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4.800 Ft
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1. | What Can I Do With a Foolish Little Thing Like You?
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2. | Harlem Joys
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3. | Lost
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4. | Mutiny in the Parlor
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5. | The Swampland Is Calling Me
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6. | More Than That
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7. | I Can See You All Over the Place
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8. | Achin' Hearted Blues
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9. | Morning Air
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10. | Echoes of Spring
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11. | Concentrating
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12. | Fading Star
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13. | Passionette
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14. | Rippling Waters
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15. | Sneakaway
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16. | Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea
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17. | Tea for Two
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18. | I'll Follow You
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19. | Finger Buster
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20. | The Lion and the Lamb
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21. | I'm Coming Virginia
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22. | Limehouse Blues
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23. | Strange Fruit
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24. | You're the Limit
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25. | Twelfth Street Rag
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26. | Bugle Call Rag
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Jazz
Willie "The Lion" Smith - Piano Big Sid Catlett - Drums Bud Freeman - Sax (Tenor) Buster Bailey - Clarinet Cecil Scott - Clarinet, Sax (Tenor) Charlie Shavers - Trumpet Dave Nelson - Trumpet Ed Allen - Cornet Eric Henry - Drums Everett Barksdale - Guitar Frank Orchard - Trombone Frankie Newton - Trumpet George Stafford - Drums George Wettling - Drums Jack Lesberg - Bass Joe Bushkin - Piano John Kirby - Bass Mac McGrath - Drums Manzie Johnson - Drums Max Kaminsky - Trumpet Mezz Mezzrow - Clarinet O'Neill Spencer - Drums, Vocals Robert Carroll - Sax (Tenor) Rod Cless - Clarinet Sidney Bechet - Clarinet, Sax (Soprano) Wellman Braud - Bass Willie Mae Williams - Washboard
* Colin Brown - Compilation, Producer * Tony Watts - Compilation, Liner Notes, Producer
Willie "The Lion" Smith
Active Decades: '20s, '30s, '40s, '50s, '60s and '70s Born: Nov 25, 1897 in Goshen, NY Died: Apr 18, 1973 in New York, NY Genre: Jazz Styles: Classic Jazz, Piano Blues, Stride
Willie "The Lion" Smith in the 1920s was considered one of the big three of stride piano (along with James P. Johnson and Fats Waller) even though he made almost no recordings until the mid-'30s. His mother was an organist and pianist, and Smith started playing piano when he was six. He earned a living playing piano as a teenager, gained his nickname "the Lion" for his heroism in World War I, and after his discharge he became one of the star attractions at Harlem's nightly rent parties. Although he toured with Mamie Smith (and played piano on her pioneering 1920 blues record "Crazy Blues"), Smith mostly freelanced throughout his life. He was an influence on the young Duke Ellington (who would later write "Portrait of the Lion") and most younger New York-based pianists of the 1920s and '30s. Although he was a braggart and (with his cigar and trademark derby hat) appeared to be a rough character, Smith was actually more colorful than menacing and a very sophisticated pianist with a light touch. His recordings with his Cubs (starting in 1935) and particularly his 1939 piano solos for Commodore (highlighted by "Echoes of Spring") cemented his place in history. Because he remained very active into the early '70s (writing his memoirs -Music on My Mind in 1965), for quite a few decades Willie "the Lion" Smith was considered a living link to the glory days of early jazz. --- Scott Yanow, All Music Guide |
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