THE
CENTER FOR POPULAR MUSIC, MIDDLE TENNESSEE STATE UNIVERSITY, MURFREESBORO, TN
ROBERT E. "MIKE" DOTY
COLLECTION 96-049
Creator:
Doty, Mike
Type
of Material:
Sound Recordings, Manuscript Materials, Scrapbooks,
Manuscript Sheet Music, Photographs
Physical
Description:
3.5
linear feet, including manuscript materials and audio tapes
1.1
linear feet of manuscripts
34
audio tape cassettes
43
78 rpm and 33 lp audio discs
Dates:
1906-1997
Abstract (Descriptive Summary):
The
collection consists of manuscript scrapbooks, holographic music, and audio
cassettes that include both personal and professional materials related to the
life and career of orchestra musician Mike Doty.
Access/Restrictions:
Audio
tapes may not be copied.
Provenance
and Acquisition Information:
Materials
had been created, collected, and/or acquired by Mike Doty over the course of
his career as a musician.
The
holographic music manuscripts were used on the stands of the various groups he
played with. Some of these were written out by the arranger, but many of them were
written by Doty for his saxophone sections or for the chamber groups he performed
with. The "Hoboe Symfony"
is his own composition, almost all copies of which are in his hand. Some of the
music books and published sheet music were acquired overseas
during travels. Most of the sound recordings included Doty in the personnel and
were acquired presumably as he recorded them. The majority of cassette tapes
were compilations sent by a friend, but there are some that Doty may himself
have recorded live; two of the cassettes were made of a radio program that
included music interview material with Doty, and three
tapes of interviews with the donor (son Michael Doty). The materials in the scrapbooks are from
various sources.
Donated
by Michael Doty of Waynesville, North Carolina, on February 7, 1997.
Subject/Index Terms:
Doty,
Mike
Orchestra
Roxy
Theatre (New York, N.Y).
Orchestra
Radio
City Music Hall (New York, N.Y.)
Agency
History/Biographical Sketch:
Robert
E. "Mike" Doty was born in Zumbro Falls,
Minnesota, on February 21, 1906. By the
time he was 18 years old, he was already organizing
and managing his own jazz and dance bands near Rochester. His band traveled to
Fargo, South Dakota, where in 1930 he joined Phil Baxter's band. Baxter's band
went west to Tacoma, Washington, where Doty eventually took over leadership of
the band for two years.
In 1931
Doty joined the Joe Haymes Orchestra in Springfield,
Missouri, played in the sax section, did some
arrangements for the band, some vocals, and even some recording dates of the Haymes Orchestra under his own name. He stayed with the
group after it had been taken over by Buddy Rogers in late 1934, but by the
beginning of 1935, Doty left for New York and eventually joined Phil Harris'
orchestra and toured briefly with them.
Doty
joined Ray Noble's orchestra later in 1935 and stayed with him until he joined
Tommy Dorsey's Orchestra in March of 1937. After a few brief months with Dorsey
(but numerous recordings), Doty joined with Bunny Berigan's
band through the remainder of 1937, also recording quite a few sides with Berigan. In 1938 Doty joined Larry Clinton and stayed until
March 1939, finishing the year with a tour for Bob Zurke.
In the
early 1940s Doty did Broadway musicals ("Louisiana Purchase" and
"Priorities of 1942") and some substitute dates (including Paul
Whiteman), finally settling down into his longest tenure thus far by joining
Fred Waring's Pennsylvanians from 1942 until 1956. The
next five years he played at the Roxy Theatre in the house orchestra
(intermittently substituting at Radio City Music Hall) until he joined Radio
City Music Hall full time in the beginning of 1961. He retired from Radio City and full time
music in April of 1979.
Sometime
in the late 1940s Doty began playing the oboe and continued playing double
reeds (and all the woodwinds) through the remainder of his career. His tenure
with the Roxy Theatre and the Radio City Music Hall exposed him to a much more
classical repertoire, and he studied accordingly. At the same time, he took to
some composing and wrote a piece for woodwinds, featuring the oboe, called the
"Hoboe Simfony,"
which was performed publicly twice. The composition reflects some links and
crossovers between jazz and impressionistic classical music. Sometime also in
the late 1940s Doty began taking on students and continued to teach and attend
student concerts late into his life.
Mike
Doty died on May 31, 1988 at his home in Rochester, Minnesota.
Scope
and Content:
The
collection consists of manuscript scrapbooks, holographic music, and audio
cassettes. The scrapbooks were assembled
by Doty and his wife and include both personal and professional memorabilia
from the period 1918 to 1982. The
manuscript music consists of holographic arrangements of two general types,
jazz and popular music and classical music from the period 1937 to 1986.
Cassette audio tapes include unique recordings of Doty, both in practice and
performance.
Series
Description:
Series
I: Life Scrapbook
1906-1984
.7
linear feet (Boxes 1 and 2)
"Scrap
Book of the Career of Robert Mike Doty in Three Books" (full inventory
follows collection guide). Announcements (posters, broadsides, invitations);
bank check; cards (membership, business, and admission tickets); correspondence
(recommendation, resume); cue card; menus (clubs, airline flight); music
(holograph, published sheet music cover); musician blue books; newspaper and magazine features (full
articles, complete issues, clippings, polls, surveys, rosters, ads, obituaries);
photographs (portraits, poses, performance, and postcards); programs
(performances, playbills, class commencements, pictorial souvenir booklets,
city entertainment guides); purchase receipts; schedules and itineraries
(tours, shows, broadcasts). Roughly arranged chronologically.
Series
II: Manuscripts
1937-1986
.7
linear feet (Boxes 3 and 4)
Scores
(for arranged saxophone section soli), alto saxophone lead sheets, and
individual parts (for each saxophone) from the repertoires of various groups
Doty played with; arranged scores and individual instrumental parts for various
versions of the "Hoboe Symfony;"
arranged scores and individual instrumental parts for an unfinished
composition; individual parts only for a complete composition not composed by
Doty; published arrangements of classical pieces by Tchaikovsky and Mozart,
with Doty's written adaptations for clarinet parts; standard oboe parts of
classical pieces from repertoire of Radio City Music Hall (Bach, Barber,
Debussy, Dukas, Gershwin, Holst,
Prokofiev, Saint-Saens) with Doty's markings.
Series
III: Audio Cassette Recordings
34 audio
cassette tapes (see Inventory of Cassette Tapes for specifics)
(Box 5)
Cassette
audio tapes consist of unique recordings of Doty at practice and in performance,
as well as a radio interview. There are also three cassettes containing
interviews of Doty’s son by CPM archivist David Jellema.
For details of Doty recordings see CPM accession file.
Collection Contents (Folder/Box
List):
Box # Folder # Description
Box 1 Personal Scrapbooks, No.1 & No. 2
No. 1, 1906-1935
No. 2, 1937-1940
Box 2 Personal Scrapbooks, No. 3
No. 3, 1942-1979
Box 3 Manuscripts: Musical Scores and Parts
Folder 1 Alto Saxophone Lead Sheet, “Not for Sale,” undated
Folder 2 Saxophone Section Soli, score only, “Stair Dows,” [Star
Dust], undated
Folder 3 Saxophone Section Soli, score and parts, “Trees,” undated
Folder 4 Saxophone Section Soli, scores only, thirteen selections,
undated
Folder
5 Saxophone Section Soli,
incomplete scores and parts, “Tea for Two,” unidentified tune, undated
Folder
6 Saxophone Section Soli, sheet
music, score, and parts, “Someday My Prince Will Come,” undated
Folder
7 Saxophone Section Soli, parts
only, “Someday My Prince Will Come,” undated
Folder
8 Alto Saxophone, parts only,
“Someday My Prince Will Come,” “Little Girl Blue,” undated
Folder
9 Alto Saxophone, parts, “Little
Girl Blue,” undated
Folder
10 Miscellaneous Fragments,
undated
Folder
11 Mississippi Rag article on “The Merry Macs,” May and June 1983
(photocopies)
Folder
12 Correspondence, Memorabilia,
Discographies, June-October 1982
Folder
13 Correspondence, Discographies,
January 1986
Folder
14 Photograph, Mike Doty, circa
1980
Folder
15 Photocopies: Album covers,
Samples of handwriting and packaging
Folder
16 Recording notes and j-cards of deaccessioned tapes, September 1981-June 1982
Box
4 Manuscripts:
Musical Scores and Parts
Folder 1 “Hoboe Symphony,” May 1951, for the Fred Waring
Television Appearance: one full set, score (untransposed)
and parts; one full set, score (transposed) and parts
Folder
2 “Hobo Symfunny”
[sic], all wind quintet parts, 1951
Folder
3 “Hoboe
Symfonie” [sic], Roxy Theatre version, score and
parts, 1958
Folder
4 “Hoboe
Simfonie” [sic], wind quintet score and all parts,
1960
Folder
5 Hoboe
Symphony: unfinished score for piano, oboe, and symphony, undated; fragment,
undated
Folder
6 Wind quintet fragment,
undated; piano fragment, undated
Folder
7 “Suite Pour Trio D’Anches,” Alexandre Tansman, oboe, clarinet, and bassoon parts, undated
Folder
8 “Danse
des Mirlitons,” Quinto E. Maganini, arranger, published parts for three clarinets and
piano; manuscript bass clarinet part
Folder
9 “Quartet,” W.A. Mozart for
oboe, violin, viola, violincello, published sheet
music; manuscript transcriptions for clarinet and two bass clarinets, undated
Folder
10 Radio City Music Hall, oboe
parts, “F”
Box
5 Audio Cassette Recordings
Materials Cataloged Separately:
Commercial
sheet music and sound recordings, songbooks, and miscellaneous vertical file
materials have been integrated into the general Center collections.
Arrangement:
Scrapbook
roughly arranged chronologically and original arrangement maintained during
processing.
Unless
otherwise noted, the arrangement scheme for the collection was imposed during
processing in the absence of a usable original order.
Location:
Scrapbooks
are filed in the manuscript oversize collections. All other materials are filed
in manuscript collections by the accession number.
Processed
by David Jellema, February 1997
Revised
by Lucinda P. Cockrell, October 2001
Revised
by Rachel K. Morris, July 2011