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3.566 Ft
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1. | Everybody Loves My Baby
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2. | What's That You're Playing?
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3. | A Lovely Way to Spend an Evening
From Higher and Higher
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4. | I Remember You
From the Fleet's in
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5. | You'd Be So Nice to Come Home To
From Something to Shout About
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6. | Dream of You
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7. | Why Shouldn't I?
From Jubilee
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8. | It's Been So Long
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9. | What's New?
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10. | Sleigh Ride in July
From Belle of the Yukon
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11. | Save It, Pretty Mama
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12. | You Brought a New Kind of Love to Me
From the Pig Pond
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Jazz
Recorded: 1981
Dick Cary - Horn (Alto), Leader, Photography, Piano, Trumpet Bob Havens - Trombone Bob Wilber - Sax (Soprano) Dick Hafer - Sax (Tenor) Frits Kaatee - Clarinet Jacques Kingma - Bass John Heard - Bass Koos Vander Sluis - Bass Nick Fatool - Drums Ross Tompkins - Piano Ted Easton - Drums, Leader, Liner Notes, Producer
* George H. Buck, Jr. - Liner Notes, Producer * Harry Lim - Liner Notes, Producer * James Mooney - Engineer, Mixing * Jennifer Lagarde - Art Direction * Parker Dinkins - Digital Remastering, Digital Transfers * Wendell Echols - Production Coordination
Contains 4 tracks from a 1975 Dutch Concert.
Dick Cary
Active Decades: '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s and '90s Born: Jul 10, 1916 in Hartford, CT Died: Apr 06, 1994 in Glendale, CA Genre: Jazz Styles: Dixieland, Swing
Dick Cary, best-known for his stint with Louis Armstrong's All-Stars (1947-1948), was most significant as a behind-the-scenes arranger and freelance musician in the trad jazz movement. He made his recording debut with Joe Marsala (1942), worked as a soloist at Nick's (1942-1943), and played for short periods with the Casa Loma Orchestra and Brad Gowans. While in the Army (1944-1946), he was able to keep on recording, including with Muggsy Spanier and Wild Bill Davison. After playing with Billy Butterfield and Louis Armstrong, Cary was with Jimmy Dorsey's big band (1949-1950); wrote arrangements and played alto horn on Eddie Condon's television shows; and throughout the 1950s, played and wrote for the Condon gang, recording with Condon, Pee Wee Russell, Max Kaminsky, Bud Freeman, Jimmy McPartland, Bobby Hackett, and others. In 1959, he settled in Los Angeles, working as a freelance musician up until his death. In later years, Cary led his Tuesday Night Friends band and performed often at Dixieland jazz festivals. --- Scott Yanow, All Music Guide |
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