The Four Freshmen were one of the top vocal groups of the
1950s, and formed the bridge between '40s ensembles like the Mel-Tones and
harmony-based rock & roll bands such as the Beach Boys as well as groups
like Spanky & Our Gang and the Manhattan Transfer. The group's roots go
back to the end of the 1940s and a barbershop quartet-influenced outfit called Hal's
Harmonizers, organized at the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Butler University
in Indiana by
two brothers, Ross and Don Barbour. Their repertoire centered on standards such
as "Moonglow" and "The Christmas Song," and they began to
show an unusually free, improvisational approach to their harmony singing. A
couple of membership changes brought Bob Flanigan, a cousin, into the fold
alongside Hal Kratzsch, and suddenly the Four Freshmen were assembled in all
but name, and that fell into place a little later.
The group struggled for a long time, living hand-to-mouth while building a
repertoire and a sound -- many people who've heard the group's records or are
familiar with their sound are unaware that they were also completely self-contained
instrumentally, each member playing more than one instrument and allowing the
others to switch off to different roles. They came to attention of various jazz
figures of the era, including Dizzy Gillespie, Woody Herman, and Stan Kenton,
and it was Kenton who took matters into his own hands, bringing the group to
the attention of Capitol Records, where the bandleader had a longstanding
relationship. Thus began a long and fruitful relationship with the label,
initially under the guidance of arranger Pete Rugolo -- gigs followed on The
Steve Allen Show (then one of the top-rated entertainment showcases on
television) and with Ray Anthony's band; they also managed to make an
appearance in the MGM movie Rich, Young and Pretty.
Their first hit single was "It's a Blue World," released in 1952, and
they enjoyed further success with "Mood Indigo" (1954), "Day By
Day" (1955), and "Graduation Day" (1956). They released their
first LP, Voices in Modern, in 1955 (and some dozen more 12" discs
over the next five years); that album was as impressive a jazz document as it
was a vocal pop effort, showcasing the group members' playing as well as their
singing and showing that these guys had lots of complex musical strings in
their bow. It was on these albums that the quartet also showed itself to be a
very smart outfit, not just in musical terms but logistically as well. Rather
than simply doing any 12 songs that might have been working well in its stage
act, the group made these releases into conceptual works, either musically
(built around the sounds achieved by combinations of the group's sound and
specific accompaniments, such as Four Freshmen and 5 Trombones, Four
Freshmen and Five Guitars, etc.) or as thematic arrays of songs (such as Voices
in Love and Voices in Latin).
This approach to devising and creating albums (which paralleled the kind of
work that Frank Sinatra was doing concurrently on the same label) would have an
influence on groups like the Beach Boys that was nearly as important as their
harmony sound; it's also an important reason why, in combination with their
virtuosity, their albums have held up so well across 40 years. Their sound and
range were helped by the fact that their benefactor, Kenton, was on the same
label, which made it possible for them to record together on occasion. Most of
their late-'50s albums were good sellers -- most have been reissued several
times on vinyl and CD -- and they had no shortage of top bookings and top pay
to keep them going into the early '60s.
There were membership changes along the way -- Kratzsch left in the spring of
1953, to be replaced by Ken Errair who, in turn, was succeeded by Ken Albers in
April of 1956, while Don Barbour left in 1960, replaced by Bill Comstock. That
lineup lasted intact for nearly 13 years, into the 1970s, but by that time the
group's influence had faded to almost nothing. The Four Freshmen had managed to
stay competitive with other pop acts through the mid-'60s, and even got a very
visible boost from the Beach Boys, in the form of Brian Wilson's frequent
expressions of admiration for the quartet as part of his inspiration behind
putting together the rock & roll group's sound, but following the arrival
of the British Invasion, they were no longer anywhere near the cutting edge of
pop music. They continued to record and perform, even assimilating such
contemporary songs as Jimmy Webb's "By the Time I Get to Phoenix," but they were effectively
relegated to the "easy listening" stations. Their contract with
Capitol ended in 1964, and the group's last affiliation with a major label was
in the second half of the decade with Liberty Records, which yielded four LPs
but no hits. By 1977, Bob Flanigan was the last original member, and he retired
in 1992.
New lineups of the group have continued to perform into the 21st century,
however, and are considered an artistically valid ensemble -- in 2000 the Four
Freshmen were voted Vocal Group of the Year by Down Beat magazine's readers.
And in 2001, no less a label than Mosaic Records -- the company that issues
complete catalogs of jazz legends going back to the 1930s, in deluxe packaging
-- released a multi-CD box of the Four Freshmen's complete 1950s recordings,
proudly (and even defiantly, given the label's catalog) proclaiming the
quartet's validity as a jazz outfit.
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