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4.100 Ft
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1. | Bourbon Street Parade
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2. | Tin Roof Blues
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3. | Weary Blues
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4. | How Come You Do Me Like You Do?
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5. | Jazz Me Blues
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6. | At the Jazz Band Ball
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7. | Singin' the Blues
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8. | Angry
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9. | Struttin' With Some Barbecue
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10. | I Ain't Gonna Give Nobody None of My Jelly Roll
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11. | Yellow Dog Blues
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12. | Big Butter and Egg Man
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13. | Someday Sweetheart
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14. | That da da Strain
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15. | Everybody Loves My Baby
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16. | How Long, How Long Blues
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17. | Fidgety Feet
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18. | Pinch Me
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19. | Song of the Wanderer
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Jazz
#1-9 Dick Baars - cornet Georg Brunis - trombone Pat Patterson - clarinet Clarence Hall - piano Gene Mayl - bass, tba Glenn Kimmel - drums Replace Baars and Patterson: Carl Halen - trumpet #10-19 Frank Powers - clarinet #10-19
Trombonist George Brunies (who in later years shortened his name to Georg Brunis) led record dates in 1943 and 1946 for the Commodore label, four numbers for Southland in 1955, and in 1973 was the leader of a live set for the Fat Cat label. Otherwise, the only albums that Brunies headed were two records for the Jazzology label in 1964 and 1965, which are reissued in full on this single CD. The Dixieland trombonist is heard with a pair of overlapping sextets recorded in Dayton, OH. Either Dick Baars or Carl Halen is on cornet/trumpet and either Pat Patterson or the superior Frank Powers is on clarinet, along with pianist Clarence Hall, Gene Mayl on bass and tuba, drummer Glenn Kimmel and Brunies himself. The Dixieland standards include "Bourbon Street Parade," "Jazz Me Blues," "Angry" (which Brunies sings), "Big Butter and Egg Man," and "Fidgety Feet." Infectious and joyful music from George Brunies during his late prime. --- Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
Georg Brunis
Active Decades: '20s, '30s, '40s, '50s, '60s and '70s Born: Feb 06, 1902 in New Orleans, LA Died: Nov 19, 1974 in Chicago, IL Genre: Jazz Styles: Dixieland, New Orleans Jazz
Another member of the famous New Orleans Brunies family, though he shortened the spelling of his name on the advice of a numerologist. Georg Brunis played alto horn in a family trio as an eight-year-old, and also with Papa Jack Laine's Reliance Brass Band. He switched to trombone at age ten; then moved to Chicago in 1920, where he played in Paul Mares' band. He later joined Mares' Friars Society Orchestra, which eventually became The New Orleans Rhythm Kings. He started a long recording and performing relationship with Ted Lewis in 1924, then became active in New York in 1935. Brunis played in several New York clubs, joined Muggsy Spanier's Ragtime Band in 1939 and played often with Eddie Condon, Lewis and Art Hodes. He went back to Chicago in 1949, forming his own band, and held a residency at Club 1111 from '51 - '59. Brunis later led groups in Wisconsin and Ohio. ---Ron Wynn, All Music Guide |
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