Biography
Although positioned closer to whimsical easy-listening fare than to the refined, understated Latin jazz discs cut by Cal Tjader, Don Swan ranked among the stronger non-Latino players who gained traction in the Latin jazz field during the 1950s. Born Wilbur Clyde Schwandt in Manitowoc, Wisconsin, on June 28, 1904, he pursued composition studies at the University of Chicago before serving as an arranger for several big bands and even joining comedian Bob Hope’s touring revue. In 1940 he joined Xavier Cugat’s orchestra as an arranger, a post he filled intermittently for the following two decades. That accumulated expertise in Latin idioms made his skills sought after both for arrangements and original compositions, whether for mainstream big bands such as those led by Skinnay Ennis and Freddy Martin or for Latin dance orchestras fronted by Perez Prado and Desi Arnaz. Around 1956–1957 he signed with Liberty Records and issued five Latin lounge albums, the first titled Mucho Cha Cha Cha. Later projects including All This and Cha Cha Too, Hot Cha Cha, and the two volumes of Latino! placed him at the helm of all-star ensembles drawn from West Coast session players, occupying the space between genuine Latin jazz and exotic novelty. The commercial response to these recordings enabled him to assemble a touring unit that worked regularly in New York and Las Vegas. He stepped away from music in the mid-1960s, eventually settled in Miami, and died there on July 23, 1998, at the age of 94.
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