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 2 x CD |
6.861 Ft
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1. CD tartalma: |
1. | Goin' Places
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2. | Doin' Things
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3. | Perfect
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4. | Cheese and Crackers
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5. | Stringin' the Blues
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6. | I'm Somebody's Somebody Now
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7. | Two-Tone Stomp
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8. | Beatin' the Dog
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9. | The Wild Dog
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10. | Dinah
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11. | In the Bottle Blues
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12. | Wild Cat
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13. | Guitar Blues
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14. | Bull Frog Moan
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15. | Jet Black Blues
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16. | Penn Beach Blues
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2. CD tartalma: |
1. | It's Right Here for You
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2. | You Can't Cheat on a Cheater
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3. | Tiger Rag
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4. | A Handful of Riffs
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5. | Running Ragged
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6. | Pardon Me, Pretty Baby
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7. | I'll Never Be the Same
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8. | I've Found a New Baby
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9. | Little Girl
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10. | I Got Rhythm
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11. | I Wanna Count Sheep (Till the Cows Come Home)
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12. | Church Street Sobbin' Blues
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13. | Vibraphonia
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14. | Hey! Young Fella
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15. | Some of These Days
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16. | Raggin' the Scale
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Jazz
Eddie Lang - Guitar, Piano Accompanist Adrian Rollini - Goofus, Piano, Sax (Bass), Sound Effects, Vibraphone Alfie Evans - Assistant Annette Hanshaw - Vocals Arthur Schutt - Assistant, Harmonium, Piano Bing Crosby - Trumpet Blind Willie Dunn - Piano, Vocals Carl Kress - Assistant Charlie Butterfield - Assistant Chauncey Morehouse - Assistant Clarence Williams - Assistant, Piano Claude Hopkins - Assistant Dick McDonough - Guitar Don Murray - Clarinet, Sax (Baritone) Frank Driggs - Assistant Frank Signorelli - Assistant, Piano Accompanist Frankie Trumbauer - Bassoon, Sax (C-Melody) Harold Arlen - Vocals Harry Collins - Assistant Jimmy Dorsey - Clarinet, Cornet, Sax (Alto) Jimmy Williams - Bass Joe Tarto - Tuba Joe Venuti - Bass, Main Performer, Violin Justin Ring - Chimes, Cymbals, Percussion King Oliver - Cornet Lennie Hayton - Piano Lonnie Johnson - Guitar Manny Klein - Trumpet Phil Evans - Assistant Phil Wall - Assistant, Piano Red Nichols - Assistant Richard DuPage - Liner Notes Rube Bloom - Piano Stan King - Drums Tommy Dorsey - Trumpet Vic Berton - Cymbals, Tympani [Timpani]
This two-LP set (reissued on CD by Koch in 2000) contains a definitive cross-section of the recordings of violinist Joe Venuti and guitarist Eddie Lang. The 32 performances include everything from duets and a few of Lang's meetings with fellow guitarist Lonnie Johnson to examples of Joe Venuti's Blue Four and guest appearances with singer Annette Hanshaw, Clarence Williams, Tommy Dorsey (on trumpet!), and Bing Crosby (on a hot "Some of these Days"). Virtually all of these recordings are superb, with solos also heard from bass saxophonist Adrian Rollini, Don Murray (on clarinet and baritone), cornetist King Oliver, the C-melody sax of Frankie Trumbauer, and Jimmy Dorsey (switching among clarinet, alto, and cornet). Highly recommended for all collections. --- Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
Eddie Lang
Active Decades: '20s and '30s Born: Oct 25, 1902 in Philadelphia, PA Died: Mar 26, 1933 in New York, NY Genre: Jazz Styles: Classic Jazz, Swing
The first jazz guitar virtuoso, Eddie Lang was everywhere in the late '20s; all of his fellow musicians knew that he was the best. A boyhood friend of Joe Venuti, Lang took violin lessons for 11 years but switched to guitar before he turned professional. In 1924 he debuted with the Mound City Blue Blowers and was soon in great demand for recording dates, both in the jazz world and in commercial settings. His sophisticated chord patterns made him a superior accompanist who uplifted everyone else's music and Lang was also a fine single-note soloist. He often teamed up with violinist Venuti (including some classic duets) and played with Red Nichols's Five Pennies, Frankie Trumbauer and Bix Beiderbecke (most memorably on "Singing the Blues"), the orchestras of Roger Wolfe Kahn, Jean Goldkette and Paul Whiteman (appearing on one short number with Venuti in Whiteman's 1930 film The King of Jazz) and anyone else who could hire him. A measure of Lang's versatility and talents is that he mostly played the chordal parts on a series of duets with Lonnie Johnson (during which he used the pseudonym Blind Willie Dunn) yet on his two duets with Carl Kress (whose chord voicings were an advancement on Lang's), he played the single-note leads. Eddie Lang, who led some dates of his own during 1927-29, worked regularly with Bing Crosby during the early '30s in addition to recording many sessions with Venuti. Tragically his premature death was caused by a botched operation on a tonsillectomy. ---Scott Yanow, All Music Guide |
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