Ward Lamar Swingle was an American vocalist and jazz musician who founded The Swingle Singers in France in 1962.
Education
Born in Mobile, Alabama, Swingle studied music, particularly jazz, from a very young age. Swingle continued his music studies at the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music, from which he graduated in 1950 (Summa Cum Laude). Swingle then moved to France in 1951 on a Fulbright scholarship, where he studied piano with Walter Gieseking and also worked as a rehearsal pianist for Les Ballets de Paris.
Career
He learned clarinet, oboe and the piano as a child. He was playing in Mobile-area Big Bands before finishing high school. Swingle subsequently applied the scat singing idea to the works of Johann Sebastian Bach.
This concept was the foundation for The Swingle Singers, which became fully established by 1962.
The Swingle Singers released their albums Jazz Sebastian Bach and Bach"s Greatest Hits in 1963. Swingle disbanded the original Swingle Singers in 1973.
He moved to London and formed an English group, which variously had the names Swingle II and the New Swingle Singers. With the new group, he expanded the earlier group"s repertoire to include classical and avant-garde works along with the scat and jazz vocal arrangements.
In 1984, Swingle returned to live in America.
Though he remained musical advisor for his London-based group, he devoted most of his time to workshops, guest conducting and the dissemination of his printed arrangements through his publishing company, Swingle Music. His pioneering ideas in new choral techniques produced invitations to conduct the Stockholm and Netherlands Chamber Choirs, the Dale Warland Singers, the Sydney Philharmonia Motet Choir, the British Broadcasting Corporation Northern Singers and the Music Educators National Conference National Honors Choir at Kennedy Center. In the 2000s he gave a long series of workshops and seminars at universities in both Europe and North America.
In 1997 he wrote an autobiography and treatise entitled Swingle Singing, in which he defined "Swingle Singing" techniques with illustrations from his arrangements and compositions.
Swingle died in Eastbourne, England, on 19 January 2015.
Membership
In 1959, he was a founding member of Les Double Six of Paris, which specialised in scat singing of jazz standards.