Joe
Loss and his Orchestra
Joe Loss
Joe
Loss
was born in Spitalfields,
London, the youngest of
four children. His
parents, Israel and Ada
Loss, were Russian Jews
and first cousins. His
father was a
cabinet-maker who had an
office furnishing
business. Loss attended
the Jews' Free School,
Trinity College of Music
and the London College of
Music (now part of the
University of West
London). He started
violin lessons at the age
of seven and later played
violin at the Tower
Ballroom, Blackpool and
also with Oscar Rabin.
Loss started band leading
in the early 1930s,
working at the Astoria
Ballroom and soon
breaking into variety at
the Kit-Cat Club. In
1934, he topped the bill
at the Holborn Empire but
in the same year moved
back to the Astoria
Ballroom where he led a
twelve piece band. In
1935, Vera Lynn appeared
with the Joe Loss
Orchestra in her first
radio broadcast. With
broadcasting, recording
and annual tours in
addition to the resident
work the band became
highly popular over the
next few years. In the
1950s and early 60s, Loss
was resident band leader
at the Hammersmith Palais
and was remembered by a
trainee nurse at
Hammersmith Hospital as
being as kind and
gentlemanly when she
attended him in hospital
as he was in his public
persona. His band's
signature tune "In
the Mood" would
often be requested three
or more times a night.
He
was the subject of This
Is Your Life on two
occasions: in May 1963
when he was surprised by
Eamonn Andrews, and in
October 1980, when
Andrews surprised him
again at London's Portman
Hotel during a
star-studded party to
celebrate Joe's 50 years
in show business. A
favourite of the British
Royal Family, Loss's
orchestra performed not
only at Royal Variety
Performances but also at
Christmas parties hosted
by the Royal family,
which earned Loss not
only the OBE but also the
LVO, an honour in the
personal gift of the
Queen.
Loss's
daughter Jennifer is the
wife of British
coach-builder Robert
Jankel.
Loss
died on 6 June 1990 and
is buried at Bushey
Jewish Cemetery in
Hertfordshire.
The
Joe Loss Orchestra
was one of the most
successful acts of the
big band era in the
1940s, with hits
including "In the
Mood". In 1961 they
had a hit with
"WheelsCha
Cha", a version of
the String-A-Longs' hit
"Wheels". Other
hits included David
Rose's "The
Stripper" in 1958,
"Sucu Sucu",
"Must Be
Madison", "The
Theme from Maigret"
and "March of the
Mods (The Finnjenka
Dance)" of 1964.
In
April 1951 Elizabeth
Batey, vocalist with Joe
Loss, fell and broke her
jaw. Joe was badly in
need of a replacement and
remembered hearing Rose
Brennan on radio during a
visit to Ireland. Within
days he had located her
and, before a week was
out, she was in
Manchester rehearsing
with the band. She stayed
with Loss for fifteen
years, before giving up
show-business in the mid
1960s. She wrote many of
the songs she recorded
with Joe Loss under the
name Marella, and
co-wrote songs with John
Harris. Her co-vocalists
with the orchestra from
1955 were Ross MacManus
(father of Elvis
Costello) and Larry
Gretton.
The
Joe Loss Orchestra
carries on under the
musical direction of Todd
Miller, who was a
vocalist with the band
for 19 years before
Loss's death. In 1989 Joe
Loss became too ill to
travel and in 1990 he
entrusted the leadership
to his longest serving
band member, trombonist
and player manager of
many decades, Sam
Watmough and to Todd. The
orchestra has been in
constant operation since
1930 and in 2015 it
celebrated its 85th
anniversary.
Specialist
dance band radio stations
continue to play his
records. Joe Loss also
features regularly on the
Manx Radio programme
Sweet & Swing,
presented by Howard
Caine.
(The
above information is
reproduced with
acknowedgement to
Wikipedia)
Listen
to 'Music While You Work'
played by Joe Loss and
his Orchestra
as broadcast on BBC Radio
2 at 12 noon on 4th July
1983
Listen
to 'Music While You Work'
played by Joe Loss and
his Orchestra
as broadcast on BBC Radio
2 at 12 noon on 31st
August 1983
MUSIC
WHILE YOU WORK
played by Joe Loss and
his Orchestra
on 31st August 1983
Calling
All Workers (sig)
Spanish Gypsy Dance
Crazy Rhythm
Men of Harlech
My Guys come back
Never on Sunday
Song of India
The Village Band
A Man and a Woman
Y Viva Espana
How about you
Calling All Workers (sig) |
Eric
Coates
Marquina
Mayer/Kahn
Trad.
Mel Powell
Hadjidakis
Rimsky-Korsakov
Fryberg
Francis Lai
Caerts/Rozenstraten
Burton Lane
Eric Coates |
|