Mostrando postagens com marcador Panama Francis. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Panama Francis. Mostrar todas as postagens

30.5.23

LUCKY MILLINDER AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1941-1942 | The Classics Chronological Series – 712 (1993) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

All 20 of the Lucky Millinder Orchestra's valuable 1941-1942 recordings are on this recommended CD. Millinder himself was not a musician and his only vocal here is mostly shouting on "Ride, Red, Ride," but he was an effective bandleader and frontman. Other than a couple of World War II propaganda songs, the music on these sessions emphasizes swing, and several notable artists are featured. Sister Rosetta Tharpe (who also played excellent guitar) has six rollicking showcases, and among the soloists are clarinetist Buster Bailey, tenorman Stafford Simon, pianist Bill Doggett, and (on the final four songs) altoist Tab Smith and the rapidly emerging trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie. On "Little John Special," Dizzy quotes directly from the as-yet-unwritten "Salt Peanuts." Other highlights include "Rock Daniel," "Apollo Jump," "Rock Me," "That's All," and "Mason Flyer." Scott Yanow
Tracklist + Credits : 

LUCKY MILLINDER AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1943-1947 | The Classics Chronological Series – 1026 (1998) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

The Lucky Millinder Orchestra's best-known recordings are from 1941-42, making this Classics CD of great interest due to the many rarities and a lot of variety. First there are four V-discs from 1943 that showcase with Millinder (for the last time) the singing and guitar playing of Sister Rosetta Tharpe, who does remakes of four of her hits (including "That's All" and "Rock Daniel"). "Savoy," from the same period, is highlighted by one of trumpeter Joe Guy's best-recorded solos, and "Shipyard Social Junction" was one of the band's final top-notch instrumentals. Of the four numbers from 1944, two songs have the recording debut of singer Wynonie Harris, and on "Hurry, Hurry," the legendary trumpeter Freddy Webster can be heard briefly. There are also two okay numbers from 1945, six from 1946 (including singer Annisteen Allen on "There's Good Blues Tonight" and some good spots for the tenor of Sam "The Man" Taylor) and four vocal cuts from the following year. Many of the very interesting sidemen actually have no real solo space (including tenors Lucky Thompson and Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis), but most of the vocals are easy to take and the Millinder Orchestra was adjusting well to the rise of R&B. An interesting and often historic set. Scott Yanow  
Tracklist :

15.4.23

CAB CALLOWAY AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1942-1947 (1998) The Classics Chronological Series – 996 | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

The final CD of the Classic label's complete reissuance of Cab Calloway's 1930-47 recordings also includes the last recordings of Cab with his regularly working big band. This 1998 CD starts out with a couple of superior but originally rejected numbers ("What's Buzzin', Cousin?" and "Chant of the Jungle") from 1942, followed by a couple of rare V-disc numbers from 1944. Otherwise, the material dates from 1945 or 1947 with just two selections from 1946. During this era, the still-popular Calloway was finding it increasingly difficult to keep his orchestra together, as were all the other bandleaders, but the quality of his music remained fairly high, even touched slightly by bop in some of the arranged passages. Some of the vocals are a bit silly, particularly "Dawn Time and "Afternoon Moon," but there are also a few near-classic jive numbers. Highlights include the snobbish "A Blue Serge Suit With a Belt in the Back," "Don't Falter at the Altar" (released here for the first time), "The Jungle King" (one of two numbers done with a septet called the Cab-Jivers), "Give Me Twenty Nickels for a Dollar," "Two Blocks Down, Turn to the Left," "The Calloway Boogie," "Everybody Eats When They Come To My House," and the somewhat bizarre "The San Francisco Fan." Although Calloway dominates the music, there are scattered and consistently worthwhile solos by trumpeter Jonah Jones and tenors Ike Quebec and Sam "The Man" Taylor. Virtually all of these recordings are obscure, making the release of this music quite noteworthy both for swing collectors and Calloway fans. Recommended, as are all of the CDs in Classics' perfectly done Cab Calloway series. Scott Yanow  
Tracklist  :
1    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    What's Buzzin', Cousin? 2:38
Mack Gordon / Harry Owens
Vocals – The Cabaliers

2    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Chant Of The Jungle    3:18
 Nacio Herb Brown / Arthur Freed
3    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    I'm Making Believe 1:50
Vocals – Dotty Salters
 Mack Gordon / James V. Monaco

4    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Foo A Little Ballyhoo    3:01
 Cab Calloway / Buster Harding / Jack Palmer
5    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Let's Take The Long Way Home    2:36
 Harold Arlen / Johnny Mercer
6    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Foo A Little Bally-hoo    3:01
 Cab Calloway / Buster Harding / Jack Palmer
7    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    All At Once    2:50
 Ira Gershwin / Kurt Weill
8    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Dawn Time    3:01
 Eddie DeLange / Buster Harding
9    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    If This Isn't Love    2:57
 Cab Calloway
10    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    A Blue Serge Suit With A Belt In The Back    2:26
 John Fortis / Max Spickol
11    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Here I Go Just Dreamin' Away    2:47
 Al J. Neiburg / William Henri Woode
12    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    The Honeydripper    2:55
 Joe Liggins
13    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Afternoon Moon    3:09
 Eddie DeLange / Duke Ellington
14    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Hey Now, Hey Now    2:55
 Cab Calloway / Stanley Hill
15    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    I Got A Gal Named Nettie    3:06
 Cab Calloway
16    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Hi-De-Ho Man    2:59
 Cab Calloway / Buster Harding / Jack Palmer
17    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Necessity    2:52
 E.Y. "Yip" Harburg / Burton Lane
18    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Oh Grandpa    2:59
 Cab Calloway / Stanley Hill / Bill Tennyson
19    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Don't Falter At The Alter    2:40
 Cab Calloway
20    Cab Calloway And His Cab-Jivers–    Give Me Twenty Nickels For A Dollar    3:01
Wolf / Brandt
21    Cab Calloway And His Cab-Jivers–    The Jungle King    3:14
 Mort Dixon
22    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Two Blocks Down, Turn To The Left    3:10
 Teddy Powell / Alex Rogers
23    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    San Francisco Fan    3:17
 Sammy Mysels / Dick Sanford
24    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    The Calloway Boogie    3:00
 Cab Calloway
25    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Everybody Eats When They Come To My House    2:43
 Jeanne Burns / Cab Calloway
Credits
Alto Saxophone – Hilton Jefferson
Alto Saxophone, Baritone Saxophone – Andrew Brown (tracks: 1, 2), Charles Frazier (tracks: 16 to 19, 22 to 25), Rudy Powell (tracks: 7 to 15)
Baritone Saxophone – Greely Walton (tracks: 3 to 6)
Bass – Milt Hinton
Clarinet, Alto Saxophone – Alfred Gibson (tracks: 2 to 15), Jerry Blake (tracks: 1)
Directed By – Cab Calloway
Drums – Buford Oliver (tracks: 12, 13), Cozy Cole (tracks: 1, 2, 14, 15), J.C. Heard (tracks: 3 to 11), Panama Francis (tracks: 16 to 25)
Guitar – Danny Barker (tracks: 1 to 13), John Smith (tracks: 14 to 25)
Piano – Bennie Payne (tracks: 1, 2, 14, 15), Dave Rivera (tracks: 3 to 13, 16 to 25)
Tenor Saxophone – Bob Dorsey (tracks: 7 to 15), Ike Quebec (tracks: 3 to 15), Irving "Skinny" Brown (tracks: 2 to 6), Sam Taylor (tracks: 16 to 25), Ted McRae (tracks: 1), Walter "Foots" Thomas (tracks: 1, 2)
Trombone – Earl Hardy (tracks: 14 to 19, 22 to 25), Fred Robinson (tracks: 3 to 13), James Buxton (2) (tracks: 16 to 19, 22 to 25), John Haughton (tracks: 9 to 11), Keg Johnson (tracks: 1 to 8, 12 to 19, 22 to 25), Quentin Jackson (tracks: 1 to 19, 22 to 25)
Trombone, Vibraphone – Tyree Glenn (tracks: 1 to 15)
Trumpet – Johnny Letman (tracks: 16 to 19, 22 to 25), Jonah Jones, Lammar Wright (tracks: 1, 2, 16 to 19, 22 to 25), Paul Webster (tracks: 3 to 13, 16 to 19,to 25), Roger Jones (tracks: 5 to 15), Russell Smith (tracks: 1 to 15), Shad Collins (tracks: 1 to 15)
Vocals – Cab Calloway (tracks: 1, 2, 4 to 25)

CAB CALLOWAY AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1949-1955 (2003) The Classics Chronological Series – 1287 | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Having spent years showcasing his own personality while diminishing the importance of the instrumentalists in his bands, Cab Calloway groveled during the early '50s, resorting to every imaginable gimmick and often sounding positively desperate. Two rather forced duets with Eugenie Baird employ exactly the same material as Pearl Bailey and Hot Lips Page were using during that same time period. These somewhat irritating covers are as different as can be from the fine artistry of Pearl and Page. "Rooming House Boogie" actually rocks, and Sam Taylor has a good hot solo. An overbearing tribute to Joe Louis is followed by the misogynistic "Your Voice." Notoriously intolerant of new musical ideas when young Dizzy Gillespie worked in his orchestra, by 1949 Cab had the unmitigated gall to sing a stupid novelty called "I Beeped When I Shoulda Bopped." This in itself was a gross imitation of Dizzy Gillespie's hit record "He Beeped When He Shoulda Bopped." Musical genres alternate as if Cab's career has been stuffed into a Waring blender. "Pero Que Jelengue," "La Mucura," and to some extent "Que Pasa Chica" are interesting examples of Calloway getting in touch with his Latino background. Cab should have done this more often! "The Duck Trot" has a bit of conga drumming and the tough tenor sax of Ike Quebec. On "Shotgun Boogie," Cab attempts to emulate Tennessee Ernie Ford. "One for My Baby" depicts a pathetic, lonely man trying to bond with his bartender. In 1952 Calloway began recording as a star vocalist backed by various orchestras rather than his own. Some of these tunes sound as if they were written expressly for Webb Pierce or Lefty Frizzell. There's a significant influx of material from the country & western market. "Hey Joe" was sent up by Homer & Jethro under the title "Hay Schmo." Why Cab Calloway tried to sing these songs, or indeed more than half of the material gathered together on this disc, is a mystery that can only be explained by economic straits and the often horrifying pop culture landscape of the 1950s. While Ray Charles was able to triumph with this kind of music, Calloway merely sounded like he was cornered by circumstances. arwulf arwulf  
Tracklist  :
1    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Baby It's Cold Outside 2:17
Vocals – Eugenie Baird
2    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    The Huckle-Buck    2:27
3    Cab Calloway And His Cab Jivers–    Ol' Joe Louis 2:31
Choir [Uncredited] – The Cab Jivers
4    Cab Calloway And His Cab Jivers–    Your Voice 2:36
Speech [Uncredited] – Maud McElroy
5    Cab Calloway And His Cab Jivers–    Rooming House Boogie    3:20
6    Cab Calloway And His Cab Jivers–    I Beeped When I Shoulda Bopped    2:35
7    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    The Duck Trot    3:10
8    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Pero Que Jelengue    2:44
9    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    The Keeper Of The Blues    2:44
10    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    La Mucura    2:51
11    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Que Pasa Chica    2:31
12    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Shot Gun Boogie    3:00
13    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    Frosty Morning    2:35
14    Cab Calloway And His Orchestra–    One For My Baby    3:28
15    Cab Calloway Acc. By Jimmy Carroll And His Orchestra–    I'll Get By    2:47
16    Cab Calloway Acc. By Jimmy Carroll And His Orchestra–    Minnie The Moocher    3:05
17    Cab Calloway Acc. By Jimmy Carroll And His Orchestra–    Gambler's Guitar (Gamblers' Blues)    2:31
18    Cab Calloway Acc. By Jimmy Carroll And His Orchestra–    Hey Joe    2:25
19    Cab Calloway Acc. By Sy Oliver And His Orchestra–    Jilted    2:06
20    Cab Calloway Acc. By Sy Oliver And His Orchestra–    Such A Night    2:07
21    Cab Calloway Acc. By Sy Oliver And His Orchestra–    Unchained Melody    2:45
22    Cab Calloway Acc. By Sy Oliver And His Orchestra–    Learning The Blues    2:35
Credits
Alto Saxophone – Bernie Peacock (tracks: 1, 2), Hilton Jefferson (tracks: 5, 6)
Bass – Milt Hinton (tracks: 1 to 6)
Drums – Panama Francis (tracks: 1 to 6)
Piano – Dave Rivera (tracks: 1 to 10)
Reeds – Leon "Diamond" Washington (tracks: 3, 4), S.A. Stewart (tracks: 3, 4)
Tenor Saxophone – Ike Quebec (tracks: 7 to 10), Sam "The Man" Taylor (tracks: 1, 2, 5, 6)
Trombone – John "Streamline" Ewing (tracks: 3, 4), Keg Johnson (tracks: 1, 2), Tyree Glenn (tracks: 5, 6)
Trumpet – Jonah Jones (tracks: 1 to 10)
Vocals – Cab Calloway

e.s.t. — Retrospective 'The Very Best Of e.s.t. (2009) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

"Retrospective - The Very Best Of e.s.t." is a retrospective of the unique work of e.s.t. and a tribute to the late mastermind Esb...