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 DVD video |
Kérjen árajánlatot! |
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1. | Basie Boogie
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2. | If I Could Be With You One Hour Tonight
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3. | Basie's Conversation
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4. | I Cried for You
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5. | One O'Clock Jump
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6. | Take Me Back, Baby
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7. | Air Mail Special
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8. | Honeysuckle Rose
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9. | Your Feet's Too Big
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10. | Ain't Misbehavin'
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11. | The Joint Is Jumpin'
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12. | When It's Sleepy Time Down South
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13. | Shine
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14. | You Rascal You
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15. | Singin' on Nothing
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16. | Oke She Moke She Pop
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17. | Shake, Rattle and Roll
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18. | Drink Hearty
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19. | House on 52nd St.
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20. | Count Me Out
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21. | Let Me Off Uptown
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22. | Thanks for the Boogie Ride
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23. | Hello Bill
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24. | I Want a Big Fat Mama
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25. | Four or Five Times
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26. | Shout Sister Shout
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27. | Unidentified Title
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28. | Sweet Slumber
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29. | Let It Roll
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30. | I Love You, Yes I Do
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31. | Do the Hucklebuck
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32. | Let's Scuffle
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This compilation of short films from the swing era finds the Count in splendid form, performing in his relaxed and gutsy manner. The DVD is completed with different soundies showcasing Fats Waller, Louis Armstrong, Joe Turner, Henry Red Allen, Gene Krupa, Lucky Millinder and the dancer Bill Bojangles Robinson.
MVD's addition to their Swing Era series featuring Count Basie is a collection of film/videos from Studio Telescriptions, Snader Telescriptions, and other sources. There are seven Count Basie tracks that are valuable, revealing, and downright exciting. Fats Waller's four songs start off with "Honeysuckle Rose," taken from a short directed by Warren Murray and released by Soundies Distribution Corporation and, needless to say, it is fantastic. As with the George Shearing collection on Idem/Music Video Distributors, there's no commentary or bonus features, and the inclusion of both would do much to explain how these nuggets came to be. The philosophy at play here seems to be that it's all about the music -- and there is lots of it, 32 tracks from Basie, Waller, Louis Armstrong, Joe Turner, Henry "Red" Allen, a couple of tunes from Gene Krupa, Lucky Millinder, and Bill "Bojangles" Robinson. Millinder's "Do The Huckelbuck" is taken from the 1948 Moms Mabley film Boarding House Blues, directed by Josh Binney, and it is classic. The sound quality is surprisingly great, and the "film" quality holds up very well decades after the fact. If used as study material in schools, this component of the Swing Era series could open up new audiences to not only these important performances but to the classy lost art of early music videos. Grade A. ---Joe Viglione, allmusic |
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