Up to three years ago I hardly knew anything about Eddie Lang. I think it was a Reading-based guitarist who drew my attention to the man whose real name was Salvatore Massaro.
Lang was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on October 25 1902. His father was a violin and guitar maker and under his influence Eddie picked up a string instrument. He received tuition on violin as a kid and attended the same school with fellow fiddler Joe Venuti. The two became close friends and often worked together later on. (I have some tapes from this collaboration.)
Eddie Lang played violin with a local band and on banjo towards the end of World War I. He was already playing guitar at that time but switched between instruments until the mid-twenties. After a string of shorter engagements, Lang joined the Mound City Blue Blowers in 1924 and visited London with this group. From 1925 onwards, Lang played guitar with numerous quite different bands of all genres and sizes. In 1926 he teamed up with his buddy Joe Venuti again. The two joined Roger Wolfe Kahn's Society Band which played in a style that had little in common with the music Lang recorded under is own name. His most fascinating records were made along side blues guitarist Lonnie Johnson. However, racial segregation prevented this incredible duo from performing in public.
Eddie Lang had to continue earning his living in commercial bands, but there was an important and more satisfying stint with Paul Whiteman where Venuti and Lang were again united for a longer time.
In 1932 the guitarist worked mainly as accompanist to singer Bing Crosby and one year later, on March 26 1933 in New York City, died from an infection following a tonsil operation.
Lang was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on October 25 1902. His father was a violin and guitar maker and under his influence Eddie picked up a string instrument. He received tuition on violin as a kid and attended the same school with fellow fiddler Joe Venuti. The two became close friends and often worked together later on. (I have some tapes from this collaboration.)
Eddie Lang played violin with a local band and on banjo towards the end of World War I. He was already playing guitar at that time but switched between instruments until the mid-twenties. After a string of shorter engagements, Lang joined the Mound City Blue Blowers in 1924 and visited London with this group. From 1925 onwards, Lang played guitar with numerous quite different bands of all genres and sizes. In 1926 he teamed up with his buddy Joe Venuti again. The two joined Roger Wolfe Kahn's Society Band which played in a style that had little in common with the music Lang recorded under is own name. His most fascinating records were made along side blues guitarist Lonnie Johnson. However, racial segregation prevented this incredible duo from performing in public.
Listen to some 78s with Venuti from David Niven Tapes, covering 1926-27
Eddie Lang had to continue earning his living in commercial bands, but there was an important and more satisfying stint with Paul Whiteman where Venuti and Lang were again united for a longer time.
In 1932 the guitarist worked mainly as accompanist to singer Bing Crosby and one year later, on March 26 1933 in New York City, died from an infection following a tonsil operation.
Jet Black Blues, 1929 [for details see discography below]
In spite of the obscurity loomed large because of an early death, Lang's legacy keep growing (he even wrote the book on jazz guitar in the 1920s.) "His flexible rhythm guitar sparkled with passing tones, chromatic sequences and single-string fills. He played with a firm tone that added harmonic flesh and rhythmic bones to ensembles led by Red Nichols, Frankie Trumbauer, the Dorsey Brothers, Paul Whiteman and Bing Crosby," wrote Downbeat in a recent article about this forgotten master of jazz guitar, which continues by stating "his tendency was toward an even, four-to-the-bar pulse, often with a new chord position, inversion or alteration on every downstroke of the strings."
This David W. Niven tape covers the years 1927 to 1928 of Venuti-Lang recordings
His solo work is sparkling with technical innovations, furthermore he was adaptable, with a deep feeling for the blues and the evidence is his recordings with Lonnie Johnson. Lang's familiarity with classical music is also evident in some of his recordings. No other white guitarist of 1920s and early 1930s came close to him as far as virtuosity is concerned.
This David W. Niven tape covers the years 1929 to 1930 of Venuti-Lang recordings
- New York, April 1, 1927, Okeh studios
- New York, May 28, 1927, Okeh studios
- New York, October 21, 1927, Okeh studios
- New York, March 29, 1927, Okeh studios
- New York, September 27, 1928, Okeh studios
- New York, November 5, 1928, Okeh studios
- New York, May 1, 1929, Okeh studios
- New York, May 22, 1929, Okeh studios
- New York, October 5, 1929, Okeh studios
- New York, January 15, 1932, Brunswick studios
- New York, February 17, 1932, Brunswick studios
Feeling My Way, 1932
By the way, has anyone ever noticed that the entire "Chronological" series has a gigantic typo on every single CD in their cover logo format that spells:
ReplyDeleteCHRONOGICAL.
I'm just sayin'