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Low Down Papa
Fats Waller
első megjelenés éve: 1993
49 perc
(1990)

CD
5.676 Ft 

 

IMPORT!
Kosaramba teszem
1.  I'm Crazy 'Bout My Baby (And My Baby's Crazy 'Bout Me)
2.  Wild Cat Blues
3.  Jail House Blues
4.  Do It Mr. So-And-So
5.  Don't Try to Take My Loving Man Away
6.  Your Time Now
7.  Papa Better Watch Your Step
8.  Haitian Blues
9.  Mama's Got the Blues
10.  Midnight Blues
11.  Last Go Round Blues
12.  Cryin' for My Used to Be
13.  Low Down Papa
Jazz / Swing, Stride, Early Jazz, Jive, Jazz Instrument, Piano Jazz

Alan Caplin Art Direction
Arnold S. Caplin Producer
Bessie Smith Composer
Dr. Toby Mountain Digital Engineer, Engineer
Fats Waller Composer, Piano, Vocals
Huddie Ledbetter Composer
James Cox Composer
James P. Johnson Piano Rolls, ?, Performer
Lightnin' Hopkins Composer
Lizzie Miles Composer
Lucille Johnson Composer
Lukie Johnson Composer
Mike Montgomery Liner Notes, Piano Rolls, Art Direction
Myrtle Barger Composer
Tausha Hammed Composer
Traditional Composer

When young Thomas Waller began to develop himself as a professional pianist under the tutelage of the great James P. Johnson, he followed in his mentor's footsteps by cutting both phonograph records and player piano rolls. While the sound recordings are generally recognized as precious relics of early jazz, any intelligent assessment of Waller's early work must also take into account those tightly wound scrolls of perforated paper. Each piano roll was created over a lengthy span of time, first by the pianist whose every note was marked onto a roll by a specially chalked recording mechanism, then by a team of engineers who manually punched hundreds of little holes to create the master roll. Much critical emphasis has been placed upon some technicians' tendency to add notes during this leg of the process, resulting in cluttered or "impossible" passages, or to repeat entire sections verbatim in order to increase the duration of the roll. The fact remains that player piano rolls formed a substantial part of the bedrock of young Fats Waller's career. In 1990 the Biograph label, having originally brought out all of Waller's known rolls on LP, compiled 13 choice examples on this CD entitled Low Down Papa. Highlights include a swell rendition of Bessie Smith's "Jailhouse Blues," amazing versions of "Your Time Now," "Haitian Blues," "Do It! Mister So and So," and a thrilling Waller/Johnson duet performance of "Cryin' for My Used to Be." The fact that Waller's "Wild Cat Blues" wasn't actually played by him is immaterial; hearing this stimulating melody played back in this manner is a real treat. (Waller's piano rolls may also be heard played through a Compton theater organ on Fats at the Organ on ASV/Living Era 5007, 1992.)

This is a region of ragtime and early jazz that is ripe for re-evaluation. Many individuals who write about early jazz apparently suffer from an inability to enjoy, comprehend, or properly assess early-20th century player piano rolls. Overarching, generalized, dismissive statements regarding this medium can be unfair and misleading. Contrary to prevailing 21st century attitudes, one should not expect the piano roll to perfectly reproduce the performance style of a given pianist. While such miracles have been accomplished under certain high-tech conditions, as with Artis Wodehouse's 1999 Yamaha Disklavier realization of Jelly Roll Morton's piano rolls for Elektra/Nonesuch, the original rolls should be approached as a replication of the listening experience enjoyed by millions of people from the 1890s through the early 1930s. It is also important to remember that the same piano roll can sound dramatically different depending upon how it is played back. Clumsy reproduction can and will bring out those aspects of the medium -- mechanical-sounding action, adrenalin tempos, and tinny tonality -- that people most often complain about. In the case of the early Welte-Mignon rolls, pedal action was recorded along with the notes, enabling the otherwise unrecorded Gustav Mahler to leave behind a tiny body of precious piano rolls for posterity (see Mahler Plays Mahler, Golden Legacy, 1993). A delightfully innovative conceptual component emerged during the second half of the 20th century as Conlon Nancarrow began punching his own rolls to create fantastically complex and seemingly "impossible" Studies for Player Piano. Considered in the light of these far-reaching developments, Fats Waller's piano rolls occupy a special place in a genre of mechanically reproduced music that has yet to be properly understood or fully appreciated. ~ arwulf arwulf, All Music Guide

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