Artist's albums
The Best Of "The Capitol Years"
1993 · compilation
Mambos
2023 · album
You May Swing
2021 · album
Piano Man - Great Piano Songs
2013 · compilation
Piano In Venice
2013 · compilation
Piano Melody
2013 · compilation
Live From The Hollywood Palladium
2006 · album
Billy May Plays The Standards
2004 · album
Big Band Classics
2002 · album
The Ultimate
2002 · album
Big Band Bash!
1952 · album
Sorta-May
1955 · album
Naughty Operetta!
1955 · album
A Band Is Born
1957 · album
Jimmie Lunceford In Hi-Fi
1957 · album
Plays For Fancy Dancin'
1957 · album
Harp with a Beat
1957 · album
Billy May's Big Fat Brass
1958 · album
The Girls And Boys On Broadway
1960 · album
The Sweetest Swingin' Sounds Of No Strings
1962 · album
Bill's Bag
1963 · album
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Biography
The last of the great arrangers who wrote regularly for Frank Sinatra, Billy May had several varied careers in and out of jazz. His first notable gig was as an arranger/trumpeter with Charlie Barnet (1938-1940), for whom he wrote the wah-wah-ing hit arrangement of Ray Noble's "Cherokee." Later, he worked in the same capacities for Glenn Miller (1940-1942) and Les Brown (1942) before settling into staff jobs, first at NBC studios, then at Capitol Records, where he led his own studio big band from 1951 to 1954. His arrangements for Sinatra, beginning with Come Fly With Me (1957) and ending with Trilogy (1979), are often in a walloping, brassy, even taunting swing mode, generating some of the singer's most swaggering vocals. May also did extensive scoring for television, film, and commercials. Although May was largely inactive in the '80s and '90s , he unexpectedly surfaced in 1996 with some typically bright big band charts for comic Stan Freberg's The United States of America, Vol. 2 (Rhino), 25 years after his contributions to Vol. 1. The veteran arranger died quietly at home on January 22, 2004 at the age of 87. ~ Richard S. Ginell, Rovi