Document Records - Vintage Blues and Jazz

Jazzin' the Blues Vol 5 1930-1953

Was £7.49    Our Price £2.49
 

 

FEATURED ARTIST / S
Barney Bigard (clarinet)
Pat Jenkins (trumpet)
'Momma' Alberta Price
Al Cooper (clarinet)
Albert Burbank (clarinet)
Albert Jiles (drums)
Albert Nicholas (clarinet)
Alcide 'Slow Drag' Pavageau (double bass)
Alex 'Razz' Mitchel (drums)
Allan Reuss (guitar)
Alton Purnell (piano)
Ann Cook
Austin Young (double bass)
Babe (Emmett) Wallace
Baby Hines
Blue Lu Barker
Campbell Skeets Tolbert (cornet)
Carl 'Tatti' Smith (trumpet)
Charles 'Red' Richards (piano)
Charlie Drayton (double bass)
Clarence Johnson (piano)
Ralph Sutton (piano)
Courtney Williams (trumpet)
Cyrus St. Clair (bass, brass)
Danny Barker (guitar)
Ed McNeil (trumpet)
Eddie Beal (piano)
Freddie Moore (drums)
Freddy Jefferson (piano)
George Brunies (trumpet)
George Lewis (clarinet)
George Lewis Ragtime Band (accomp.)
Grachan Moncur (double bass)
Harold Austin (tenor sax)
Harry Prather (double bass)
Helen Proctor
Hubert Pettaway (drums)
Jimmy Archey (trombone)
Joe Sullivan (piano)
Joe Watkins (drums)
John Drummond (double bass)
Johnny St Cyr (guitar)
Kenny Clarke (drums)
Lawrence Marrero (banjo)
Lizzie Miles
Louis Jordan (alto sax)
Louis Nelson (trombone)
Monette Moore
Oliver Richardson (piano)
Otis Hicks (tenor sax)
Pops Foster (double bass)
Red Callender (double bass)
Rudy Williams (alto sax)
Sam Massenberg (trumpet)
Sammy Price (piano)
Singleton Zutty (drums)
Stafford Simon (cornet, tenor sax)
The Crystalette All Stars
Walter Martin (drums)
Wild Bill Davison (cornet)
Wooden Joe`s Band
Yack Taylor
Lem Johnson

    TRACK LIST

Lizzie Miles
01 - Too slow blues Listen

Helen Proctor
02 - Someone outside is taking your mind off me Listen
03 - You'll never miss the water 'til the well runs dry Listen

Baby Hines
04 - I've lost my head over you Listen
05 - This is the end Listen

Babe (Emmett) Wallace
06 - I'm blowin' my top Listen
07 - Fine piece of meat Listen

Yack Taylor
08 - Hard lovin' blues Listen
09 - Sugar boogie Listen
10 - I'll make it worth your while Listen
11 - Those draftin' blues Listen

Babe (Emmett) Wallace
12 - Git it (‘cause I love to see you wid it) Listen

Monette Moore
13 - Rockin' chair Listen
14 - I want a little boy Listen
15 - Another woman's blues Listen
16 - Please Mr. Blues Listen

Blue Lu Barker
17 - After you've gone Listen
18 - Georgia grind Listen

'Momma' Alberta Price
19 - Tell me baby (finale blues) Listen

Ann Cook
20 - The Lord will make a way Listen

Monette Moore
21 - Burgundy street blues Listen

This collection is from the jazzier end of the blues spectrum ranging from small group Swing to the early Jazz Revival, spanning between New York and New Orleans. The music is lively, rich and at times poetic. A heady mixture created when Jazz meets the Blues. From the latter city, but recorded in the former, comes Lizzie Miles, who had extensive recording careers both pre- and postwar; the prewar material is collected on three Document CDs (DOCD-5458 / 59 / 60), but Too Slow Blues appears here for the first time. It was scheduled for issue on Victor 23298, but the disc never appeared. This surely cannot have been for reasons of musical quality, for Miles and her accompanists are on top form, with Teddy Bunn and Pops Foster being especially impressive. Skeets Tolbert and His Gentlemen of Swing, supply the accompaniment on eight of the next nine titles. The Baby Hines' titles showcases a singer with an evident admiration for lvie Anderson. Babe Wallace puts across a hepster's persona on the lively dope number, I'm Blowin' My Top, which has a fine instrumental break shared among Tolbert's alto, Lem Johnson's clarinet, and trumpeter Carl 'Tatti' Smith. Equally vivacious, and given a very likable arrangement, is Fine Piece Of Meat, a tribute to 'a killer-riller-diller from Manila with vanilla.' On his final offering here, Wallace invites sundry band members to solo, on a piece where meaningful lyrics are even more subordinate to the general determination to have a good time. I'm less bothered than most users of 'Blues & Gospel Records’ by the exclusion of Louis Jordan's prewar recordings, but of course, there was no way that Yack Taylor’s tough gal reading of Hard Lovin' BIues could or should have been kept out. Skeets Tolbert turns up again for Taylor's other three titles; Sugar Boogie lopes along, with 'Tatti' Smith's muted trumpet doodles especially noteworthy. I'll Make It Worth Your While is another sexually aggressive number. Monette Moore and her musicians, almost inevitably led by Sammy Price, are in excellent form. Blue Lu Barker’s numbers, again with husband Danny and Pops Foster among the accompanists, come from a radio broadcast. Albert Nicholas's low register clarinet twines around Blue Lu's characteristically small, nasal voice on After You've Gone before Baby Dodds jump starts the band into the ride out. Georgia Grind is perhaps not as sexy as Blue Lu thinks, but the band is in fine, slow dragging form, with Nicholas again acquitting himself well, this time on the upper side of the break. Alberta Price fronts Bunk Johnson's band and Monette Moore paces out an extraordinary “blues poem†recitation, accompanied by the George Lewis band. Between these two numbers is the magnificent Ann Cook, formerly a blues singer. Cook was known around town as 'Bad Ann', but by 1949 she had renounced the sinful world. Her reading of The Lord Will Make A Way is greatly enhanced by the stately playing of the 'Wooden’ Joe Nicholas band. Includes full discographical details and informative booklet notes by Chris Smith.
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