Chuckle Bros by Brian and Ron Boychuk for August 17, 2021

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    allen@home  about 3 years ago

    So thanks to momma. Benny Goodman became famous.

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    Doug K  about 3 years ago

    Apparently, as a child, Benny was just a little bit spoiled – he wasn’t such a Good Man until later. (But he was always the King of Swing.)

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    nosirrom  about 3 years ago

    ♪ It don’t mean a thing if I can’t use my swing ♫

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    The Reader Premium Member about 3 years ago

    Goodman!

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    Teto85 Premium Member about 3 years ago

    Benny had a difficult time of it early in his life. Goodman was the ninth of twelve children born to poor Jewish emigrants from the Russian Empire. His father, David Goodman (1873–1926), came to the United States in 1892 from Warsaw in partitioned Poland and became a tailor. His mother, Dora Grisinsky, (1873–1964), came from Kovno. They met in Baltimore, Maryland, and moved to Chicago before Goodman’s birth. With little income and a large family, they moved to the Maxwell Street neighborhood, an overcrowded slum near railroad yards and factories that was populated by German, Irish, Italian, Polish, Scandinavian, and Jewish immigrants.

    Money was a constant problem. On Sundays, his father took the children to free band concerts in Douglass Park, which was the first time Goodman experienced live professional performances. To give his children some skills and an appreciation for music, his father enrolled ten-year-old Goodman and two of his brothers in music lessons, from 1919, at the Kehelah Jacob Synagogue and Benny received two years of instruction from the classically trained clarinetist and Chicago Symphony member, Franz Schoepp. During the next year Goodman joined the boys club band at Hull House, where he received lessons from director James Sylvester. By joining the band, he was entitled to spend two weeks at a summer camp near Chicago. It was the only time he could get away from his bleak neighborhood. At 13, he got his first union card. He performed on Lake Michigan excursion boats, and in 1923 played at Guyon’s Paradise, a local dance hall.

    In summer 1923, he met Bix Beiderbecke. He attended the Lewis Institute (Illinois Institute of Technology) in 1924 as a high-school sophomore and played clarinet in a dance hall band.

    When he was 17, his father was killed by a passing car after stepping off a streetcar. His father’s death was “the saddest thing that ever happened in our family”, Goodman said.

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    WCraft Premium Member about 3 years ago

    He’s not king in my neighborhood until he swings almost parallel to the top bar and then launches himself!

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