Hampton was born on 20th April 1908 in Louisville, Kentucky, but moved to Chicago as a child, where he began his career as a drummer. He relocated to Los Angeles to play drums in Les Hite's band. They soon became the house band for Frank Sebastian's New Cotton Club, a popular L.A. jazz club.
During a 1930 recording date in the NBC studios in L.A., Louis Armstrong discovered a vibraphone. He asked Hampton if he could play it. Hampton, who knew how to play the xylophone, tried it and they agreed to record a few records with Hamp on vibes. Hampton is credited with popularizing the vibraphone as a jazz instrument.
In the mid-1930s, the Benny Goodman Orchestra came to Los Angeles to play the Palomar Ballroom. John Hammond brought Goodman to see Hampton play. Goodman asked Hampton to move to New York City and join Goodman, Teddy Wilson, and Gene Krupa who'd already formed a Benny Goodman Trio within the large band - to expand into the Benny Goodman Quartet. The Trio and Quartet were among the first racially integrated bands to record and play before wide audiences; they were just as well received at Goodman's famous 1938 Carnegie Hall concert as was the full Goodman band.
While Hampton worked for Goodman in New York, he recorded with several different small groups known as the Lionel Hampton Orchestra as well as assorted small groups within the Goodman band. In the early 40s he left the Goodman organization to form his own touring band.
Hampton's band fostered the talents of Illinois Jacquet, Dexter Gordon, Ernie Royal, Jack McVea, Charlie Mingus, Monk Montgomery, Wes Montgomery, Quincy Jones, Benny Golson, Fats Navarro, Kenny Dorham, Clifford Brown, Dinah Washington, Betty Carter, Joe Williams, Arnett Cobb, Earl Bostic, and John Colianni among many others.
Hampton's recording of "Flying Home" (1939) with the famous honking tenor sax solo by Jacquet, later refined and expanded by Cobb (1946), is considered by some to be the first rock and roll record. He was known for his tireless energy and his skill on the vibes, drums, and lightning speed two-fingered piano. The bars on the vibraphone are laid out like the piano; Hampton played both instruments the same way.
Beginning in the mid-1980s, Hampton and his band started playing at the University of Idaho's jazz concert, which in 1985 was renamed the Lionel Hampton Jazz Festival. In 1987 the University's music college was renamed the Lionel Hampton School of Music, the first and only university music college to be named after a jazz musician.
Lionel Hampton died of cardiac arrest at Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York on 31st August 2002. He was buried in the Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx, New York.
The Nearness of You
Lionel Hampton Lyrics
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That thrills and delights me, oh no
Its just the nearness of you
It isn't your sweet conversation
That brings this sensation, oh no
Its just the nearness of you
All my wildest dreams come true
I need no soft lights to enchant me
If you'll only grant me the right
To hold you ever so tight
And to feel in the night the nearness of you
The song "The Nearness of You" is a love song that describes the overwhelming feeling of being close to the person you love. The opening lines of the song suggest that it is not the physical presence of the person that delights the singer, but rather the closeness that they share. The second stanza affirms this, stating explicitly that it is not the person's words that bring the singer joy, but their simple presence.
The third stanza of the song is the most powerful, as it describes the intensity of the singer's emotions when they are holding the person they love. The night is imbued with a sense of magic, and the wildest dreams of the singer become possible when the person they love is near. The final stanza makes clear that the singer desires nothing more than to hold the person they love close and to revel in their nearness.
Overall, "The Nearness of You" is a beautiful evocation of the power of physical closeness and its ability to inspire feelings of love and passion.
Line by Line Meaning
Its not the pale moon that excites me
The presence of the moon does not cause me excitement
That thrills and delights me, oh no
It does not fill me with pleasure and excitement, oh no
Its just the nearness of you
It is merely the closeness of you that brings me elation
It isn't your sweet conversation
Your charming words do not generate these emotions
That brings this sensation, oh no
They are not responsible for this feeling inside of me, oh no
Its just the nearness of you
It is simply your proximity to me that conjures this sensation
When you're in my arms and I feel you so close to me
When we are embraced and your closeness surrounds me
All my wildest dreams come true
All my deepest desires are fulfilled
I need no soft lights to enchant me
I do not require any additional illuminations to captivate me
If you'll only grant me the right
If only you will allow me
To hold you ever so tight
To embrace you tightly
And to feel in the night the nearness of you
To experience the sensation of your proximity during the nighttime
Lyrics © Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC, BMG Rights Management
Written by: Hoagy Carmichael, Ned Washington
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind