- For over twenty nine years, Swing Fever has
been the choice band for sophisticated weddings, corporate
events and parties in San Francisco and throughout Northern
California.
- Quality music... Authentic big band sound... Swing Fever's
musicians cut their chops with jazz legends... Critics rave:
"Toe-tapping and relentlessly swinging..."
- Flexible in size... The band can perform ceremonial music
for weddings, background music for corporate events, and
then build the band for dancing.
- Planners value our attention to detail. We help design
the music so your weddings and corporate events run smoothly.
- Browse our web site for music list,
band configuration, reviews,
and performance calendar. Swing
Fever...San Francisco swing jazz band with classic
big band sound, available in Northern California for weddings,
corporate events, parties.
Duke
Ellington, Count Basie, Ella Fitzgerald, Benny Goodman, Nat
King Cole, Louis Armstrong, Glenn Miller, Louis Jordan, Billie
Holiday, George Gershwin, Cole Porter, Rodgers and Hart, Irving
Berlin, Hoagy Carmichael, Harold Arlen.........
The music is our passion. Witty and romantic tunes from the
1930s and ‘40s have inspired Swing Fever since
1978, and we can’t seem to get enough. We stopped keeping
track of our song list after 1000 tunes. We learned from the
originators of the music, which is why our performances have
an authenticity that fans expect and critics appreciate.
It helps to have the most experienced jazz players in the
San Francisco Bay Area. Swing Fever musicians have performed
and recorded with: Duke Ellington, Benny Goodman, Ella Fitzgerald,
Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett, BB King, Rosemary
Clooney, Stan Getz, Thelonius Monk, George Shearing, Coleman
Hawkins, Peggy Lee, Chet Baker, Vince Guaraldi, Bill Evans,
Red Norvo, Wes Montgomery, Teddy Wilson, Max Roach, Earl “Fatha”
Hines, Michael Feinstein, Glen Campbell, John Hendrix, Johnny
Mathis, Carmen McRae, Mel Torme, Joe Pass and Kenny Burrell.
And then there’s our fine vocalist, Denise Perrier,
read more about her on the Players page.
Swing Fever has been performing jazz of the 1930’s
and 40’s for twenty-nine years. The band has toured
and recorded with renowned musicians, including Count Basie
– Duke Ellington trumpeter Clark Terry, clarinetist
Buddy DeFranco and vibraphonist Terry Gibbs.
Swing Fever has released three CDs, two of them with Duke
Ellington – Count Basie trumpeter Clark Terry, growing
out of several tours together and an appearance at the Monterey
Jazz Festival. A fourth CD, from live tour performances with
Buddy DeFranco and Terry Gibbs will appear this Fall.
Swing Fever is dedicated to the music of the Swing Era,
playing it as critic Phil Elwood said, “as though the
numbers are on today’s Hit Parade.” The band treats
Swing Era music as a living breathing form, to which the players
bring fresh excitement, new arrangements and unusual instrumentation.
Clever, fun, romantic, moody, witty – here is wonderful,
classic music presented in its full emotional range.
As Jazz Now said, “Swing Fever keeps its music alive
without turning it into a museum piece.” If this is
the band’s mission, it is a successful one, as demonstrated
by the band’s notable longevity and popularity,
Created and nurtured in the San Francisco Bay Area, Swing Fever has always persisted, somewhat against the grain. In
its own piano-less Swing style, well garnished with vocals,
devoted to classic Gershwin and Ellington on the one hand
and jive on the other.
Swing Fever has played the Monterey Jazz Festival
twice, also the San Francisco, San Jose, Sacramento and Los
Angeles Classic Jazz Festivals. In 1990, Swing Fever
was honored by the California Arts Council with an appointment
to its touring roster. It has remained on that roster for
15 years and played more than 400 concerts in California.
The band has played two recent concert tours in Alaska, and
is a long time member of Western Arts Alliance.
Rhythmic, romantic, torrid and witty…this is Swing Fever’s music and they’re crazy for it. Watch
out, you may catch Swing Fever too.
| Accomplishments: |
- 25 years as an active jazz band.
- Two recent performances at The Monterey Jazz Festival
- Inaugural celebration for San Francisco Mayor Willie
Brown
- 125th Anniversary Gala of the San Francisco Art
Institute
|
- Four San Francisco Black and White Balls
- Twelve years of New Years Eve performances at Do
maine Chan don in Napa Valley
- Eleven years of state-wide concerts supported by
the California Arts Council
- 600 Corporate events, 1100 weddings, 450 concerts
- Three CD's
|
> See The Reviews We Have Earned!
- “Don't miss Swing Fever the next time you see them
on any schedule.....
Best of all, they are a lot of fun! They gave a dynamite
performance from the beginning to the end!"....Jazz
Now
Swing Fever...San Francisco swing jazz
band with classic big band sound
available in Northern California for weddings, corporate events,
parties.
^up
Swing's
the thing: Band leader still grooving after 30 years
by Carla Bova
From Marin Independent Journal Article Launched: 06/09/2007
*click photos for larger image
THERE ARE two things Bryan Gould does almost daily.
He practices trombone, playing 1930s and '40s classic jazz
to perform with Swing Fever, the band he started nearly 30
years ago. "Most days I'll blow through some songs,"
Gould says. "I play the melodies on most songs."
And he gardens an acre of land at his San Rafael home. Gould's
pride is a line of pear trees with adjoining branches that
he trained to be a natural fence bordering grass and a walkway.
"I enjoy physically getting in with a shovel,"
Gould says. "It is my second favorite instrument after
the trombone."
The 68-year-old band leader, who also sings, was first drawn
to Dixieland music in his 20s before making the "easy
transition" to swing.
"I just got stuck in the swing era," he says. "I
think it is the most important body of music that America
has put out, of any kind really. The appeal is the romance
of the songs, the very beautiful and complicated songs that
were written during that period, but also the rhythm of the
bands that were playing them, the verve and excitement of
the bands."
Swing Fever keeps the music alive with a repertoire of at
least 1,700 songs, Gould says, adding he knows the lyrics
to about 1,400. The band draws from Duke Ellington, Count
Basie, Ella Fitzgerald, George Gershwin, Irving Berlin and
Benny Goodman to name a few.
"The play list is changing all the time, all the time,"
Gould says. "We have never played the same set in our
lives."
That is quite a feat for a band that plays about 200 events
a year. Swing Fever has played more than 1,500 weddings and
about 500 concerts mostly around the state since it formed
in 1978 and, for the past 18 years, has performed every Tuesday
at the Panama Hotel in San Rafael.
Hotel
owner Dan Miller says the band's jazzy style fits the vibe
in his dining room.
"Bryan has a real personal affection for the style of
music and is a music historian," Miller says. "When
he plays, he sings and he talks about the history of the music
plays."
Miller has noticed customers returning to hear music of
the past.
"He likes to introduce it to a younger crowd,"
Miller says. "His enthusiasm and knowledge seem to attract
people."
A small combo band like Swing Fever typically has piano,
bass, drums, saxophone and trumpet. Instead, Swing Fever swaps
out piano and trumpet in favor of guitar and trombone. The
vocalist is often Denise Perrier.
"The trombone and tenor saxophone is a lovely blend,"
Gould says. "We like the mellower sound of the guitar
rather than piano. And there is less clutter. Piano fills
up a lot of space musically."
Gould was born in San Francisco and raised in an old farmhouse
on Twin Peaks. His father, Barney, was a playwright, actor
and public relations man who at one point worked as a sports
reporter for the Chronicle during World War II. His mother,
Elise, was the office supervisor for the Republican County
Central Committee for 30 years.
"My parents loved musicals," Gould says. "That's
where I picked up a lot of lyrics from the early albums -
"Music Man," "South Pacific," "Oklahoma."
Gould's family and the family of his current wife, Laurie
Oman, were neighbors on Twin Peaks. The two were childhood
friends but had not dated while growing up.
"When the families got together, my father played jazz
piano and his brother played guitar and his mother would bring
out the washboard and thimbles for me," says Oman of
the 1960s jam sessions. "People would sing and he'd play
the trombone."
They both went on to marry other people before "rediscovering"
each other 21 years ago.
"He ran into my folks at the Marin Theatre Company
and, you know, chat, chat, chat," Oman says. "They
mentioned I was divorced and living in Sonoma County. I think
his ears perked up. It wasn't long before I got a call from
him out of the clear blue sky it seemed to me because my folks
hadn't mentioned they ran into him."
They
have been married for 16 years and have four grandchildren
ages 2 to 7.
As a boy, he wanted to be a bus driver.
"It was my first ambition," Gould says. "That's
how I got around San Francisco, by riding around on Muni,
meeting bus drivers and getting free rides and going all over
the city."
After attending Lowell High School, Gould spent three years,
until he was 21, in the newspaper business as a copyboy with
the San Francisco News. He wrote a sports column on skiing
and was often sent on news assignments. He was arrested while
covering a break from San Quentin State Prison.
"These cons had just surrendered and I had to get the
photographs, but in order to get them from our photographer,
I had to get through all these cops and prison officials and
they were trying to stop me," Gould says. "They
got the idea I was trying to free the prisoners."
He looked for adventure hopping freight trains and spent
six days riding a two-man raft through Hell's Canyon on the
Snake River in Idaho. "That was a defining experience,
a manhood ritual for me," he says.
Every summer for six years, Gould took off hitchhiking all
over the country, kind of like he did as a boy on city buses.
"I hitchhiked from San Francisco to Anchorage and back
in 1960. I went to New York, New Orleans, every place. There
was almost no state I did not cover," Gould says. "I
wanted to know America and Americans and I wanted to know
all parts of the country."
The excursions were among his earliest musical influence,
he says.
"During those hitchhiking tours, I would always seek
out the jazz in different towns, particularly in Chicago,
particularly in New York, particularly in New Orleans,"
Gould says. "I lingered in all those cities and absorbed
whatever jazz music I could. I learned different styles and
different approaches to music. I met a lot of players. I wasn't
playing well enough to sit in with these fine bands."
Gould
says he started playing trombone late, at age 19. He studied
for five years with Johnny Klock, bass trombonist with the
San Francisco Symphony. "My reading of music is very
limited so most of what I know is by ear," he says.
He graduated from San Francisco State University in 1965
with a bachelor's degree in creative writing and was 26 when
he married first wife, Eleanor Hjelvik. They lived in the
Mission District. Around the same time, Gould took a job as
a counselor at San Francisco Juvenile Hall where he worked
for six years. The couple had a daughter, Leslie Gould, now
39, who lives in Mill Valley and works for Swing Fever.
"I had a new family and needed to make a living,"
Gould says. "I was painting abstract expressionist oil
paintings. I was writing and I was playing music but none
of these were making any kind of money, so I took a job at
the juvenile hall."
In 1969 he moved to San Rafael and went to work as a counselor
and juvenile probation officer with the Marin County Probation
Department and helped run a residential treatment facility
for teenagers.
Larkspur resident Rosalie Laird met Gould in 1970 while
working as a teacher at juvenile hall.
"He was very well-liked by the kids," Laird says
of Gould. "They were in this awful situation - locked
up, had a troubled home life - and he was mellow and able
to communicate with them."
That is where she first heard Gould play the trombone. "Several
counselors would jam together at lunchtime, and the kids would
dance or sing or just listen, she says.
He started Swing Fever in 1978 and five years later he left
the probation job that he had held for 14 years.
Liard recalls, "He worked very hard at getting gigs
for his group and quit his job at juvenile hall because he
began making a living with music."
"I just had a burning desire to play music," Gould
says. "I put in a very intense five years building the
band, building the business and making contacts, joining chambers
of commerce. I started playing in wineries and everywhere
I could get contacts and referrals. After five years I thought,
'This is solid enough to go on with it.'"
More than solid in fact, with Swing Fever going on to play,
tour, record for nearly 30 years.
The band's first steady gig was at the former Andalou restaurant
in San Rafael, performing at Sunday brunch for six years with
about 70 shows broadcast on radio station KTIM.
Laird was a regular.
"I took a lot of people down for brunch to listen to
him," Laird says. "He jokes between songs and knows
everything about composers, old jazz players, anybody who
ever played. It is always interesting to see who will be playing
with him because he has guests artists. I don't know any other
musician who makes a living without having a day job."
The band has performed at four of San Francisco's big bashes,
the Black and White Ball in the 1980s and 1990s; at former
San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown's inauguration; at jazz festivals
from Monterey to San Juan Island; and at several parties for
Chronicle columnist Herb Caen. "He got to know the band
and he liked the style," Gould says.
Through the California Arts Council Touring Program, a program
which no longer exists, Swing Fever booked tours across California
and two in Alaska, performing about 400 concerts over 13 years.
The band recorded three CDs, all music of the swing era.
Noted trumpeter Clark Terry played on two of the CDs.
A fourth will be released in September of live recordings
from Swing Fever shows at venues including Freight and Salvage
in Berkeley and Kimball's East in Emeryville. The album includes
performers Terry, clarinetist Buddy DeFranco, vibraphonist
Terry Gibbs and vocalist Jackie Ryan of Mill Valley.
A
related booking business, run from home, was born about 12
years ago.
"We had an office to book our band but we would get
a lot of calls for music that we did not want to play, did
not know how to play and had no interest in playing, chiefly
rock," Gould says. "We were not interested in rock
but started booking bands that did. We had the contacts and
friends in the music business so we knew what bands to hire
and could hook up people with a band that was right for them."
Employee Paula Helene primarily books Swing Fever, but the
business offers a roster of about 20 bands, soloists and duets
who play a variety of music from swing to Latin to rock. The
company brings insight for customers with employees who have
background in the music industry.
"To a large extent, we understand the musicians we
book and we know what they are good at and what they maybe
are not so good at," Helene says. "We can certainly
steer the client to a particular musician or a particular
band if we can get a good idea of what they really want."
Gould wants to spend time in his garden of roses and neatly
lined vegetables - successions of lettuce, peas, beets, squash,
asparagus. The orchard of 25 trees has peaches, apples, oranges,
lemons. Ten pear trees form a fence since Gould took up espalier,
the horticultural technique of training trees through pruning
and grafting to create patterns with branches.
Then he takes to the trombone to play the classical jazz
he loves.
"Part of what we do is preserving the music at all
costs," Gould says. "We think this music is going
to appeal to people for a long, long time."
Carla Bova can be reached at cbova@marinij.com. |