Bandboy (also expressed as band boy) is a bygone term for a job similar to for what now is known as a "roadie." They set up, tear down, and maintain equipment, and music. They help out backstage with tasks such as making sure that towels, drinks, and ice are available.
Unlike a roadie, the bandboy was more like a personal assistant, or au pair, or butler/dresser for the leader — making sure suits were dry cleaned, shoes shined, and the like. On foreign tours a local bandboy would translate, find places to eat, change money, buy train tickets, and perform similar tasks. Often the bandboy would disseminate information for the leader, hand out itineraries, room lists, and set lists. The role of bandboy was different with every band and had different duties than the more senior road manager, who dealt with promoters, booking agents, contracts, payroll, and catering. When times got tough financially, road managers or band members themselves often performed bandboy duties.
Notable bandboy alumni
edit- Simon Napier-Bell
- Popsie Randolph, Benny Goodman
- George A. "Bullets" Durgom (1915–1992), Tommy Dorsey
- Morris I. (Moishe) Diamond (born 1921), Tommy Dorsey: 1940–1942[1][2][3]
- Nifty Vickerson, Frank Sinatra
- Henry Snodgrass, Count Basie
- Willie Bobo, Machito's Afro-Cubans: 1947[4]
- Fred Charap, Count Basie[5]
- Jimmy Thomason (born 1919), Cliff Bruner[6]
- Coke Escovedo, Tito Puente
- Ken Fujiwara, Count Basie, Japan tour: 1980s
- Bob "Little Gate" Walker, Bunny Berigan[7]
- Bernard Arthurneal (Bernie) Mackey (1909–1980), Bunny Berigan[8][9]
- Edward F. Gabel (1924–2014), Stan Kenton (left Kenton as bandboy to work for Earle Spencer as manager in 1947)[10]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Name Dropper or "People I've Schlepped With", by Morris I. Diamond, BearManor Media (publisher) (2011); ISBN 1593936532; ISBN 9781593936532
- ^ Beverly Hill Records biography of Morris I. Diamond
- ^ "Vet Gained Friends, Lost Hearing in War" (bio), by Denise Goolsby, The Desert Sun, December 7, 2010
- ^ "Biography of Willie Bobo", by James Nadal, www.allmusic.com, Rovi Corporation
- ^ "Horizontal Slide 2" Archived 2014-09-03 at the Wayback Machine, website of Fred Charap
- ^ The jazz of the Southwest: an Oral History of Western Swing, by Jean Ann Boyd, University of Texas Press (1998), pg. 58; ISBN 0292708599; ISBN 9780292708594; ISBN 0292708602; ISBN 9780292708600
- ^ Bunny Berigan: Elusive Legend of Jazz, by Robert Dupius (born 1926), Louisiana State University Press (1933), pg. 177; OCLC 22662815 ISBN 0807116483 ISBN 9780807116487
- ^ "Bunny Berigan – Mr. Trumpet: The Golden Boy Moves," by Michael Paul Zirpolo, Jr. (born 1950), IAJRC Journal, June 1, 2010; ISSN 0098-9487
- ^ Mr. Trumpet: The Trials, Tribulations, and Triumph of Bunny Berigan, by Michael Paul Zirpolo, Jr. (born 1950), Scarecrow Press (1911) ISBN 0810881527 ISBN 978-0810881525
- ^ "As Written," Billboard, pg. 19, col. 1, March 22, 1947