Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Co-wrote ‘American Bandstand’ theme song

- By Adam Bernstein The Washington Post

Larry Elgart, a saxophonis­t who formed a popular big band with his older brother, Les, co-wrote the theme song to “American Bandstand,” and had his biggest hit album in 1982, a disco-pulsing medley of 1940s standards called “Hooked on Swing,” died Aug. 29 at a hospice center in Sarasota. He was 95.

His wife, Lynn Elgart, confirmed the death but did not cite a specific cause. He lived in Longboat Key.

A precocious­ly talented musician, Elgart was traveling with bands at 15 to support his family during the Great Depression. He played alto sax in orchestras led by Tommy Dorsey, Woody Herman, Red Norvo and Charlie Spivak, some of the biggest-name outfits of the day, and was an adventurou­s-minded player who also helped compose ballet scores and musical tone poems.

He first teamed with his brother in 1947 to start a band with dynamic arrangers, such as Nelson Riddle and Ralph Flanagan, but it proved a commercial failure. Elgart and Charles Albertine, a saxophonis­t-composer with avant-garde sensibilit­ies, formed a new orchestra in 1952 and installed trumpeter Les Elgart as the nominal frontman.

It was the last breath of the jazz and swing era, and rock-and-roll soon emerged as the dominant commercial force. But the brothers managed to keep the Les Elgart Orchestra, later renamed the Les and Larry Elgart Orchestra, humming along lucrativel­y for the next 15 years by playing campus proms, country club dates and cruise ship ballrooms.

They were traveling widely to promote the radio success of one of their first albums, “Sophistica­ted Swing” (1953), when they landed in Philadelph­ia and met Bob Horn, who hosted a local TV dance show called “Bandstand.”

“My brother said to him, ‘If we record a theme for you, would you use it?’ ” Larry Elgart told the Longboat Observer in Florida. “. . . Our next recording date, we recorded [“Bandstand Boogie,” written with Albertine] and took it to Bob Horn, and he said, ‘Absolutely. That’s it.’ . . . If you hear Barry Manilow at times, he’ll say he wrote ‘Bandstand Boogie.’ It’s not true. He just wrote the lyrics” decades later.

The song, cut in 1954, remained the anthem for what became “American Bandstand,” which soon had a youthful new host, Dick Clark, and Elgart enjoyed royalties from the song for the next six decades.

After the brothers separated in the late 1960s, Larry Elgart continued a prolific recording career. His biggest commercial hit was his most unlikely.

“Hooked on Swing” (1982) was a concept propelled by K-Tel, the company that prospered with TV infomercia­ls before getting into the record business. They had astronomic­al success with “Hooked on Classics,” a 1981 album that featured the Royal Philharmon­ic Orchestra rendering Beethoven, Mozart and other composers to a contempora­ry beat. It briefly turned “classical disco” into a sensation.

Elgart said he was initially unreceptiv­e to undertakin­g “Hooked on Swing.”

It peaked at No. 31 on the Billboard charts, sold more than 3 million copies and launched two more “Hooked on Swing” albums of what he called “fusion swing” arranged by pianist Dick Hyman.

“Hooked on Swing” was credited at times with helping kick off a revival of interest in big-band music. “I feel very good about the renewed interest in swing,” Elgart told United Press Internatio­nal in 1983, adding that he “tried to make the music of the swing era something today’s young people can relate to. The music was fun then and should be now.”

Lawrence Joseph Elgart was born in New London, Conn., on March 20, 1922, and grew up mostly in Pompton Lakes, N.J. His father was a jack of all trades, working variously as a candymaker and steamfitte­r, among other jobs, during the Depression.

As a child, Larry had been mesmerized by big bands on the radio, and he began playing clarinet by 9 before taking up the sax.

An early marriage ended in divorce. Survivors include his wife of 54 years, Lynn Walzer Elgart, who co-wrote his 2014 memoir “The Music Business and the Monkey Business”; two sons from his first marriage, Brock Elgart of Framingham, Mass., and Brad Elgart of Ashland, Mass.; four grandchild­ren; and four great-grandchild­ren. Les Elgart died in 1995.

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