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4.001 Ft
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1. | One Sweet Letter from You
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2. | Flying Home
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3. | Rose Room (In Sunny Roseland)
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4. | Stardust
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5. | Haven't Named It Yet
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6. | Seven Come Eleven
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7. | Honeysuckle Rose
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8. | Shivers
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9. | Gone With "What" Wind
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10. | The Sheik of Araby
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11. | Surrender Dear
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12. | Boy Meets Goy (Grand Slam)
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13. | Six Appeal (My Daddy Rocks Me)
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14. | Wholly Cats
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15. | As Long as I Live
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16. | Benny's Bugle
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17. | I Can't Give You Anything But Love
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18. | Breakfast Feud
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19. | On the Alamo
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20. | I Found a New Baby
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21. | Profoundly Blue
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22. | Solo Flight
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Jazz
Alec FILA - Trumpet Artie Bernstein - Bass Ben Webster - Sax (Tenor) Benny Carter - Sax (Alto) Benny Goodman - Clarinet, Orchestra Big Sid Catlett - Drums Buff Estes - Sax (Alto) Charlie Christian - Guitar (Electric), Main Performer Chu Berry - Sax (Tenor) Clyde Hart - Piano Coleman Hawkins - Sax (Tenor) Cootie Williams - Trumpet Count Basie - Piano Cozy Cole - Drums Cutty Cutshall - Trombone Dave Tough - Drums Dizzy Gillespie - Trumpet Earl Bostic - Sax (Alto) Edmond Hall - Clarinet Fletcher Henderson - Piano Georgie Auld - Sax (Tenor) Gus Bivona - Sax (Alto) Harry Jaeger - Drums Henry "Red" Allen - Trumpet Hymie Schertzer - Sax (Alto) Irving Goodman - Trumpet Israel Crosby - Bass J.C. Higginbotham - Trombone Jerry Jerome - Sax (Tenor) Jimmy Maxwell - Trumpet Johnny Guarnieri - Piano Ken Kersey - Piano Lionel Hampton - Orchestra, Vibraphone, Vocals Lou McGarity - Trombone Meade "Lux" Lewis - Celeste Milt Hinton - Bass Nick Fatool - Drums Red Ballard - Trombone Skip Martin - Sax (Alto) Ted Vesely - Trombone Toots Mondello - Sax (Alto) Vernon Brown - Trombone Ziggy Elman - Trumpet
Charlie Christian
Active Decades: '30s and '40s Born: Jul 29, 1916 in Dallas, TX Died: Mar 02, 1942 in New York, NY Genre: Jazz Styles: Big Band, Bop, Swing
It can be said without exaggeration that virtually every jazz guitarist that emerged during 1940-65 sounded like a relative of Charlie Christian. The first important electric guitarist, Christian played his instrument with the fluidity, confidence, and swing of a saxophonist. Although technically a swing stylist, his musical vocabulary was studied and emulated by the bop players, and when one listens to players ranging from Tiny Grimes, Barney Kessel, and Herb Ellis, to Wes Montgomery and George Benson, the dominant influence of Christian is obvious. Charlie Christian's time in the spotlight was terribly brief. He played piano locally in Oklahoma, and began to utilize an amplified guitar in 1937, after becoming a student of Eddie Durham, a jazz guitarist who invented the amplified guitar. John Hammond, the masterful talent scout and producer, heard about Christian (possibly from Mary Lou Williams), was impressed by what he saw, and arranged for the guitarist to travel to Los Angeles in August 1939 and try out with Benny Goodman. Although the clarinetist was initially put off by Christian's primitive wardrobe, as soon as they started jamming on "Rose Room," Christian's talents were obvious. For the next two years, he would be well-featured with Benny Goodman's Sextet; there were two solos (including the showcase "Solo Flight") with the full orchestra; and the guitarist had the opportunity to jam at Minton's Playhouse with such up-and-coming players as Thelonious Monk, Kenny Clarke, and Dizzy Gillespie. All of the guitarist's recordings (including guest spots and radio broadcasts) are currently available on CD. Tragically, he contracted tuberculosis in 1941, and died at the age of 25 on March 2, 1942. It would be 25 years before jazz guitarists finally moved beyond Charlie Christian. ---Scott Yanow, All Music Guide |
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