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Hot Dance Bands 1929-1938 - Unissued on 78s

Louis Armstrong, Blanche Calloway and Clarence Williams

Hot Dance Bands 1929-1938 - Unissued on 78s

Price: € 10.95 7.67
Format: CD
Label: Retrieval
UPC: 0608917907728
Catnr: RTR 79077
Release date: 26 September 2014
old €10.95 new € 7.67
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10.95 7.67
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Label
Retrieval
UPC
0608917907728
Catalogue number
RTR 79077
Release date
26 September 2014
Album
Artist(s)
Composer(s)
EN
DE

About the album

“Unissued on 78s means just that and no more”. Certainly some of the recordings here have appeared on LPs and CDs, but long enough ago to have become collectible in their own night.

In 1929 Louis Armstrong’s trumpet playing was at its most majestic. The sides we have here were made under somewhat odd circumstances in that they are part of a mysterious matrix series of which no paper record exists. Indeed for many years they remained totally undiscovered until it was found that they were non-vocal takes from three sessions recorded in late November and early December 1929. What the purpose of these sessions was we’ll probably never know; maybe they were intended for the Latin-American or German markets, but it then was realised that Louis’ inimitable instrumental singing style, where language became almost irrelevant, was acceptable and indeed enjoyed, even in places where English vocals were usually a minus point. Who knows? Whatever the reason, we are lucky to have six examples of Louis Armstrong at his best. The first title was recorded with Carroll Dickerson’s Orchestra with whom Louis was appearing as their star performer at the time. The rest are with the great Luis Russell Orchestra and one very interesting thing occurs. On most Armstrong records of the ‘30s he is the only featured soloist and certainly the only featured trumpet player, but on ‘St. Louis Blues’ we have fine solos, not only from the likes of trombonist J.C. Higginbotham, but also from Henry ‘Red’ Allen, who was at the time widely regarded as Louis’ possible successor, or even rather disparaged as a Louis copyist. However Red’s more angular phrasing and slightly more adventurous harmonic sense show him to have been a great original talent. And it’s all driven along by the splendid Russell rhythm section propelled by the great Pops Foster.

Vocalist Blanche Calloway (b. Baltimore, Maryland 1902 d. Baltimore, Maryland 16 December, 1978) was the elder sister of famous
bandleader Cab Calloway. By the mid-twenties she was already a seasoned and popular performer in revues and black vaudeville.
She was featured in “Plantation Days” in Chicago when she helped Cab to join her and he worked with her for a year or so. In 1931 she was fronting Andy Kirk’s fine Twelve Clouds of Joy for a residency at the Pearl Theatre in Philadelphia when she made the first session here under the name of Blanche Calloway and her Joy Boys. The gig was so successful that she soon formed a band of her own which she led until 1938 when she hit a bad patch and eventually went bankrupt. In later years she worked as a single act, became the director of a Florida radio station and ended by founding the Afram Cosmetic Company. The remaining titles, all alternate takes, show a definitely
hot band containing good soloists who get space in which to shine. An interesting point re “Sugar Blues”: The white “novelty” trumpet player Clyde McCoy made a career of this number in a version using various odd muted sounds, which became hugely popular, so much so that he recorded it again in the ‘30s and yet again in the ‘40s, (I suspect he made a further version in the ‘50’s). His original record was made on 22nd January 1931, yet trumpeter Edgar Battle makes almost a carbon copy on Callaway’s version, recorded on 27th March 1931. How and why? McCoy’s record can have only just been released and had not had time to become so famous that it was worth making a ‘cover’ version. Very strange!

Clarence Williams was a native of Plaquemine Delta, Louisiana, where he was born on 5th October 1898, and before he died in New York on 6th December 1965 he had made an indelible mark on jazz history as pianist, vocalist, songwriter and most importantly, as a talent scout for the Okeh Company and leader of countless record sessions between the early 20s and the end of the 1930s.

On some of the resulting records a young Louis Armstrong, fresh from King Oliver’s Band got his first major solo opportunities, sometimes paired with a Williams discovery making his first records, none other than Sidney Bechet. Other Williams record alumni
including his wife, the fine singer Eva Taylor, Buster Bailey, Eddie Lang, James P Johnson, Coleman Hawkins, Cecil Scott, Ed Allen and many more. Among his best known compositions are ‘Royal Garden Blues’, ‘Baby, Won’t You Please Come Home’, ‘I Ain’t Gonna Give Nobody None of This Jelly Roll’ and as a music publisher his catalogue contained such great standards as ‘Shout, Sister, Shout’, ‘Sugar Blues’ and ‘Squeeze Me’. He was a pioneer black radio performer in the late ‘20s and on through the ‘30s. Most of his recordings vary very little in style from the earliest to the last. Usually he used a small group - often featuring Ed Allen and Cecil Scott resulting in solid unpretentious jazz and it remains very listenable, mostly light hearted, listening today.
Unveröffentlicht, das verspricht viel - ein Hauch Abenteuer und Geheimnis ist sicherlich dabei. Nun wurden einige der hier gesammelten Aufnahmen sicherlich bereits zuvor veröffentlicht worden, doch das ist mittlerweile schon so lange her, dass sie mit Fug und Recht trotzdem als Sammlerausgaben gelten dürfen: einige der Armstrong-Aufnahmen sind nicht einmal dokumentiert! Genießen Sie diese einzigartigen Raritäten von einigen der besten Musiker der 1920er und '30er Jahre: unprätentiöser Jazz, der zu hören eine wahre Freude ist.

Composer(s)

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Play album Play album
01.
After You've Gone
03:22
(Henry Creamer, Turner Layton) Louis Armstrong and his Orchestra
02.
After You've Gone
03:24
(Henry Creamer, Turner Layton) Louis Armstrong and his Orchestra
03.
I Ain't Got Nobody
03:02
(Spencer Williams, Hart A. Wand) Louis Armstrong and his Orchestra
04.
Dallas Blue
03:19
(Henry Creamer, Turner Layton) Louis Armstrong and his Orchestra
05.
St. Louis Blues
03:03
(W.C. Handy) Louis Armstrong and his Orchestra
06.
St. Louis Blues
03:01
(W.C. Handy) Louis Armstrong and his Orchestra
07.
There's Rhythm in the River
03:12
(Paul Francis Webster, John Jacob Loeb) Blanche Calloway and her Joy Boys
08.
Just a Crazy Song [Hi, Hi, Hi]
02:50
(Chick Smith, Spencer Williams) Blanche Calloway and her Joy Boys
09.
Sugar Blues
03:17
(Lucky Fletcher, Clarence Williams) Blanche Calloway and her Joy Boys
10.
I'm Getting Myself Ready For You
03:07
(Cole Porter) Blanche Calloway and her Joy Boys
11.
Loveless Love
03:03
(W.C. Handy) Blanche Calloway and her Joy Boys
12.
Misery
03:24
(James P. Johnson, Andy Razaf) Blanche Calloway and her Joy Boys
13.
It's Right Here For You
03:01
(Perry Bradford) Blanche Calloway and her Joy Boys
14.
It Looks Like Susie
02:56
(Cliff Friend) Blanche Calloway and her Joy Boys
15.
Whithout That Gal
03:21
(Walter Donaldson) Blanche Calloway and her Joy Boys
16.
Make Me Know It
02:28
(Fess Williams) Blanche Calloway and her Joy Boys
17.
I Got What It Takes
03:20
(Clarence Williams, Hexekiah Jenkins) Blanche Calloway and her Joy Boys
18.
Kentucky
02:58
(Henry Creamer, Turner Layton) Clarence Williams' Washboard Band
19.
Jungle Crawl
03:01
(Clarence Williams) Clarence Williams and his Orchestra
20.
Savin' Up For Baby
02:43
(Ernie Golden) Clarence Williams and his Orchestra
21.
Black Gal
02:48
(Joe Pullum) Clarence Williams and his Orchestra
22.
A Foolish Little Girl Like You
02:58
(Irving Bibo) Clarence Williams and his Orchestra
23.
There's Gonna Be The Devil To Pay
02:52
(Bob Emmerich, Billy Hueston) Clarence Williams and his Orchestra
24.
Hop On Me Blues
02:32
(probably Clarence Williams) Clarence Williams Trio
show all tracks

Often bought together with..

Hotsy Totsy Gang 1930 Plus some Whoopee Makers
Irving Mills
The First 24 Sides
Irving Mills and his Hotsy Totsy Gang
Vocals & Instrumentals 1927 - 1934 | Unissued on 78s
Various Artists
Unissued on 78s Rare and Obscure 1925 - 1932
Various Artists
Unissued on 78s Hot Dance Bands 1924-1932
Various Artists
Unissued on 78s Hot Jazz 1926 - 1932
Various Artists

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