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Saturday, July 19, 2025

Jazz goes to... Elliot Lawrence

Elliot Lawrence
Jazz Goes Broadway

Elliot Lawrence was born Elliot Lawrence Broza on February 14, 1925, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. His parents, Stan Lee Broza and Esther Broza, were radio and television pioneers. In 1927, they created and produced the Horn and Hardart Children's Hour, which ran on WCAU radio from 1927 to 1958 and concurrently on television from 1948 to 1958.
Lawrence grew up in this show business environment and began studying piano at the age of three. His first public performance was at age four conducting the orchestra on the Children's Hour stage show. At the age of six he wrote his first composition, "Falling Down Stairs", and was stricken with polio. Lawrence suffered from the illness for six months, after which he recovered. By the age of 12, Elliot had formed his first band, a 15-piece unit called The Band Busters, and had already begun doing club dates on the weekends. Elliot finished high school at age 16 and entered the University of Pennsylvania. During his junior year his band, now named The Elliot Broza Orchestra, began playing college proms around Pennsylvania. 
Elliot took the name Elliot Lawrence to distinguish himself from his family name when he became the music director of WCAU'S House Band in 1945. The band premiered on the radio on January 18, 1945, as The Elliot Lawrence Orchestra in a weekly half-hour broadcast "Listen to Lawrence". The Elliot Lawrence Band, of which he was the piano player and leader, soon incorporated classical instruments like oboe, French horn, English horn and bassoon.
From 1946 to 1954, Lawrence's Band toured, performing at dances, concerts, college proms, and headline gigs around the United States year round, while recording albums for Decca, Columbia, RCA, Fantasy, and Vik records. In 1949, the band performed a three-week stint with the Nat King Cole Trio at the Paramount Theater in New York City, during which time it recorded Gerry Mulligan's "Elevation", later named "one of the top 50 best jazz recordings of the 20th century" by the Smithsonian Institution. The Elliot Lawrence Band performed in Philadelphia at the World Series in 1950, playing his original song "The Fightin' Phils". By this time, however, the band had become known for their "sweet" commercial sound. From 1947 to 1949 the band was the "campus choice" in Billboard's most promising new orchestra polls. Elliot was also voted one of America's "most eligible bachelors" by Look magazine in 1949.
After 1960, Lawrence gave up jazz and began composing and arranging for television, film, and stage. He won the Tony Award for his second show, How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying in 1962. This led to a 16-year career as a Broadway Conductor and musical director and later to his almost 50-year career as the "go to" conductor for big television events and specials.
Elliot Lawrence died on July 2, 2021, at the age of 96 in Manhattan. *(from wikipedia.org)*

If New York's jazz studio scene had a high point, it's probably 1956 and '57, just as the 12-inch LP became popular and just before stereo intruded with its odd sonics. During those two years, labels set high LP production quotas and producers were dispatched to line up numerous recording dates. With the pressure on, many producers took chances on artists who might not have been heard otherwise and concepts that hadn't been tried previously. They also began using Broadway songs as a way to build inventory.
One of the earliest examples was Elliot Lawrence's Jazz Goes Broadway, which had a distinctly East Coast sound. The difference between the East Coast and West Coast studio sound rested in its main influences. On the West Coast, arrangements and playing tended to be splashier and more swayed by television, fast cars and the movies. On the East Coast, the playing was jazzier and the arrangements tended to be bluesy, instrumentally denser and less commercial sounding.
Recorded over two sessions in May 1957, Jazz Goes Broadway featured two different sets of first-call studio musicians. The arrangements were by AlCohn, Elliot Lawrence and Manny Albam. What's more, each song showcases a different artist.
On Jazz Goes Broadway, we hear the artful use of show tunes without sacrificing jazz or swing. *Marc Myers*

Although he mostly worked in radio, television, and the studios in the 1950s, pianist/arranger Elliot Lawrence also led a series of fine swing-oriented jazz dates. Most of his sessions were at the head of big bands, but, for this CD Lawrence leads a pair of overlapping octets. Such soloists as Art Farmer or Nick Travis on trumpet, Jimmy Cleveland or Urbie Green on trombone, altoist Gene Quill, clarinetist Hal McKusick, tenorman Zoot Sims and Al Cohn (switching to baritone), the groups perform ten songs taken from Broadway shows. Four ("Just in Time", "I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face", "On the Street Where You Live", and "Mack the Knife") became standards while the other six sank into obscurity. The jazz all-stars (which also include bassist Chubby Jackson and drummer Don Lamond) uplift all of the tunes, with arrangements provided by Lawrence, Cohn, and Manny Albam. *Scott Yanow (All Music Guide)*

1 - Jubilation T. Cornepone
(Johnny Mercer, Gene De Paul)
2 - Just In Time
(B. Comden, A. Green, J. Styne)
3 - Big D
(Frank Loesser)
4 - I've Grown Accustomed To Her Face
(Alan J. Lerner, Frederick Loewe)
5 - On The Street Where You Live
(Alan J. Lerner, Frederick Loewe)
6 - Mack The Knife
(Kurt Weill)
7 - Joey, Joey, Joey
(Frank Loesser)
8 - If'n
(Matt Dubey, Harold Karr)
9 - Look At 'Er
(Bob Merrill)
10 - Standing On The Corner
(Frank Loesser)

#1, #3, #6, #8:
Art Farmer (trumpet), Jimmy Cleveland (trombone), Gene Quill (alto sax),
 Zoot Sims (tenor sax), Al Cohn (baritone sax), Elliot Lawrence (piano),
Chubby Jackson (bass), Don Lamond (drums).
Recorded at Webster Hall, RCA Victor Studios, New York City, May 7, 1957
#2, #4, #5, #7, #9, #10:
Nick Travis (trumpet), Urbie Green (trombone), Hal McKusick (clarinet),
Zoot Sims (tenor sax), Al Cohn (baritone sax), Elliot Lawrence (piano),
Chubby Jackson (bass), Don Lamond (drums).
Recorded at Webster Hall, RCA Victor Studios, New York City, May 8, 1957

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