You are able to gift 5 more articles this month. Anyone can access the link you share with no account required. Learn more. I was not alive when Big Band music was in its heyday, but I do remember my ...
Miller disappeared on a flight out of Twinwood in 1944. LONDON -- Eighty years ago on Aug. 27th, 1944, the great American bandleader Glenn Miller performed at a base some 60 miles north of London, RAF ...
It’s not quite Christmas in Montgomery until Airmen of Note rolls into town with the music of Glenn Miller — holiday songs and other classics like “American Patrol,” “Little Brown Jug” and ...
The Glenn Miller collections are housed within the American Music Research Center’s collections at the University of Colorado Boulder Libraries’ Rare & Distinctive Collections. For all questions about ...
There's a formula to Glenn Miller's version of swing that still exists 80 years after his mysterious death during World War II. Eric Stabnau, music director for the Glenn Miller Orchestra, explains ...
On February 10, 1942, Glenn Miller was awarded the first-ever Gold Record, for the song "Chattanooga Choo Choo." RCA Victor made the record by taking one of Miller's albums, painting it gold, and ...
The most popular and sought after big band of all time, the Glenn Miller Orchestra, returns to Chattanooga and the UTC Fine Arts Center’s Roland Hayes Concert Hall Friday at 7 p.m. The band will ...
The Glenn Miller Collections preserves documentation of an important era of American entertainment industry history, where popular, jazz and classical music fused into a national conciousness. With ...
As anyone who’s recently attended a show by Foreigner or Lynyrd Skynyrd knows, it’s become as common as a guitar solo to see a classic rock & roll outfit without any original members in the lineup.
He's named after a famous big band leader, so it's no surprise that he, himself, is now known as the "big one man band." WFMZ's Eve Russo welcomed the Lehigh Valley's own Glenn Miller to 69 News at ...
Eighty years ago on Aug. 27th, 1944, the great American bandleader Glenn Miller performed at a base some 60 miles north of London, RAF Twinwood, the hub and airfield he frequently flew in and out of ...