Mostrando postagens com marcador Arthur Schutt. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Arthur Schutt. Mostrar todas as postagens

18.8.23

JOE VENUTI – 1926-1928 | The Chronogical Classics – 1211 (2001) FLAC (tracks), lossless

This particular slice of the Joe Venuti & Eddie Lang chronology presents some of their all-time best instrumental performances garnished with a small bouquet of precious novelties and sugary love songs with delightfully naïve vocals by Scrappy Lambert, Billy Hillpot, and Rube Bloom. The sweetest of these are sung in a manner so euphoric as to be almost nonsensically charming. This is true even of a suspiciously idyllic paean to the pleasures of "Pickin' Cotton," a faintly onerous song representing a tenebrous subgenre of Tin Pan Alley tunes that wistfully glorified the gallant bygone days of slave or cheap "emancipated" labor. Venuti's lyrically inspired handling of the violin and Lang's virtuosic guitar still sound surprisingly fresh and imaginative. These earliest Venuti and Lang collaborations exude a special sort of positive energy that is unique in all of classic jazz. Some of the instrumental tracks feel like well-organized, improvised hot chamber music. Fortunately, Venuti's "Kickin' the Cat" and "Beatin' the Dog" are presented without any nasty lyrics or cruel sound effects. arwulf arwulf  
Tracklist :


19.6.23

BENNY GOODMAN AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1928-1931 | The Classics Chronological Series – 693 (1993) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

 This CD reissues the first 22 selections led by Benny Goodman, spanning a three-year period when the clarinetist developed into a greatly in-demand studio musician during the Depression. The first ten titles feature him in hot, small groups with the likes of cornetist Jimmy McPartland, trombonist Glenn Miller, trumpeter Wingy Manone, and tenor saxophonist Bud Freeman. Included is "Wolverine Blues," "Jungle Blues" (during which Benny Goodman takes his only recorded trumpet solo), the satirical "Shirt Tail Stomp" (which makes fun of cornball bands), and a pair of trio features ("That's a Plenty" and "Clarinetitis"), recorded seven years before the Benny Goodman Trio debuted. The remaining dozen numbers, from 1930-1931, are strictly dance band performances with an emphasis on melodies and dull vocals (mostly by Scrappy Lambert and Paul Small) and only a few short spots for solos. Scott Yanow
Tracklist + Credits :

25.5.23

THE RED HEADS – 1925-1927 | The Classics Chronological Series – 1267 (2002) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

The Red Heads was a pseudonym for Red Nichols & His Five Pennies whenever their recordings were released on the Melotone, Oriole, or Perfect labels during the years 1925-1927. Following in the wake of EPM Musique's 25-track Complete edition of 1998, Jazz Oracle's 74-track, three-CD set of 2004 augmented the main body of their work with a surprisingly large number of sides by pop vocalists Jay C. Flippen and Cliff Edwards with sweet and jazzy accompaniments by the Red Heads. Edwards, also known as Ukulele Ike, eventually achieved international fame as the voice of Jiminy Cricket. This exhaustively thorough chronological survey also features vocals by Frank Gould and Arthur Fields. Having all of these charming period pop vocals in the package should be regarded as a confectionary bonus rather than a distracting disadvantage. The producers have placed the instrumentals in full context by including harmless pleasantries like "You Should See My Tootsie" and "I'm 'Gonna' Hang Around My Sugar," with the word "gonna" in quotes. Instrumentalists of note in the Red Heads discography are trumpeters Red Nichols and Wingy Manone; cornetist Brad Gowans, trombonist Miff Mole, reed players Jimmy Dorsey and Fud Livingston; pianists Arthur Schutt and Rube Bloom; guitarists Dick McDonough and Eddie Lang, and ace percussionist Vic Berton. This amazing anthology is not exclusively intended or recommended for historians, specialists, or recluses. It is a thrilling magnum dose of great historic jazz, dance, and pop recordings from smack in the middle of the '20s. No one should be put off by the quantity of tracks, the modest helping of alternate takes, or the marvelously old-fashioned nature of the music within. It is perhaps most important that it be heard by people who do not specialize in music and culture from this period. The Red Heads can and will speak to anyone. arwulf arwulf

Tracklist + Credits :


4.5.23

RED NICHOLS – 1925-1927 | The Classics Chronological Series – 1212 (2001) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

This anthology collects sides released between 1925 and 1927 by Red Nichols under the usual assortment of monikers, including, this time around, Lanin's Red Heads, the Hottentots, Red & Miff's Stompers, and Red Nichols & His 5 Pennies. These combos usually included longtime associates Miff Mole on trombone and Jimmy Dorsey on clarinet and alto sax. As a cornet player, Nichols often gets dismissed as a version of Bix Beiderbecke lite, an assessment that isn't exactly fair, and he tackles Beiderbecke's own "Davenport Blues" here in his own easy style, showing allegiance more than competition. Other highlights here include the stripped-down "Jimtown Blues" and the intricate "Boneyard Shuffle." Nichols tackled more innovative and complicated arrangements a couple of years down the road from these recordings, and while this might not be the place to start to sample Nichols' massive 1920s output (he is rumored to have appeared on over 4,000 recordings during that decade alone), it is nonetheless a warm, bright, and pleasant listen. Steve Leggett 
Tracklist :
1    Lanin's Red Heads–    Jimtown Blues    3:08
2    Lanin's Red Heads–    King Porter Stomp    3:08
3    Lanin's Red Heads–    I Wouldn't Be Where I Am If You Hadn't Gone Away    2:55
4    Lanin's Red Heads–    Flag That Train    3:05
5    Lanin's Red Heads–    I'm Gonna Hang Around My Sugar    3:21
6    Lanin's Red Heads–    Five Foot Two, Eyes Of Blue 3:11
Vocals – Art Gillham
7    The Hottentots–    Down And Out Blues    2:59
8    The Hottentots–    The Camel Walk    2:54
9    The Hottentots–    Pensacola    2:36
10    The Hottentots–    Nobody's Rose    2:49
11    The Hottentots–    Lots O'Mama    2:40
12    Red And Miff's Stompers–    Alabama Stomp    3:47
13    Red And Miff's Stompers–    Stampede    4:38
14    Red And Miff's Stompers–    Hurricane    4:28
15    Red And Miff's Stompers–    Black Bottom Stomp    3:50
16    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Washboard Blues    3:06
17    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    That's No Bargain    2:43
18    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Buddy's Habits    2:51
19    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Boneyard Shuffle    3:10
20    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Alabama Stomp    2:55
21    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Hurricane    2:56
22    Red And Miff's Stompers–    Delirium    3:04
23    Red And Miff's Stompers–    Davenport Blues    3:02
Credits :
Banjo – Tony Colucci (tracks: 1 to 6, 9, 10, 22, 23), Unknown Artist (tracks: 11)
Bass – Joe Tarto (tracks: 1 to 6, 12 to 15)
Clarinet – Dick Johnson (tracks: 7 to 10), Unknown Artist (tracks: 11)
Clarinet, Alto Saxophone – Jimmy Dorsey (tracks: 12 to 23)
Clarinet, Alto Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Alfie Evans (tracks: 1 to 6, 12 to 15), Clarence Heidke (tracks: 1 to 6)
Clarinet, Tenor Saxophone – George Slater (tracks: 1 to 6)
Cornet – Unknown Artist (tracks: 11)
Directed By – Sam Lanin (tracks: 1 to 6)
Drums – Unknown Artist (tracks: 11), Vic Berton (tracks: 1 to 10, 12 to 23)
Guitar – Eddie Lang (tracks: 16 to 21)
Piano – Art Gillham (tracks: 5, 6), Arthur Schutt (tracks: 12 to 23), Bill Krenz (tracks: 1 to 4), Rube Bloom (tracks: 7 to 10), Unknown Artist (tracks: 11)
Saxophone [C-Melody] – Unknown Artist (tracks: 11)
Trombone – Miff Mole (tracks: 1 to 10, 12 to 15, 18 to 23), Unknown Artist (tracks: 11)
Trumpet – Hymie Farberman (tracks: 1 to 6), Red Nichols (tracks: 1 to 10, 12 to 23)
Violin – Unknown Artist (tracks: 5, 6)

RED NICHOLS – 1927-1928 | The Classics Chronological Series – 1241 (2002) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Loring "Red" Nichols was an expert cornet player, a solid improviser, and apparently a workaholic, since he is rumored to have appeared on over 4,000 recordings during the 1920s alone. One of the ways he managed this feat was by appearing under countless different names, and in the case of this collection covering the years 1927 and 1928, he made recordings as Red Nichols & His 5 Pennies, the Six Hottentots, Red & Mill's Stompers, and Red Nichols' Stompers. Pay no attention to whether there were five Pennies or six Hottentots, since Nichols' groups tended to be eight or ten pieces or more, no matter what the moniker read, and usually featured longtime associates Miff Mole on trombone, Jimmy Dorsey on clarinet or alto sax, and the marvelous Dudley Fosdick on mellophonium. This collection features one of the biggest hits of Nichols' career, "Ida, Sweet as Apple Cider," and like "Cornfed," also collected here, it effortlessly combines a sophisticated arrangement with a kind of easy, down-home feel that masks its complexities. Although critics often brush right by him, Nichols was always a fresh and innovative arranger and bandleader. Steve Leggett  
Tracklist :
1    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Bugle Call Rag    2:51
2    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Back Beats    2:50
3    The Six Hottentots–    I'm In Love Again    2:48
4    The Six Hottentots–    Sometimes I'm Happy    3:05
5    The Six Hottentots–    Rosy Cheeks    2:55
6    The Six Hottentots–    The Memphis Blues    3:09
7    The Six Hottentots–    Melancholy Charlie    2:57
8    The Six Hottentots–    Hurricane    3:01
9    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Cornfed    2:50
10    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Five Pennies    2:48
11    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Mean Dog Blues    3:11
12    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Riverboat Shuffle 3:01
Arranged By – Fud Livingston
13    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Eccentric 2:58
Arranged By – Fud Livingston
14    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Ida, Sweet As Apple Cider 2:47
Arranged By – Lennie Hayton
15    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Feelin' No Pain 2:54
Arranged By – Fud Livingston
16    Red And Miff's Stompers–    Slippin' Around    2:45
17    Red And Miff's Stompers–    Feelin' No Pain    3:04
18    Red Nichols' Stompers–    Sugar    3:17
19    Red Nichols' Stompers–    Make My Cot Where The Cot-Cot-Cotton Grows    3:18
20    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Nobody's Sweetheart    3:05
21    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    My Gal Sal    3:08
22    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Avalon    3:07
23    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Japanese Sandman    3:16
Credits :
Alto Saxophone – Max Farley (tracks: 18, 19)
Bass Saxophone, Instruments [Goofus] – Adrian Rollini (tracks: 9 to 15, 18, 19)
Brass Bass – Jack Hanson (tracks: 16 to 19), Joe Tarto (tracks: 3 to 8)
Clarinet, Alto Saxophone – Jimmy Dorsey (tracks: 1 to 11)
Clarinet, Tenor Saxophone – Fud Livingston (tracks: 11 to 17, 20 to 23), Pee Wee Russell (tracks: 11 to 23)
Drums – Chauncey Morehouse (tracks: 18, 19), Vic Berton (tracks: 1 to 17, 20 to 23)
Guitar – Carl Kress (tracks: 16 to 23), Dick McDonough (tracks: 12 to 15), Eddie Lang (tracks: 1, 2, 9 to 11)
Mellophone – Dudley Fosdick (tracks: 20 to 23)
Piano – Arthur Schutt (tracks: 1 to 11)
Piano [Either/Or] – Arthur Schutt (tracks: 18, 19), Lennie Hayton (tracks: 18, 19)
Piano, Celesta – Lennie Hayton (tracks: 12 to 17, 20 to 21)
Saxophone [C-Melody] – Frank Trumbauer (tracks: 18, 19)
Trombone – Bill Rank (tracks: 18, 19), Miff Mole (tracks: 1 to 15, 18 to 23), Unknown Artist (tracks: 18, 19)
Trumpet – Bo Ashford (tracks: 18, 19), Leo McConville (tracks: 12 to 15), Manny Klein (tracks: 12 to 15), Red Nichols
Violin – Joe Venuti (tracks: 1, 2, 9 to 11)
Vocals – Charlie Farrell (tracks: 18, 19), Irving Kaufman (tracks: 3 to 5), Jim Miller (17) (tracks: 18, 19)


RED NICHOLS – 1928-1929 | The Classics Chronological Series – 1270 (2002) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

This collection, drawn from recordings done by Red Nichols in 1928 and 1929, finds him in transition, struggling to deal with the advent of Dixieland and the coming big-band era. Nichols worked best with midsize bands (six to ten pieces), and his most successful arrangements (the lead track here, "Poor Butterfly," is a good example) feature unusual tonal placements that give each piece an edgy, cinematic feel. Dixieland made such touches far too subtle, and Nichols was unable to play to his strengths as the 1930s progressed. A valuable record of an interesting jazzman at the crossroads, this compilation will find its greatest appeal with serious jazz buffs, historians, and collectors. Steve Leggett
Tracklist :
1    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Poor Butterfly (Vocal)    3:58
2    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Poor Butterfly (Instr.)    4:01
3    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Can't Yo' Hear Me Calling, Caroline? (Vocal)    4:05
4    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Can't Yo' Hear Me Calling, Caroline? (Instr.)    4:04
5    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Panama    3:02
6    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    There'll Come A Time    3:14
7    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Dear Old Southland (Vocal)    4:27
8    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Dear Old Southland (Instr.)    4:31
9    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Limehouse Blues (Vocal)    4:38
10    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Limehouse Blues (Instr.)    4:32
11    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Whispering    3:03
12    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    I Can't Give You Anything But Love    2:49
13    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Margie    2:56
14    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Imagination    2:57
15    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Original Dixieland One-Step    2:46
16    Red Nichols And His Orchestra–    Harlem Twist 2:51
Vocals – Chauncey Morehouse
17    Red Nichols And His Orchestra–    Five Pennies    3:25
18    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    A Pretty Girl Is Like A Melody    3:03
19    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    I Never Knew    2:58
20    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Who's Sorry Now?    3:01
21    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Chinatown, My Chinatown    3:13
Credits :
Bass – Art Miller (tracks: 1 to 15)
Clarinet, Alto Saxophone – Benny Goodman (tracks: 19 to 21), Jimmy Dorsey (tracks: 5, 6, 18)
Clarinet, Tenor Saxophone – Fud Livingston (tracks: 1 to 18, 21)
Drums – Vic Berton (tracks: 1 to 12, 18)
Drums, Vibraphone – Chauncey Morehouse (tracks: 13 to 17, 19 to 21)
Guitar – Carl Kress (tracks: 1 to 6, 13 to 21), Eddie Lang (tracks: 7 to 10)
Mellophone – Dudley Fosdick
Piano – Arthur Schutt (tracks: 1 to 20)
Piano, Celesta – Lennie Hayton (tracks: 21)
Trombone – Miff Mole
Trumpet – Leo McConville (tracks: 1 to 11, 13 to 17), Manny Klein (tracks: 1 to 10, 13 to 15, 18 to 21), Red Nichols
Violin – Joe Venuti (tracks: 11, 12), Murray Kellner (tracks: 1 to 10, 13 to 15)
Vocals – Scrappy Lambert (tracks: 1, 3, 7, 9)

RED NICHOLS – 1929 | The Classics Chronological Series – 1332 (2003) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

By 1929, Red Nichols had been active as a recording artist for nearly eight years. He had been making a name for himself as a leader since 1925, usually in the company of a superhuman trombonist by the name of Miff Mole. While some folks might focus upon the presence of Jimmy Dorsey, seasoned early jazz addicts will also cherish the opportunity to commune with the spirits of Miff Mole, Vic Berton and Arthur Schutt. The first three selections reveal what these men were able to accomplish under optimal conditions,( i.e. without vocals or violins). The band is wonderful, especially when Adrian Rollini introduces "Allah's Holiday" with the bass saxophone or takes a weird solo during "Roses of Picardy" using an ebonite tube full of holes with a clarinet mouthpiece stuck in the end of it. This bizarre instrument was identified as the E flat "hot fountain pen." It has a reedy, often slightly congested sound. The Captivators session brings on a veritable sitz bath of early-'30s smooth dance band effects. The instrumental takes were shipped straight to Germany, while Scrappy Lambert's vocal tracks were foisted upon the American record-buying public. Glenn Miller sounds as though he's blowing his trombone into a wine bottle during the instrumental version of "I'm Marching Home to You." At their best these sides enable the listener to cultivate a pleasantly false sense of well-being. Miller, Jack Teagarden, Babe Russin and multi-instrumental Benny Goodman made for a perfectly reasonable Five Pennies until Scrappy showed up and started singing "On the Alamo." After he ran out of breath, they gagged the Lamb and recorded a perfectly good instrumental take. A 19-piece Five Pennies band -- including four violins -- deliberately created a movie soundtrack malaise before the arrangement kicked the band into a suitably rambunctious background for Teagarden's handsome vocal on "Sally, Won't You Come Back?." Two weeks later, swollen to 20 players with Lambert attached to its neck like a pilot fish, the band cut three more sentimentally disturbed numbers. On June 12 of 1929, Nichols carved his band down to 12 units. Apparently incapable of making more than a handful of records without singers, he now induced Red McKenzie to moan and groan his way through "Who Cares?." Fortunately, "Rose of Washington Square" came out as a hot instrumental, enabling the listener to enjoy the combined energies of Pee Wee Russell, Bud Freeman, Joe Sullivan and Dave Tough. By this time you might as well completely surrender to the pop music esthetic of mid- to late- 1929 and simply enjoy the lyrics to "I May Be Wrong, But I Think You're Wonderful." Lambert is, well, useful as a concise articulator of the words to "They Didn't Believe Me," one of the few songs Jerome Kern would be remembered for if he hadn't slept in and missed the boat when the Lusitania sailed off on its rendezvous with German torpedoes in 1915. If you forget that this is supposed to have something to do with jazz, it feels like a two-bit lieder recital. So what the hell. After all is said and done, it really is a lovely old tune. arwulf arwulf  
Tracklist
1    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Alice Blue Gown    2:45
2    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Allah's Holiday    3:18
3    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Roses Of Picardy    2:38
4    The Captivators , Direction Of Red Nichols–    I'm Marching Home To You (Vocal) 3:08
Vocals – Scrappy Lambert
5    The Captivators , Direction Of Red Nichols–    I'm Marching Home To You (Instr.)    3:04
6    The Captivators , Direction Of Red Nichols–    Building A Nest For Mary (Vocal) 3:07
Vocals – Scrappy Lambert
7    The Captivators , Direction Of Red Nichols–    Building A Nest For Mary (Instr.)    3:06
8    The Captivators , Direction Of Red Nichols–    I Used To Love Her In The Moonlight (Vocal) 3:02
Vocals – Scrappy Lambert
9    The Captivators , Direction Of Red Nichols–    I Used To Love Her In The Moonlight (Instr.)    3:02
10    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Indiana 2:40
Arranged By – Glenn Miller
11    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Dinah    3:15
12    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    On The Alamo (Vocal) 3:04
Vocals – Scrappy Lambert
13    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    On The Alamo (Instr.)    3:05
14    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Sally, Won't You Come Back? 4:19
Vocals – Scrappy Lambert, Jack Teagarden
15    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    It Had To Be You 4:46
Arranged By – Arthur Schutt
Vocals – Scrappy Lambert

16    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    I'll See You In My Dreams 4:36
Arranged By – Glenn Miller
Vocals – Scrappy Lambert

17    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Some Of These Days 4:16
Arranged By – Herb Taylor, Red Nichols
Vocals – Scrappy Lambert, Jack Teagarden

18    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Who Cares?    3:17
19    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Rose Of Washington Square    2:51
20    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    I May Be Wrong, But I Think You're Wonderful 2:54
Vocals – Scrappy Lambert
21    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    The New Yorkers 3:05
Vocals – Red McKenzie
22    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    They Didn't Believe Me 2:55
Vocals – Scrappy Lambert
23    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Wait For The Happy Ending 2:39
Arranged By – Fud Livingston
Vocals – Scrappy Lambert

24    Red Nichols And His Five Pennies–    Can't We Be Friends? 2:56
Vocals – Dick Robertson
Credits :
Alto Saxophone – Unknown Artist (tracks: 10 to 13)
Banjo – Tommy Felline (tracks: 18 to 24)
Bass – Art Miller (tracks: 4 to 13, 15 to 19), Jack Hansen (tracks: 20 to 24), Joe Tarto (tracks: 14 to 17)
Bass Saxophone, Instruments [Hot Fountain Pen] – Adrian Rollini (tracks: 1 to 3)
Clarinet – Fud Livingston (tracks: 1 to 3, 20 to 24), Pee Wee Russell (tracks: 18 to 24)
Clarinet, Alto Saxophone – Jimmy Dorsey (tracks: 1 to 3, 14 to 17, 20 to 24), Pete Pumiglio (tracks: 4 to 9)
Clarinet, Alto Saxophone, Baritone Saxophone – Benny Goodman (tracks: 9 to 13)
Clarinet, Alto Saxophone, Flute, Oboe, Bassoon – Alfie Evans (tracks: 4 to 9, 14), Arnold Brilhart (tracks: 14 to 17)
Clarinet, Tenor Saxophone – Jimmy Crossan (tracks: 4 to 9, 15 to 17)
Drums – Chick Condon (tracks: 4 to 9), Dave Tough (tracks: 18, 19), Gene Krupa (tracks: 10 to 13), George Beebe (tracks: 20 to 24), Vic Berton (tracks: 1 to 3, 14 to 17)
Guitar, Banjo – Carl Kress (tracks: 1 to 17)
Mellophone – Dudley Fosdick (tracks: 1 to 3)
Piano – Arthur Schutt (tracks: 1 to 17), Irving Brodsky (tracks: 20 to 24), Joe Sullivan (tracks: 18, 19)
Tenor Saxophone – Babe Russin (tracks: 10 to 13), Bud Freeman (tracks: 18, 19)
Tenor Saxophone, Flute, Oboe – Larry Binyon (tracks: 14 to 17)
Trombone – Bill Trone (tracks: 14), Glenn Miller (tracks: 4 to 24), Herb Taylor (tracks: 15 to 24), Jack Teagarden (tracks: 10 to 24), Miff Mole (tracks: 1 to 3)
Trombone [Either, Or] – Bill Trone (tracks: 10 to 13), Herb Taylor (tracks: 10 to 13)
Trumpet – John Egan* (tracks: 20 to 24), Leo McConville (tracks: 10 to 14), Manny Klein (tracks: 1 to 19), Red Nichols, Tommy Thunen (tracks: 15 to 24)
Violin – Henry Whiteman (tracks: 14 to 17, 20, 21, 23, 24), Joe Raymond (tracks: 14 to 17), Lou Raderman (tracks: 14 to 17), Maurice Goffin (tracks: 20, 21, 23, 24), Murray Kellner (tracks: 14 to 17)
Violoncello – Lucien Schmitt (tracks: 14 to 17)

MIFF MOLE – 1927 | The Classics Chronological Series – 1269 (2002) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Trombonist Miff Mole gained some fame in the 1920s for his many recordings with cornetist Red Nichols. At a time when many other trombonists had a much more percussive approach, Mole had an unusual style full of staccato runs, unpredictable interval jumps and impressive technique. Mole led a series of sessions during the 1927-30 period with his Molers, which overlapped personnel with Nichols' bands, utilizing some of the top white studio players of the era. This superior British LP contains all 12 numbers cut at the trombonist's sessions of 1927, plus four tunes on which the band backs the popular singer Sophie Tucker. With Nichols, either Jimmy Dorsey or Pee Wee Russell on clarinet, usually pianist Arthur Schutt, guitarist Dick McDonough and drummer Vic Berton being among the key sidemen (bass saxophonist Adrian Rollini is an asset on the final six numbers), the music is quite advanced for the time, particularly in its arrangements. Highlights include "Alexander's Ragtime Band," "Hurricane," "Davenport Blues," Tucker's "After You've Gone," "Imagination" and "Original Dixieland One-Step." Scott Yanow  
Tracklist
1    The Arkansas Travellers–    Washboard Blues    2:42
2    The Arkansas Travellers–    That's No Bargain    2:52
3    The Arkansas Travellers–    Boneyard Shuffle    2:50
4    Miff Mole's Molers–    Alexander's Ragtime Band    2:47
5    Miff Mole's Molers–    Some Sweet Day    3:02
6    Miff Mole's Molers–    Hurricane    2:44
7    Miff Mole's Molers–    Davenport Blues    3:04
8    Miff Mole's Molers–    The Darktown Strutter's Ball    2:50
9    Miff Mole's Molers–    A Hot Time In The Old Town Tonight    2:49
10    Sophie Tucker Acc. By Miff Mole's Molers–    After You've Gone    2:45
11    Sophie Tucker Acc. By Miff Mole's Molers–    I Ain't Got Nobody    2:25
12    Sophie Tucker Acc. By Miff Mole's Molers–    One Sweet Letter From You    2:38
13    Sophie Tucker Acc. By Miff Mole's Molers–    Fifty Million Frenchmen Can't Be Wrong    2:45
14    The Arkansas Travellers–    Ja Da    3:04
15    The Arkansas Travellers–    Sensation    2:35
16    The Arkansas Travellers–    Stompin' Fool    3:03
17    Miff Mole's Molers–    Imagination    2:53
18    Miff Mole's Molers–    Feelin' No Pain    2:52
19    Miff Mole's Molers–    Original Dixieland One Step    2:47
20    Miff Mole's Molers–    My Gal Sal    3:05
21    Miff Mole's Molers–    Honolulu Blues    2:48
22    Miff Mole's Molers–    The New Twister    3:01
23    The Arkansas Travellers–    Birmingham Breakdown    2:44
24    The Arkansas Travellers–    Red Head Blues    2:37
25    The Arkansas Travellers–    I Ain't Got Nobody    2:41
Credits :
Alto Saxophone – Fred Morrow (tracks: 1 to 3, 14 to 16, 23 to 25)
Banjo, Guitar – Dick McDonough (tracks: 4 to 9, 17 to 22)
Bass Saxophone – Adrian Rollini (tracks: 17 to 22)
Brass Bass – Joe Tarto (tracks: 7 to 13)
Clarinet – Jimmy Dorsey (tracks: 1 to 3, 7 to 16), Pee Wee Russell (tracks: 17 to 25)
Clarinet, Tenor Saxophone – Fud Livingston (tracks: 17 to 25)
Drums – Ray Bauduc (tracks: 7 to 9), Vic Berton (tracks: 1 to 6, 10 to 25)
Guitar – Eddie Lang (tracks: 10 to 13, 17 to 22)
Piano – Arthur Schutt (tracks: 1 to 9, 14 to 22), Rube Bloom (tracks: 23 to 25), Ted Shapiro (tracks: 10 to 13)
Trombone – Miff Mole
Trumpet – Red Nichols
Vocals – Sophie Tucker (tracks: 10 to 13)

KEVIN HAYS — Open Range (2005) Serie Piano Works – III | FLAC (tracks+.cue) lossless

"Open Range is one of the most remarkable solo works of the past decade" - (JAZZTHETIK) ACT Kevin Hays' departure from his bi...