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piano to trumpet and worked with local bands. He attended Texas
Christian University in Fort Worth from 1932 to 1936 (playing for all four years in the school jazz band) and joined the Ben Pollack Orchestra in 1937 when it was touring Texas. He moved to California with the band and in the spring of 1939 joined the Glenn Miller Orchestra. With Miller Hurley was recorded playing perhaps the orchestra's most famous solo, the one for trumpet on Miller's "In the Mood." Hurley also took other fine solos, including appearances on Miller recordings of "Stardust," "Glen Island Special" (a tune written by Texan Eddie Durham), and "Rug Cutter's Swing," as well as on "One O'Clock Jump," recorded at Carnegie Hall in 1939. In 1940 Hurley left Miller to join the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra, and the next year he signed on with the Artie Shaw Orchestra. During the rest of the 1940s he worked in Hollywood. He worked in the NBC television studios in the 1950s and later freelanced for various television, film, record, and radio companies. He was seen in many films, including The Five Pennies (1959) and The Gene Krupa Story (1959). Hurley died in Fort Worth on August 14, 1963. He was survived by a wife and two sons.
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with territory bands and then was discovered by Ben
Pollack (who was traveling through Texas) in 1937. After a year with Pollack, Hurley settled in Los Angeles to become a studio musician. However, Glenn Miller signed him up in 1939 and, during his year with Miller, Hurley was a key soloist as can be heard on the bandleader's Carnegie Hall concert and his studio recordings. The trumpeter spent time in the big bands of Tommy Dorsey (1940-1941) and Artie Shaw (1941) and then freelanced in the studios, most notably for MGM (1944-1949) and NBC (1950-1955). Hurley also played in Dixieland groups in the '50s including Matty Matlock's Rampart Street Paraders and on a heated (and fortunately recorded) live set from the Club Hangover in 1954 with Ralph Sutton and Edmond Hall. Clyde Hurley, a fine trumpeter with a fat tone and a hard-driving style, led two recording dates resulting in four numbers for Keynote in 1946 and five for Crown in 1950.
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38619 Tarrant County, Fort Worth, Texas, Clyde L. Hurley Jr., Male, September 3, 1916, Father: Clyde L. Hurley, Fort Worth, Texas, White, Age 20, Born: McKinney, Texas, Telegraph
Operator, Mother: Esther Brown, Fort Worth, Texas, White, Age 19, Gorman, Texas, Housewife, Born at 8:30pm in Fort Worth,
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Other Fort Worth musicians include ... tenor saxophonist and vocalist Tex Beneke ... and trumpeter Clyde Hurley (born
September 3, 1916). ... most famously on "In the Mood" in 1939 when Hurley, who had studied music at Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, performed the tune's memorable trumpet
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Name: Mr Clyde Lanham Hurley Junior; Birth Date: 3 Sep 1916; Birth Place: Fort Worth, Texas; Gender: Male; Race: White; Residence: Fort Worth, Tarrant, Texas; Father: Clyde L Hurley; Mother: Esther Brown; Age at Death: 46; Death Date: 14 Aug 1963; Death Place: Fort Worth, Tarrant, Texas, USA; Cause
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On April 20, 1940, Hurley was listed in the census as living with his then wife, Katherine Ann Foster (b. June 7, 1917, d. September 3, 1994) at 4114 Prescott Ave., Dallas, Texas, the house of his in-laws. Hurley had two sons: Clyde Lanham Hurley III (b. 1937, d. 2022); and
Lawrence Foster Hurley
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Although his name is now quite obscure, Clyde Hurley took a trumpet solo that has been heard dozens of times by the average
American; the familiar chorus on Glenn Miller's "In the Mood." Hurley originally taught himself to play by soloing along with Louis Armstrong records. He started out working
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Jazz trumpeter Clyde Lanham Hurley, Jr., was born in Fort Worth on
September 3, 1916. He was the son of Clyde L. and Esther B. (Temple) Hurley. He first studied music with his mother, who was a professional pianist and vocalist. Influenced by early Louis Armstrong recordings, Hurley switched from
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After gaining experience working locally, Hurley was heard by bandleader Ben
Pollack when the drummer was passing through Texas. Hurley joined Pollack in 1938 (taking a solo on his record "So Unexpectedly"). However, he left the band when it toured Los Angeles the following year so that he could
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records. His talent was encouraged and nurtured by his mother, Esther Brown Hurley, who had a career in the early days of Texas radio traveling by train from Fort Worth to stations in San
Antonio and Houston where she sang and played piano live. He studied music at the
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was touring through Texas he heard Hurley and invited him to join his orchestra where Hurley soloed on "So
Unexpectedly". After a year with Pollack, while on tour in Los Angeles, Hurley left to become a studio musician. Hurley was playing with
614:, 1940; Dallas, Dallas, Texas; roll T627_4172, page 20B, line 79, enumeration district 255-22, Family History film 005458086, National Archives film number T627. Retrieved on April 25, 2015.
456:, 1920; Fort Worth Ward 11, Tarrant, Texas; roll T625_1849, page 5A, line 2, enumeration district 144, Family History film 757, National Archives film number 757. Retrieved on 2015-02-15.
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240:", "Slip Horn Jive" and "Tuxedo Junction." After a difference of opinion with Miller over the style of music the band was playing, Hurley left Miller in May 1940 to work with
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During the time he was with Miller, Hurley was one of the key soloists. He appeared on the band's studio recordings and live performances throughout America, including
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in Fort Worth from 1932 to 1936 where he participated in the school's jazz band. He began his career working with territory bands. In 1937, while drummer/band-leader
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402:(Report). Fort Worth, Tarrant, Texas: Texas State Board of Health, Bureau of Vital Statistics. September 3, 1916. p. 186 of 648
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After his stint with Shaw, he did freelance work for the movie studios. In 1941, he played the trumpet track for the classic
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sent for him to join the Miller band on its Glen Island Casino opening in May 1939, the year following fellow Fort Worthian
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become a studio musician, one of many notable Pollack "discoveries" that eventually deserted him for more lucrative work...
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369:(Report). Fort Worth, Tarrant, Texas: Texas Department of State Health Services. August 14, 1963
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describes Hurley as "a fine trumpeter with a fat tone and a hard-driving style". He died of a
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Advertisement for Selmer instruments. New York, 25th, Sep - 20th, November, 1939.
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at the Club Hangover. His studio work in the 1950s included sessions with
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Moonlight Serenade: a bio-discography of the Glenn Miller Civilian Band
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Calendar editor: Ron Hearn. 1979–2005. Last Updated August 20, 2005.
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The Trumpet Kings: The Players who Shaped the Sound of Jazz Trumpet
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Self-taught, he learned to play the trumpet by playing along with
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Pop Chronicles the 40s: The Lively Story of Pop Music in the 40s
429:. Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association
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cartoon "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy of Company B." He worked for
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joining Miller's band. Beneke recommended Hurley to Miller.
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from 1950 to 1955. During the late 1950s, Hurley played in
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179:in Fort Worth leaving two sons and a former wife.
333:The Swing Era: The Development of Jazz, 1930–1945
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477:. AllMusic, a division of All Media Network, LLC
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159:(September 3, 1916 – August 14, 1963) was a
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171:to Clyde Lanham Hurley and Esther Brown.
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506:Jazz Mavericks of the Lone Star State
335:. New York: Oxford University Press.
305:. New Rochelle, NY: Arlington House.
687:20th-century American male musicians
652:RPM Records (United States) artists
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662:Texas Christian University alumni
475:"Artist Biography by Scott Yanow"
657:Musicians from Fort Worth, Texas
677:20th-century American musicians
425:Dave Oliphant (June 15, 2010).
320:. New York: Da Capo paperback.
692:Glenn Miller Orchestra members
625:Born On This Day - September 3
318:Glenn Miller and His Orchestra
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509:. University of Texas Press.
397:Standard Certificate of Birth
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316:Simon, George Thomas (1980).
380:of death: Coronary occlusion
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546:. Hal Leonard Corporation.
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427:"Hurley, Clyde Lanham, Jr"
331:Schuller, Gunther (1991).
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157:Clyde Lanham Hurley, Jr.
682:20th-century trumpeters
267:groups, recording with
38:Background information
301:Flower, John (1972).
612:United States census
503:(December 3, 2009).
454:United States census
364:Certificate of Death
167:era. He was born in
642:American trumpeters
226:Hotel Pennsylvania
177:coronary occlusion
587:978-1-55935-147-8
230:Paramount Theatre
169:Fort Worth, Texas
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373:February 16,
371:. Retrieved
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273:Ralph Sutton
253:Walter Lantz
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242:Tommy Dorsey
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207:Glenn Miller
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142:Tommy Dorsey
125:c. 1937–1955
121:Years active
70:(1963-08-14)
20:Clyde Hurley
672:1963 deaths
667:1916 births
538:Scott Yanow
471:Scott Yanow
400:(Microfilm)
367:(Microfilm)
292:(b. 1941).
281:Paul Weston
277:Edmond Hall
238:In The Mood
198:Ben Pollack
173:Scott Yanow
163:during the
134:Ben Pollack
130:Formerly of
636:Categories
348:References
246:Artie Shaw
222:Cafe Rouge
211:Tex Beneke
146:Artie Shaw
110:Instrument
102:Occupation
49:1916-09-03
265:Dixieland
248:in 1941.
234:John Best
161:trumpeter
596:31611854
574:(1994).
540:(2001).
228:and the
165:big band
105:Musician
88:big band
296:Sources
114:Trumpet
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413:Texas.
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287:Family
183:Career
84:Genres
78:, U.S.
59:, U.S.
522:solo.
205:when
96:swing
592:OCLC
582:ISBN
548:ISBN
511:ISBN
483:2015
435:2015
408:2015
375:2015
337:ISBN
322:ISBN
307:ISBN
275:and
92:jazz
65:Died
43:Born
261:NBC
257:MGM
224:in
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Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.