Yaged is one of
Benny Goodman's most-devoted disciples, so well-versed in
Goodman's style that he was hired as technical advisor to
Steve Allen for the 1956 film The Benny Goodman Story.
Yaged took up clarinet as an adolescent after hearing
Goodman's 1935 National Biscuit Company broadcasts. He studied for many years with a member of the
New York Philharmonic and was offered a chair with the
Buffalo Philharmonic, which he declined. He instead embraced jazz, playing at New York clubs like Jimmy Ryan's and the Swing Club in the '40s.
Yaged served in the Army during World War II; he worked widely as a sideman before and after the war, notably with
Phil Napoleon's Memphis Five. Some of the famous names on his resumé include
Coleman Hawkins,
Henry "Red" Allen, and
Jack Teagarden. From the mid-'50s,
Yaged mostly led his own bands. Over the next several decades, he became a fixture in such New York nightclubs as the Metropole, Jimmy Weston's, and the Gaslight. By the late '90s,
Yaged was fronting a band called the Felix Swing Band, led by keyboardist Felix Endico. A successful society orchestra based in New York's Westchester County (just north of N.Y.C.), the group's repertoire features arrangements made famous by
Goodman,
Artie Shaw,
Fletcher Henderson,
Chick Webb,
Duke Ellington,
Earl Hines, and
Count Basie, among others.
–
Chris Kelsey, Rovi