
After first gaining mainstream popularity with their breakthrough performance in Swingers, Big Bad Voodoo Daddy
have gone on to become one of the most popular touring bands on the road today. BBVD now carries on the tradition
of the legendary big bands and orchestras by touring non-stop, performing over 100 concerts each year around the
world. Like the Glen Miller Orchestra, Benny Goodman, and the Count Basie Big Band, BBVD sell out shows
to audiences of all ages in cities as far flung as Honolulu, HI, St. Petersburg, FL, even making an appearance
at the 2008 summer Pori Festival in Finland.
Following
the paths of big band leaders like Glenn Miller, Benny Goodman,
and Duke Ellington, Big Bad Voodoo Daddys brassy, upbeat
sound has been embraced both by older fans nostalgic for the
music of their youth and by legions of younger fans enamored
of the elegance and sophistication of the Big Band era. They
have performed at the Billboard Music Awards, the White House
and at the halftimes of both the Super Bowl and the Orange
Bowl. The bands videos are regularly featured on MTV
and VH1 and they have performed on numerous television shows
such as The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Live
with Regis and Late Night with Conan OBrien.
Ive never thought of our music as retro,
says singer-songwriter-guitarist Scotty Morris, leader of
Big Bad Voodoo Daddy, the neo-swing little Big Band that helped
define the lounge scene as it was featured in the hit film
Swingers. Were an alternative to retro. Were
high-octane nitro jive loud, wild, total edge. Back
in the Forties, swing was punk rock, the black juke joint
music white guys heard and said, This is swingin.
What we do is wild and swingin, Forties music with a
Nineties twist. Were as influenced by Black Flag as
Count Basie.
In 1995 Big Bad Voodoo Daddy, decked out in pinstriped suits,
fedora hats and spectator shoes, was already a staple on the
underground Hollywood club scene when actor friend Jon Favreau,
who hung out at the bands Wednesday night appearances
at the Derby, told Morris, I wrote a movie. Are you
interested in being in it? Morris read the script, which,
as he puts it, was very much the sort of life we were
all living. So we figured lets just do this cool movie
with our friends. We had no idea it would do what it did.
A year later, after the band had also appeared on the Fox
television series Party of Five (and its Music From Party
Of Five soundtrack album), Swingers was released. Thanks to
its scene-stealing performance and the showcasing of three
songs on the soundtrack album, Big Bad Voodoo Daddy was tagged
as one of the hottest, hippest, coolest bands around. Says
Morris: Good music is not a novelty. Yes, the swing
scene is a scene, but great bands can emerge from scenes.
This scene may come and go but this band has come to stay.
The
first release for the Coolsville label, Big Bad Voodoo Daddy,
was the bands long-awaited major label album debut.
Eleven of the twelve tracks are originals, including two songs
(You & Me & the Bottle Makes 3 Tonight
and Go Daddy-O) heard on the Swingers soundtrack
album. The sole outside composition is of the Cab Calloway
classic Minnie the Moocher. Produced by Brad Benedict
and Michael Frondelli, and Morris, Big Bad Voodoo Daddy was
recorded at the Capitol Records Tower in legendary studio
B, where greats such as Louis Prima and Nat King
Cole once toiled. Their major label debut has sold an astounding
1.2 million copies to date and tracks from the record have
been used in countless television programs and feature films.
The bands second major label release, Big and Bad features
10 more original tracks to go along with their cool cover
of the Jungle Book Theme I Wanna Be Like You and
their rendition of Frank Sinatras Old McDonald.
Big Bad Voodoo Daddy was one of the pioneers of the swing
revival but Swingers, says Morris, indeed changed everything.
In the almost two years prior to the films premiere,
Big Bad Voodoo Daddy would play the Derby on Wednesday then
hit the road Thursday through Monday. The scene was
really retro and underground. Guys didnt just grease
their hair and wear suits and fedoras for the show; they dressed
like that all the time, to the nines. But when Swingers hit,
the crowds became more diverse and the average everyday person
was coming out to see us everywhere from all-ages clubs to
the meat markets and full-on disco clubs.
Morris couldnt have imagined such widespread acceptance
when, dissatisfied and jaded by life as a young Los Angeles
studio guitarist, he decided to launch a three-piece swing
combo in 1989. I was a hired gun playing anything and
everything, from punk to country. I was disenchanted and wanted
to do what I felt in my soul. I had started out playing trumpet
and loved Louis Armstrong, King Oliver, the wild guys, the
early primitive stuff, that Big Band mambo I heard while growing
up, when people first started dancing in the aisles, before
Big Band became polished and clean and tame. I just wanted
to play and have fun and bring something different.
The trio, including drummer Kurt Sodergren, performed everywhere
from college clubs to cheap dives in the Ventura-Santa Barbara
area. Soon after, Morris tapped Dirk Shumaker on string bass
and a couple of surf buddies, including Andy Rowley on saxophone,
to add horns. The audience response? At the time, there
was nothing like this going on at all. I mean, we used to
open with the theme from Get Smart and see their
mouths drop open. I was amazed people were digging what we
wanted to play.
By 1992, the band was officially dubbed Big Bad Voodoo Daddy.
I went to an Albert Collins concert and he so blew
me away that I had to ask him for his autograph. He signed
my ticket: To the big bad voodoo daddy. I thought
that was the coolest thing ever, and the coolest name.
It was also the title of the groups first album, self-produced
and distributed via indie distributor Hep Cat in 1993. Immediately,
we knew something was up. We printed 2,000 copies and they
sold out in a week, just in our home area. The next week we
printed another 1,000, and they sold out in a week too. So
we took our show on the road, from San Diego to San Francisco.
It was only then that we saw anyone swing dancing to this
music and found out there even was a scene.
Before Big Bad Voodoo Daddy took up residence at the Derby
for 18 months beginning in 1995, Morris knew it was time for
a bigger-sounding band. Glen The Kid Marhevka
replaced the former trumpet player and Karl Hunter came aboard
on saxophone and clarinet. Also joining was pianist Josh Levy,
who had played in a jazz band, which recently won the John
Coltrane Trio competition. All of the bandmasters are between
the ages of 25 and 33. A second self-produced album, Whatchu
Want For Christmas, was released later in 1995.
Since Swingers, Big Bad Voodoo Daddy has performed more than
450 concerts on stages across North America. As testament
to its cutting edge attitude, as well as its class and stylishness,
the band has also been called upon to perform at some of the
major entertainment event behind-the-scenes parties, from
Bruce Willis and Demi Moores New Years Eve party
to the Billboard Awards to the premieres for The Godfather,
Titanic, and As Good as It Gets, from the opening of the art
worlds Getty Center to halftime at the 1999 Super Bowl
and Orange Bowl and the 2000 Playboy Jazz Festival. Additionally,
the band performed 4 songs in an episode of Ally McBeal in
1999 and was the house band for the ESPN Espy Awards in 1999
and 2000.
For me, music is music, says Morris. I
just happen to be writing in the style of Forties swing. There
arent any rules and I never questioned what my instincts
told me. We just went for it, and its felt right from
day one. Everyone digs this music. This music is timeless.
Big Bad Voodoo Daddy isnt yesterday; its both
today and tomorrow. This is one hot funky dance band!

BBVD in Fresno, CA with Mark Sonder, CSEP
Watch Big Bad Voodoo Daddy performing on ABC's Dancing With the Stars on March 17, 2009!
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