupa.

Former big-band players will conduct the ensemble in different portions of the show. Rex Allen, a featured trombonist for the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra, will conduct the band through its Glenn Miller repertoire.

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Harry Babbitt, a former lead singer with the Kay Kyser band, will lead the Kyser section. Drummer Irv Kluger, who worked with Nat King Cole, Ella Fitzgerald and other legends will head the Krupa section.

And conductor and composer Frank DeVol will narrate the Jimmy Dorsey portion of the show. DeVol was married to singer Helen O’Connell, who appeared with the Dorsey band.

Big-band singers Beryl Davis and Bob Grabeau will provide the vocals throughout the evening.

“There is a wonderful renaissance happening with the big-band business, all over the country, all over the world,” said singer Beryl Davis, who likes to keep her age a mystery. “The audience is so responsive. It’s like giving somebody walking through the desert a glass of water. They are so grateful for us being there.”

The musicians seem to be equally appreciative of the opportunity.

“I love to do the shows. All the musicians do,” said Babbitt, of Newport Beach. “There’s something inside me that makes me want walk on stage with that feeling of a being a younger performer, like I did when I was 25 or 30 years old.”

Babbitt, 79, has been working with Graydon on and off for about 12 years. When he’s not on some nostalgia tour, he often is the headline act at fund-raisers for Newport Beach’s Hoag Hospital, his pet charitable organization, or performing for senior groups in the area.

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Many of the folks in his regular audiences remember Babbitt as lead singer for the Kay Kyser Band from 1938 to 1944. He provided the vocals for “Slow Boat to China,” “I’ve Got Spurs That Jingle, Jangle, Jingle” and “Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition.”

Babbitt said Miller, Dorsey, Kyser and Krupa each have their own supporters, but it is the combination of the music of the four that really attracts the crowds.

“I don’t think any one of these bands could do the job of selling out alone, but when you put four of them together, you get the people,” he said. “There is an emotional feeling for the people who listen to the music of that period. It is part of somebody’s life that has slipped by, and now they are trying to get it back.”

* The Battle of the Big Bands--Round 2 appears tonight at the Cerritos Center for the Performing Arts, 12700 Center Court Drive. 8 p.m. $30-$45. (310) 916-8500.

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