Billie Holiday I Wished on the Moon
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Records to Consider
VOLUME XXIII BIG BAND JUMP NEWSLETTER NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 1992 Dec 12-13, 1992 Vocals have always been with BBJ PROGRAMS are subject to change due to un SINGING GROUPS us, even though swing pur avoidable circumstances or station convenience. Many ists tend to overlook the con requests are receivedfor tape copies o f the programs, tribution made by lyrics in popularizing the Big Bands but stringent copyright laws applying to the records that are the basis of it all. The Mills Brothers, the Pied used prevent us from supplying such copies. Pipers, the Sentimentalists, the Modernaires, the Ink Spots, the Stardusters and the Merry Macs all make ( RECORDS TO CONSIDER) recorded appearances on this salute to the vocal groups, along with a few instrumental and single vocal HERE’S THAT SWING THING Pat Longo hits of the forties. Orchestra -Vocals by Frank Sinatra, Jr. USA Records - 19 Cuts - CD or Cassette Dec 19-20, 1992 It’s a very special BIG BAND CHRISTMAS time with very special Billy May was one of the arrangers for this recording, music, captured as which immediately makes it a must-have. Pat Longo’s performed in the studio and in broadcasts during the Orchestra has a two decade history of solid perfor Christmas seasons of years past. Both Big Bands and mance, some of it a bit far out for some Big Band single vocalists recall the Sounds of Christmas in a traditionalists, but most simply solid swing. Sax man simpler time; perhaps a better time. Recollections of Longo was vice-president of a California bank until he Christmas experiences fill in the moments between the realized money wasn’t what he wanted to handle the music to weave a spell. -
Part 2 of Selected Discography
Part 2 of Selected Discography Milt Hinton Solos Compiled by Ed Berger (1949-2017) - Librarian, journalist, music producer, photographer, historian, and former Associate Director, Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University. This is a chronological list of representative solos by Hinton as a sideman in a variety of settings throughout his career. Although not definitive, Milt was such a consistent soloist that one could cite many other equally accomplished performances. In some cases, particularly from the 1930s when bass solos were relatively rare, the recordings listed contain prominent bass accompaniment. November 4, 1930, Chicago Tiny Parham “Squeeze Me” (first Hinton recording, on tuba) 78: Recorded for Victor, unissued CD: Timeless CBC1022 (Tiny Parham, 1928–1930) January–March 1933, Hollywood Eddie South “Throw a Little Salt on the Bluebird’s Tail” (vocal) “Goofus” CD: Jazz Oracle BDW8054 (Eddie South and His International Orchestra: The Cheloni Broadcast Transcriptions) May 3, 1933, Chicago Eddie South “Old Man Harlem” (vocal) 78: Victor 24324 CD: Classics 707 (Eddie South, 1923–1937) June 12, 1933, Chicago Eddie South “My, Oh My” (slap bass) 78: Victor 24343 CD: Classics 707 (Eddie South, 1923-1937) March 3, 1937 Cab Calloway “Congo” 78: Variety 593 CD: Classics 554 (Cab Calloway, 1934–1937) January 26, 1938 Cab Calloway “I Like Music” (brief solo, slap bass) 78: Vocalion 3995 CD: Classics 568 (Cab Calloway, 1937–1938) August 30, 1939 Cab Calloway “Pluckin’ the Bass” (solo feature —slap bass) 78: Vocalion 5406 CD: Classics -
Religious Expressions Among Jazz Musicians
religions Article Performing, Representing, and Archiving Belief: Religious Expressions among Jazz Musicians Vaughn A. Booker Department of Religion, Princeton University, 1879 Hall, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA; [email protected] Academic Editors: Douglas James Davies and Michael J. Thate Received: 30 March 2016; Accepted: 12 August 2016; Published: 19 August 2016 Abstract: The archives of African American jazz musicians demonstrate rich sites for studying expressions of religious belief and daily religious practice in public and private arenas, in professional and personal capacities. Highlighting print material from the archives of Edward Kennedy “Duke” Ellington (1899–1974) and Mary Lou Williams (1910–1981), this article examines the ways that these musicians worked to articulate their beliefs in print and to make meaning of their routine practices. Ellington and Williams produced written records of their aspirations for non-clerical religious authority and leadership, novel notions of religious community, and conceptions of quotidian writing tasks as practices with devotional value in the middle decades of the twentieth century. In preparation for his Sacred Concert tours of American and Western European religious congregations, Ellington theologized about the nature of God and the proper language to address God through private hotel stationery. Following her conversion to Roman Catholicism, Williams managed a Harlem thrift shop and worked to create the Bel Canto Foundation for musicians struggling with substance abuse and unemployment. This study of the religious subjectivity of African Americans with status as race representatives employs archival historical methods in the effort to vividly approximate complex religious interiority. Keywords: African American religious history; Religion in America; jazz; Duke Ellington; Mary Lou Williams 1. -
J. Dorsey, Earl Hines Also Swell Trombone Showcased
DOWN BEAT Chicago. April 15. 1941 Chicago fl by his latest cutting. Everything Depends On You, in which he spots Gems of Jazz’ and Kirby Madeline Green and a male vocal trio. On BBird 11036, it’s a side which shows a new Hines, a Hines who can bow to the public’s de Albarns Draw Big Raves; mands and yet maintain a high artistic plane. Backer is In Suiamp Lande, a juniper, with the leader’s I—Oh Le 88, Franz Jackson’s tenor and a »—New ' J. Dorsey, Earl Hines Also swell trombone showcased. Je Uy, 3—dmapi Jelly (BBird 11065) slow 4—Perfid by DAVE DEXTER, JR. blues with more sprightly Hines, 5—The A and a Pha Terrelish v ical by Bill 6—High I JvlUSICIANS SHOULD FIND the new “Gems of Jazz” and Eckstein. Flipover, I’m Falling 7—There' For You, is the only really bad John Kirby albums of interest, for the two collections em side of the four. It’s a draggy pop 9—Chapeí brace a little bit of everything in the jazz field. The “Gems” with too much Eckstein. [O—Th> l include 12 exceptional sides featuring Mildred Bailey, Jess 11—f Unti Stacy, Lux Lewis, Joe Marsala and Bud Freeman. Made in Jimmy Dorsey 12—Frenes 1936, they’ were issued only in England on Parlophone and Hot as a gang of ants on a WATCH O have been unavailable domestically until now. warm rock, Jim and his gang click again with two new Tudi« Cama Ma «mvng tl B a i 1 ey’s rata versions uf Yours (the Man Behind the Counter in soda-jerk getup in that rat. -
Jazz and the Cultural Transformation of America in the 1920S
Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Doctoral Dissertations Graduate School 2003 Jazz and the cultural transformation of America in the 1920s Courtney Patterson Carney Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations Part of the History Commons Recommended Citation Carney, Courtney Patterson, "Jazz and the cultural transformation of America in the 1920s" (2003). LSU Doctoral Dissertations. 176. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/176 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Doctoral Dissertations by an authorized graduate school editor of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please [email protected]. JAZZ AND THE CULTURAL TRANSFORMATION OF AMERICA IN THE 1920S A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in The Department of History by Courtney Patterson Carney B.A., Baylor University, 1996 M.A., Louisiana State University, 1998 December 2003 For Big ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The real truth about it is no one gets it right The real truth about it is we’re all supposed to try1 Over the course of the last few years I have been in contact with a long list of people, many of whom have had some impact on this dissertation. At the University of Chicago, Deborah Gillaspie and Ray Gadke helped immensely by guiding me through the Chicago Jazz Archive. -
JUKEBOX JAZZ by Ian Muldoon* ______
JUKEBOX JAZZ by Ian Muldoon* ____________________________________________________ n 1955 Bill Haley’s Rock Around the Clock was the first rock and roll record to become number one on the hit parade. It had made a stunning introduction in I the opening moments to a film called Blackboard Jungle. But at that time my favourite record was one by Lionel Hampton. I was not alone. Me and my three jazz loving friends couldn’t be bothered spending hard-earned cash on rock and roll records. Our quartet consisted of clarinet, drums, bass and vocal. Robert (nickname Orgy) was learning clarinet; Malcolm (Slim) was going to learn drums (which in due course he did under the guidance of Gordon LeCornu, a percussionist and drummer in the days when Sydney still had a thriving show scene); Dave (Bebop) loved the bass; and I was the vocalist a la Joe (Bebop) Lane. We were four of 120 RAAF apprentices undergoing three years boarding school training at Wagga Wagga RAAF Base from 1955-1957. Of course, we never performed together but we dreamt of doing so and luckily, dreaming was not contrary to RAAF regulations. Wearing an official RAAF beret in the style of Thelonious Monk or Dizzy Gillespie, however, was. Thelonious Monk wearing his beret the way Dave (Bebop) wore his… PHOTO CREDIT WILLIAM P GOTTLIEB _________________________________________________________ *Ian Muldoon has been a jazz enthusiast since, as a child, he heard his aunt play Fats Waller and Duke Ellington on the household piano. At around ten years of age he was given a windup record player and a modest supply of steel needles, on which he played his record collection, consisting of two 78s, one featuring Dizzy Gillespie and the other Fats Waller. -
Gerry Mulligan Discography
GERRY MULLIGAN DISCOGRAPHY GERRY MULLIGAN RECORDINGS, CONCERTS AND WHEREABOUTS by Gérard Dugelay, France and Kenneth Hallqvist, Sweden January 2011 Gerry Mulligan DISCOGRAPHY - Recordings, Concerts and Whereabouts by Gérard Dugelay & Kenneth Hallqvist - page No. 1 PREFACE BY GERARD DUGELAY I fell in love when I was younger I was a young jazz fan, when I discovered the music of Gerry Mulligan through a birthday gift from my father. This album was “Gerry Mulligan & Astor Piazzolla”. But it was through “Song for Strayhorn” (Carnegie Hall concert CTI album) I fell in love with the music of Gerry Mulligan. My impressions were: “How great this man is to be able to compose so nicely!, to improvise so marvellously! and to give us such feelings!” Step by step my interest for the music increased I bought regularly his albums and I became crazy from the Concert Jazz Band LPs. Then I appreciated the pianoless Quartets with Bob Brookmeyer (The Pleyel Concerts, which are easily available in France) and with Chet Baker. Just married with Danielle, I spent some days of our honey moon at Antwerp (Belgium) and I had the chance to see the Gerry Mulligan Orchestra in concert. After the concert my wife said: “During some songs I had lost you, you were with the music of Gerry Mulligan!!!” During these 30 years of travel in the music of Jeru, I bought many bootleg albums. One was very important, because it gave me a new direction in my passion: the discographical part. This was the album “Gerry Mulligan – Vol. 2, Live in Stockholm, May 1957”. -
The History and Development of Jazz Piano : a New Perspective for Educators
University of Massachusetts Amherst ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Doctoral Dissertations 1896 - February 2014 1-1-1975 The history and development of jazz piano : a new perspective for educators. Billy Taylor University of Massachusetts Amherst Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations_1 Recommended Citation Taylor, Billy, "The history and development of jazz piano : a new perspective for educators." (1975). Doctoral Dissertations 1896 - February 2014. 3017. https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations_1/3017 This Open Access Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. It has been accepted for inclusion in Doctoral Dissertations 1896 - February 2014 by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. For more information, please contact [email protected]. / DATE DUE .1111 i UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS LIBRARY LD 3234 ^/'267 1975 T247 THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF JAZZ PIANO A NEW PERSPECTIVE FOR EDUCATORS A Dissertation Presented By William E. Taylor Submitted to the Graduate School of the University of Massachusetts in partial fulfil Iment of the requirements for the degree DOCTOR OF EDUCATION August 1975 Education in the Arts and Humanities (c) wnii aJ' THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF JAZZ PIANO: A NEW PERSPECTIVE FOR EDUCATORS A Dissertation By William E. Taylor Approved as to style and content by: Dr. Mary H. Beaven, Chairperson of Committee Dr, Frederick Till is. Member Dr. Roland Wiggins, Member Dr. Louis Fischer, Acting Dean School of Education August 1975 . ABSTRACT OF DISSERTATION THE HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF JAZZ PIANO; A NEW PERSPECTIVE FOR EDUCATORS (AUGUST 1975) William E. Taylor, B.S. Virginia State College Directed by: Dr. -
What Did You Do for MLK Day?
Welcome back! What RUr goals this semester? Tweet us @RUTorch January 21, 2014 @RUTorch www.rutorch.com /RooseveltTorchNews Volume 70 Issue 16 What did you do for MLK Day? he Illinois Indiana Regional Organizing Network (IIRON) held Hope in the Age of Crisis Sunday to celebrate Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy and Tcarry on his work of organizing for justice. Mass incarceration, environmental justice, corporate accountability and worker justice were discussed at the event. Roosevelt student Dylan Amlin, part of the IIRON Student Network, advocated for students to attend. Torch staff members and contributers attended the event. The multimedia and full story they gathered from the event can be found at: www.rutorch.com Roosevelt partners with Gardner Institute to study student experience By Samantha Reid increasing retention rates and and educational philosophies. It don’t have much of a say in cur- year’s budget. [email protected] building up the student body of is then up to the committees to riculum or student services, but The Gardner Institute’s work the university. study student surveys and data, these student surveys give them doesn’t end at the end of this Along with nine other uni- Foundations of Excellence fo- coming to conclusions and mak- the power to influence major year when the committees have versities nationwide, Roosevelt cuses on nine specific principles ing recommendations based off change. given their final reports, however. University has partnered with in determining the improvements of the available information. Part of analyzing the effective- Consultants from Foundations the John N. Gardner Institute to be made. -
The English Listing
THE CROSBY 78's ZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBAthe English listing Members may recall that we issued a THE questionnaire in 1990 seeking views and comments on what we should be providing in CROSBY BING. We are progressively attempting to fulfil 7 8 's these wishes and we now address one major ENGLISH request - a listing of the 78s issued in the UK. LISTING The first time this listing was issued in this form was in the ICC's 1974 booklet and this was updated in 1982in a publication issued by John Bassett's Crosby Collectors Society. The joint compilers were Jim Hayes, Colin Pugh and Bert Bishop. John has kindly given us permission to reproduce part of his publication in BING. This is a complete listing of very English-issued lO-inch and 12-inch 78 rpm shellac record featuring Sing Crosby. In all there are 601 discs on 10different labels. The sheet music used to illustrate some of the titles and the photos of the record labels have been p ro v id e d b y Don and Peter Haizeldon to whom we extend grateful thanks. NUMBERSITITLES LISTING OF ENGLISH 78"s ARIEl GRAND RECORD. THE 110-Inchl 4364 Susiannainon-Bing BRUNSWICK 112-inchl 1 0 5 Gems from "George White's Scandals", Parts 1 & 2 0 1 0 5 ditto 1 0 7 Lawd, you made the night too long/non-Bing 0 1 0 7 ditto 1 1 6 S I. L o u is blues/non-Bing _ 0 1 3 4 Pennies from heaven medley/Pennies from heaven THECROSBYCOLLECTORSSOCIETY BRUNSWICK 110-inchl 1 1 5 5 Just one more chance/Were you sincere? 0 1 6 0 8 Home on the range/The last round-up 0 1 1 5 5 ditto 0 1 6 1 5 Shadow waltz/I've got to sing a torch -
Downbeat.Com April 2011 U.K. £3.50
£3.50 £3.50 U.K. PRIL 2011 DOWNBEAT.COM A D OW N B E AT MARSALIS FAMILY // WOMEN IN JAZZ // KURT ELLING // BENNY GREEN // BRASS SCHOOL APRIL 2011 APRIL 2011 VOLume 78 – NumbeR 4 President Kevin Maher Publisher Frank Alkyer Editor Ed Enright Associate Editor Aaron Cohen Art Director Ara Tirado Production Associate Andy Williams Bookkeeper Margaret Stevens Circulation Manager Sue Mahal Circulation Associate Maureen Flaherty ADVERTISING SALES Record Companies & Schools Jennifer Ruban-Gentile 630-941-2030 [email protected] Musical Instruments & East Coast Schools Ritche Deraney 201-445-6260 [email protected] Classified Advertising Sales Sue Mahal 630-941-2030 [email protected] OFFICES 102 N. Haven Road Elmhurst, IL 60126–2970 630-941-2030 Fax: 630-941-3210 http://downbeat.com [email protected] CUSTOMER SERVICE 877-904-5299 [email protected] CONTRIBUTORS Senior Contributors: Michael Bourne, John McDonough, Howard Mandel Atlanta: Jon Ross; Austin: Michael Point, Kevin Whitehead; Boston: Fred Bouchard, Frank-John Hadley; Chicago: John Corbett, Alain Drouot, Michael Jackson, Peter Margasak, Bill Meyer, Mitch Myers, Paul Natkin, Howard Reich; Denver: Norman Provizer; Indiana: Mark Sheldon; Iowa: Will Smith; Los Angeles: Earl Gibson, Todd Jenkins, Kirk Silsbee, Chris Walker, Joe Woodard; Michigan: John Ephland; Minneapolis: Robin James; Nashville: Robert Doerschuk; New Orleans: Erika Goldring, David Kunian, Jennifer Odell; New York: Alan Bergman, Herb Boyd, Bill Douthart, Ira Gitler, Eugene Gologursky, Norm Harris, D.D. Jackson, Jimmy Katz, -
Musiques Du Diable Et Autres Bruits Bénéfiques , Avec
MUSIQUES DU DIABLE ET AUTRES BRUITS BÉNÉFIQUES ALEXANDRE VINCENT FONTAINE ROUSSEAU GIARD sélection et textes dessins MUSIQUES DU DIABLE ET AUTRES BRUITS BÉNÉFIQUES sélection musicale 2010 — 2015 LES ÉDITIONS DE TA MÈRE attention : Ce livre contient au moins 23 tounu·e·s, Pour mon voisin préféré 23 têtes de mort (dont 3 avec du feu) et un nombre incalculable de coches pétées. Pour mon voisin préféré Direction littéraire : Révision : Maxime Raymond Maude Nepveu-Villeneuve Direction artistique : Maquette et composition : Benoit Tardif Vincent Giard © Éditions de Ta Mère, 2017 © Alexandre Fontaine Rousseau, 2017 © Vincent Giard, 2015 — 2017 Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec, 2017 Bibliothèque et Archives du Canada, 2017 isbn : 978-2-924670-13-2 www.tamere.org Nous remercions de son soutien financier le Conseil des Arts du Canada. L’an dernier, le Conseil a investi 153 millions de dollars pour mettre de l’art dans la vie des Canadiennes et des Canadiens de tout le pays. Nous remercions de leur soutien moral Cathon et Sophie Bédard, qui ont chacune commis un dessin dans ce livre. Saurez-vous les trouver ? plus sérieusement : Ce livre est un hommage aux treize numéros du défunt zine Tout va bien, publiés entre 2009 et 2013. Son existence est aussi intimement liée à celle des États altérés, diffusés depuis janvier 2009 sur les ondes de cism. Les auteurs tiennent à remercier celles et ceux qui ont contribué, de près ou de loin, à ce que ces deux entités existent. Ils désirent aussi profiter de cette occasion pour rassurer le lecteur quant à leur santé physique et mentale, leur hygiène personnelle ainsi que leur alimentation (liquide ou non).