* En anglais uniquement
An important force as a bandleader in Los Angeles,
Les Hite (who never became famous beyond musician circles) led a series of significant (if sparsely documented) orchestras in the 1930s and '40s. After studying at the University of Illinois and playing saxophone in a family band,
Hite worked with Detroit Shannon and toured with the Helen Dewey Show. When the revue fell apart unexpectedly in Los Angeles,
Hite settled in the city. He worked for the Spikes Brothers' Orchestra,
Mutt Carey, Curtis Mosby, and
Paul Howard's Quality Serenaders among others. In 1930 he took over
Paul Howard's band and it became Sebastian's Cotton Club Orchestra, soon becoming a fixture at L.A.'s Cotton Club for years.
Hite's big band accompanied
Louis Armstrong during the trumpeter's stay in Los Angles, and later on backed
Fats Waller.
Hite's Orchestra also appeared on the soundtracks of many films and made a few rare visual appearances in the movies. Although his big band occasionally toured (even appearing in New York in 1937), it remained based in Los Angeles. After 1945,
Hite gradually dropped out of the music business although in his last five years he managed a booking agency. In addition to
Armstrong and
Waller, among the musicians who worked with
Hite were
Lionel Hampton,
Marshall Royal,
Lawrence Brown,
Britt Woodman,
Joe Wilder, and (for a brief period in 1942)
Dizzy Gillespie. Unfortunately, other than its dates backing
Louis Armstrong,
the Les Hite Orchestra only recorded 14 selections, all during 1940-1942;
T-Bone Walker guested on "T-Bone Blues" while
Dizzy Gillespie took an early bop solo on "Jersey Bounce." ~ Scott Yanow