Ziggy Elman

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
And The Angels Sing 00:00 Tools
You Took Advantage of Me 00:00 Tools
Freilach 00:00 Tools
Bublitchki 00:00 Tools
Zaggin' with Zig 00:00 Tools
Fralich In Swing 00:00 Tools
I Found a New Baby 00:00 Tools
I Have Everything to Live for 00:00 Tools
Love Is the Sweetest Thing 00:00 Tools
Bye 'n' Bye 00:00 Tools
Sugar 00:00 Tools
I'm Through With Love 00:00 Tools
Fralich in Swing (And the Angels Sing) 00:00 Tools
Let's Fall in Love 00:00 Tools
I'm Yours 00:00 Tools
And The Angles Sing 00:00 Tools
29th and Dearborn 00:00 Tools
Something to Remember You By 00:00 Tools
Tootin' My Baby Back Home 00:00 Tools
I'll Never Be the Same 00:00 Tools
Deep Night 00:00 Tools
Body and Soul 00:00 Tools
Am I Blue 00:00 Tools
You're Mine, You 00:00 Tools
You Took Advantage Of Me (08-29-39) 00:00 Tools
I'll Get By 00:00 Tools
Bublitchki (12-28-38) 00:00 Tools
Always 00:00 Tools
What Used to Was Used to Was (Now It Ain't) 00:00 Tools
Forgive My Heart (You Are My Happiness) 00:00 Tools
Lover Come Back to Me 00:00 Tools
Cheek to Cheek 00:00 Tools
Zaggin' With The Zig (06-08-39) 00:00 Tools
What Used To Was Used To Was 00:00 Tools
Forgive My Heart 00:00 Tools
You're Mine You 00:00 Tools
Sugar (12-28-38) 00:00 Tools
How HighThe Moon 00:00 Tools
Bye 'N' Bye (11-27-39) 00:00 Tools
With a Song in My Heart 00:00 Tools
Bei Mir Mist Du Schoen 00:00 Tools
Samba with Zig 00:00 Tools
How High the Moon 00:00 Tools
Carolina in the Morning 00:00 Tools
Fralich In Swing (And The Angels Sing) (12-28-38) 00:00 Tools
At Sundown 00:00 Tools
Ivy 00:00 Tools
My Reverie 00:00 Tools
I'm Through With Love (12-26-39) 00:00 Tools
Tootin' My Baby Back Home (12-26-39) 00:00 Tools
I'm Yours (08-29-39) 00:00 Tools
Am I Blue? (08-29-39) 00:00 Tools
The Birth of the Blues 00:00 Tools
29th And Dearborn (12-28-38) 00:00 Tools
Butterfly Strut 00:00 Tools
Am I Blue? 00:00 Tools
I Have Everything To Live For (08-29-39) 00:00 Tools
I'll Never Be The Same (06-08-39) 00:00 Tools
Tea for Two 00:00 Tools
dancing with zig 00:00 Tools
Let's Fall In Love (06-08-39) 00:00 Tools
Deep Night (11-27-39) 00:00 Tools
Love Is The Sweetest Thing (11-27-39) 00:00 Tools
You're Mine, You (06-08-39) 00:00 Tools
Me and My Shadow 00:00 Tools
The Night Is Young and You're So Beautiful 00:00 Tools
Lover, Come Back to Me 00:00 Tools
Just Once More 00:00 Tools
  • 3,752
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  • 977
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  • 3752
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Harry Aaron Finkelman (May 26, 1914 – June 26, 1968), better known by the stage name Ziggy Elman, was an American jazz trumpeter most associated with Benny Goodman, though he also led his own Ziggy Elman and His Orchestra. He was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, but his family settled in Atlantic City when he was four. His father was a violinist who had hoped he would play violin as well. Although he learned to play the violin, Harry preferred the brass instruments. He began playing for Jewish weddings and nightclubs at age 15, and in 1932 had his first recording where he played trombone. At some point in the decade he adopted the name Ziggy Elman. Elman is a shortening of Finkelman while "Ziggy" is believed to be a reference to Florenz Ziegfeld. He joined the Benny Goodman orchestra as a trumpet player in 1936. His 1939 composition "And the Angels Sing" with lyrics by Johnny Mercer became the number one song in the nation. In 1956, he was asked to recreate his famous frailach solo along with the original vocalist Martha Tilton for the movie, The Benny Goodman Story but was unable to, his technique having since withered away. Another trumpeter, Manny Klein, played the solo on the soundtrack, but Elman appeared performing it in the film. This song is, arguably, his longest-lasting musical legacy since it has appeared in films up to 1997 and was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1987. After his work with Goodman he joined Tommy Dorsey's band and also played as a member of the military during the war. He loved frailach music, later known as klezmer, and made a few recordings of such with Mickey Katz. In the period from 1940 to 1947 he was honored in Down Beat magazine readers poll six times. He led his own bands starting in 1947. By the 1950s big bands had declined and for a time he switched to entertainment work. In this decade he appeared in films mostly as himself. In 1956 he had a heart-attack which curtailed his musical career. By the end of the 1950s he had to work for a car dealership and was financially ruined. In 1961 it was revealed at an alimony hearing that he was virtually bankrupt. He later worked in a music store and taught trumpet to some up-and-coming musicians. He died in 1968 at 54 and was buried at Mount Sinai Memorial Park Cemetery Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.