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| 1. | The Old Music Master Artie Bernstein, Hoagy Carmichael, Spike Jones
 
 |  | 2. | Stardust Hoagy Carmichael
 
 |  | 3. | Rockin' Chair Mildred Bailey, Hoagy Carmichael
 
 |  | 4. | Moon Country Hoagy Carmichael & His Orchestra
 
 |  | 5. | Riverboat Shuffle Hoagy Carmichael, Frankie Trumbauer & His Orchestra
 
 |  | 6. | Two Sleepy People Hoagy Carmichael
 
 |  | 7. | Judy Hoagy Carmichael And His Orchestra
 
 |  | 8. | Skylark Hoagy Carmichael, Billy Eckstine, Earl Hines & His Orchestra
 
 |  | 9. | Moonburn Hoagy Carmichael, Bing Crosby, Georgie Stoll's Trio
 
 |  | 10. | Hong Kong Blues Artie Bernstein, Hoagy Carmichael, Spike Jones
 
 |  | 11. | One Morning in May Hoagy Carmichael, Joe Loss & His Band, Jimmy Messene
 
 |  | 12. | Lazy River Hoagy Carmichael And His Band
 
 |  | 13. | I Get Along Without You Very Well Hoagy Carmichael, Adelaide Hall, Fela Sowande
 
 |  | 14. | Blue Orchids Hoagy Carmichael, Geraldo & His Orchestra, Cyril Grantham
 
 |  | 15. | Little Old Lady Hoagy Carmichael, Gracie Fields, Fred Hartley's Quintet
 
 |  | 16. | Georgia on My Mind Hoagy Carmichael, Nat Gonella & His Georgians
 
 |  | 17. | Sing Me a Swing Song (And Let Me Dance) Hoagy Carmichael, Ella Fitzgerald, Chick Webb
 
 |  | 18. | Lazy Bones Hoagy Carmichael
 
 |  | 19. | Washboard Blues Hoagy Carmichael, Paul Whiteman Orchestra
 
 |  | 20. | Snowball Hoagy Carmichael
 
 |  | 21. | Small Fry Hoagy Carmichael
 
 |  | 22. | Sing It Way Down Low Hoagy Carmichael
 
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| Jazz / Vocal, Big Band, Show Tunes, Swing, Classic Jazz, American Popular Song, Standards, Traditional Pop, Tin Pan Alley Pop, Vocal Jazz 
 Hoagy Carmichael - Bass
 Adelaide Hall
 Artie Bernstein	, Bass
 Billy Eckstine
 Bing Crosby
 Chick Webb
 Colin Brown	Compilation, Producer, Compilation Producer
 Cyril Grantham	Vocals,
 Earl Hines & His Orchestra
 Ella Fitzgerald
 Fela Sowande	Organ,
 Frankie Trumbauer & His Orchestra
 Geraldo & His Orchestra
 Gracie Fields
 Jimmy Messini	Vocals
 Mildred Bailey
 Paul Whiteman Orchestra
 Spike Jones	, Drums
 Tony Watts	Compilation Producer, Producer, Compilation, Liner Notes
 
 The most offbeat and proto-bohemian of the great songwriters who have contributed to the Great American Songbook, Hoagy Carmichael was as apt to write about actual places in memory, or the sheer passing of time or everyday tasks like doing laundry, as he was to spin out a traditional love song, and it has made his musical legacy a rich and varied one. This nice collection works as a fine introduction to Carmichael's unique voice, and it features his own versions of "Moon Country," "Hong Kong Blues," "Lazy River," and "Lazy Bones" (Carmichael had an almost Zen-like fascination with the art of doing nothing and he wrote countless songs about the glorious inertia of being lazy), as well as versions of his songs by other artists, including Frank Sinatra's early take on "Stardust," Carmichael's most famous composition, and Nat Gonella's wonderful orchestral version of "Georgia on My Mind," another stone cold Carmichael classic. ~ Steve Leggett, All Music Guide
 
 
 
 Hoagy Carmichael
 
 Active Decades: '20s, '30s, '40s, '50s and '60s
 Born: Nov 11, 1899 in Bloomington, IN
 Died: Dec 27, 1981 in Palm Springs, CA
 Genre: Jazz
 
 One of the great composers of the American popular song, Hoagy Carmichael differed from most of the others (with the obvious exception of Duke Ellington) in that he was also a fine performer. Such Carmichael songs as "Stardust," "Georgia on My Mind," "Up the Lazy River," "Rockin' Chair," "The Nearness of You," "Heart and Soul," "In the Cool, Cool, Cool of the Evening," "Skylark," and "New Orleans" have long been standards, each flexible enough to receive definitive treatment numerous times. Carmichael, who was briefly a lawyer, loved jazz almost from the start, and particularly the cornet playing of Bix Beiderbecke. His first composition, "Riverboat Shuffle," was recorded by Bix and the Wolverines in 1924, and became a Dixieland standard. Carmichael, as a pianist, vocalist, and occasional trumpeter, eventually abandoned law to concentrate on jazz, particularly after recording "Washboard Blues" with Paul Whiteman in 1927. He led a few jazz sessions of his own in the late '20s (including one that interpreted "Stardust" as an up-tempo stomp), but became more popular as a skilled songwriter. By 1935, he was working in Hollywood and became an occasional character actor, appearing in 14 films including To Have and Have Not and The Best Years of Our Lives, generally playing a philosophical and world weary pianist/vocalist. In the 1940s, Carmichael recorded some trio versions of his hits, and in 1956, he cut a full set of vocals while backed by a modern jazz group that included Art Pepper. After that, he drifted into semi-retirement, dissatisfied with how the music business had changed. His two autobiographies (1946's -The Stardust Road and 1965's -Sometimes I Wonder) are worth picking up.
 --- Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
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