Biography
During the swing era, Jack Jenney ranked among the era's foremost trombonists, yet the short lifespan of his orchestra and his death at thirty-five have left him largely overlooked in later decades. Born to a music instructor, he took up both trumpet and trombone at eight and began appearing at jobs with his father's group by eleven. His first paid work arrived in 1928 with Austin Wylie, after which he spent time in the bands of Isham Jones—where he recorded—and Mal Hallett in 1933.
A precise technician whose tone carried warmth, Jenney found steady studio calls in New York, performing with Victor Young, Fred Rich, and various radio orchestras while also contributing to sessions led by Red Norvo, Glenn Miller in 1935, Dick McDonough, and his wife, singer Kay Thompson, in 1937. After directing a studio ensemble of his own in 1938, he assembled a full big band the following year; despite widespread praise for his technically dazzling recording of “Stardust,” the orchestra never gained traction.
Jenney worked intermittently with Artie Shaw from 1940 to 1942, delivering a concise yet indelible solo on the bandleader's celebrated “Stardust,” then returned to studio duties. A brief 1942 stint with Benny Goodman led to an appearance in the film Stage Door Canteen; he was also featured in the concluding jam session of Syncopation and subsequently led an unrecorded big band on the West Coast. Following several months of Navy service in 1943–44, he resumed studio work in California. Complications after an appendectomy caused his early death.
Beyond countless sideman dates, Jenney directed five sessions under his own name, four of them with his 1939–1940 orchestra, all later compiled on a Hep CD. Recognition never matched his ability.
A precise technician whose tone carried warmth, Jenney found steady studio calls in New York, performing with Victor Young, Fred Rich, and various radio orchestras while also contributing to sessions led by Red Norvo, Glenn Miller in 1935, Dick McDonough, and his wife, singer Kay Thompson, in 1937. After directing a studio ensemble of his own in 1938, he assembled a full big band the following year; despite widespread praise for his technically dazzling recording of “Stardust,” the orchestra never gained traction.
Jenney worked intermittently with Artie Shaw from 1940 to 1942, delivering a concise yet indelible solo on the bandleader's celebrated “Stardust,” then returned to studio duties. A brief 1942 stint with Benny Goodman led to an appearance in the film Stage Door Canteen; he was also featured in the concluding jam session of Syncopation and subsequently led an unrecorded big band on the West Coast. Following several months of Navy service in 1943–44, he resumed studio work in California. Complications after an appendectomy caused his early death.
Beyond countless sideman dates, Jenney directed five sessions under his own name, four of them with his 1939–1940 orchestra, all later compiled on a Hep CD. Recognition never matched his ability.
Albums
Singles


