Composer/arranger/conductor
Axel Stordahl is best known as
Frank Sinatra's musical director during the first decade of the singer's solo career, and is often credited with helping to bring pop arranging into the modern age. A native of Staten Island, NY, he was born
Odd Stordahl to parents of Norwegian descent on August 8, 1913. He took up the trumpet as a youth, and played in several dance bands around Long Island and the Catskills during the late '20s and early '30s. He also began arranging around this time, and in 1933 he joined Bert Bloch's orchestra in both capacities. Over the next couple of years,
Stordahl sang on the side in a vocal trio dubbed the Three Esquires with bandmates
Jack Leonard and
Joe Bauer. Around 1935 or 1936,
Tommy Dorsey hired all three men, and
Stordahl joined as third trumpet player and part-time arranger. It soon became apparent that arranging was far and away his greatest strength, and he made it his full-time vocation, becoming
Dorsey's lead arranger in short order.
Stordahl wrote mostly dance arrangements for the next few years, but when a young singer named
Frank Sinatra took
Jack Leonard's place,
Stordahl found an even more effective niche working on romantic ballads for the emerging heartthrob.
Stordahl's lovely, sensitive treatments worked marvelously with
Sinatra's supple, yearning voice, and when the singer cut his first four-song solo session in 1942, he hired
Stordahl as the arranger and conductor.
Sinatra left the
Dorsey band for a full-fledged solo career later that year, signing with Columbia and bringing
Stordahl with him to serve as musical director.
Sinatra took the music world by storm over the next few years, projecting a warm, vulnerable intimacy that was unprecedented in American popular music.
Stordahl was an unsung hero in this achievement, thanks to his excellent sense of how to frame
Sinatra's voice. He was among the first American arrangers to tailor his work to the strengths of a specific vocalist; which seems like an obvious thing to do in retrospect, but up until
Sinatra, the star solo vocalist was a rare phenomenon in pop music, save for
Bing Crosby.
Stordahl's work was lush but tasteful, taking advantage of better recording technology to bring out subtler, more intricate instrumental touches and quieter dynamics. His writing for strings was rich, full, and smooth, creating the perfect backdrop for
Sinatra's romantic longing. Essentially,
Sinatra knew what he needed to make his persona work, and
Stordahl knew exactly how to give it to him.
Stordahl often assigned the swinging, up-tempo tunes to other arrangers in the
Sinatra organization, but handled the vast majority of the ballads himself. This blueprint remained consistently successful for most of
Sinatra's tenure at Columbia, and certainly played a major role in his ascent to superstardom.
The prolific
Stordahl wrote over 300 recorded arrangements for
Sinatra, and more than doubled that total with his work for
Sinatra's assorted radio programs during the '40s. Those included stints on Your Hit Parade from 1943-1944 and 1947-1949, plus another show called Songs by Sinatra from 1945-1947.
Stordahl also co-composed several successful songs for
Sinatra and others during the latter half of the '40s, including "I Should Care" (1945), "Day by Day" (1946), "Ain'tcha Ever Comin' Back" (1947), "Night After Night" (1949), and "Meet Me at the Copa" (1950). By the early '50s,
Sinatra's career had taken a downturn, and conflicts with Columbia chief
Mitch Miller over his musical direction led to his exit from the label. He caught on with Capitol and initially intended to bring
Stordahl with him; in fact,
Stordahl headed up his first recording session for his new label. However, sensing that
Sinatra's sound needed an update, Capitol pushed him to record with the up-and-coming
Nelson Riddle, whose ballad treatments generally built on
Stordahl's foundation, albeit with a more contemporary sensibility.
Sinatra had resisted the change at first out of loyalty to
Stordahl, but when
Riddle's work helped revitalize his recording career, he wound up parting ways with his longtime director.
Stordahl married singer
June Hutton (of
the Pied Pipers) and went on to work with singers like
Bing Crosby,
Doris Day (backing her on the hit "Tea for Two"),
Eddie Fisher,
Dinah Shore,
Nanette Fabray, and
Dean Martin, among others. He also led several studio bands for radio and television, and was the musical director for the TV series McHale's Navy. He and
Hutton recorded together for Capitol during the '50s. Toward the end of the decade,
Stordahl became interested in the exotica fad, and issued several lounge albums under his own name, mostly for Decca: 1959's The Lure of the Blue Mediterranean, 1960's
Jasmine and Jade (for Dot), 1961's
The Magic Islands Revisited (with Gene Rains), and 1963's
Guitars Around the World. Unfortunately, by this time,
Stordahl had been diagnosed with cancer. As
Sinatra prepared to leave Capitol for his own label, Reprise, he reunited with
Stordahl one last time on what proved to be his final Capitol concept album, 1961's
Point of No Return.
Stordahl passed away on August 30, 1963, in Encino, CA.
–
Steve Huey, Rovi