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The Great American Songbook |
Louis Armstrong |
első megjelenés éve: 2006 |
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(2006)
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 CD |
4.103 Ft
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1. | Star Dust
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2. | I've Got the World on a String [From Cotton Club Parade]
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3. | Memories of You
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4. | I Can't Believe That You're in Love with Me [From Gay Paree]
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5. | When Your Lover Has Gone [From Blonde Crazy]
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6. | I Can't Give You Anything but Love [From Lew Leslie's Blackbirds ...]
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7. | All of Me
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8. | Body and Soul [From Three's A Crowd]
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9. | Lazy River
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10. | Ain't Misbehavin' [From Connie's Hot Chocolates][Live]
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11. | Pennies from Heaven [From Pennies from Heaven][Live]
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12. | On the Sunny Side of the Street [From Lew Leslie's International Revue]
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13. | Rockin' Chair [Live]
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14. | Mack the Knife [From the Three Penny Opera]
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Jazz / Dixieland, Classic Jazz, New Orleans Jazz, Traditional Pop
Louis Armstrong - Trumpet, Vocals "Big" Mike McKendrick Guitar, Banjo Albert Nicholas Sax (Alto) Albert Washington, Jr. Clarinet, Sax (Tenor) Arvell Shaw Bass Barrett Deems Drums Bill Oldham Bass Bill Perkins Guitar, Banjo Billy Kyle Piano Bob Haggart Bass Bob Stephens Producer Bobby Hackett Cornet Bobby Holmes Sax (Alto), Clarinet Budd Johnson Sax (Tenor), Clarinet Castor McCord Sax (Tenor), Clarinet Charlie Alexander Piano Charlie Holmes Sax (Alto) Charlie Jones Sax (Tenor), Clarinet Danny Barcelona Drums Dick Carey Piano Ed Anderson Trumpet Eddie Condon Banjo Edmond Hall Clarinet Ellis Whiutlock Trumpet George Avakian Producer George James Clarinet, Sax (Soprano), Sax (Alto) George Oldham Sax (Alto), Clarinet George Orendorff Trumpet Harold Scott Trumpet Henry Hicks Trombone Henry Prince Piano Howard Fritzson Design Direction J.C. Higginbotham Trombone Jack Teagarden Vocals, Trombone Joe Bailey Tuba, Bass John Lindsay Bass Justin Ring Producer Keg Johnson Trombone Les Hite Sax (Baritone), Sax (Alto) Lester Boone Sax (Alto), Clarinet Lionel Hampton Vibraphone, Drums Liz Reilly Photo Research Lonnie Johnson Guitar Luis Russell Piano Luther Graven Trombone Marvin Johnson Sax (Alto) Mort Herbert Bass Nathan Sedlander Product Manager Patti Matheny A&R Paul Barbarin Drums Peanuts Hucko Clarinet Pops Foster Bass Preston Jackson Trombone R.J. Jones Producer Richard Seidel Compilation Producer Scoville Johnson Sax (Alto), Clarinet Sid Catlett Drums Steven Berkowitz A&R Susanne Cerha Design Assistant, Design Teddy Hill Sax (Tenor) Teddy Wilson Piano Theodore McCord Sax (Alto) Tommy Rockwell Producer Triana DOrazio Packaging Manager Trummy Young Vocals Tubby Hall Drums Will Friedwald Liner Notes Woody Pornpitaksuk Mastering Yank Porter Drums Zilner Randolph Arranger, Trumpet
While Louis Armstrong didn't invent jazz, he certainly shaped it in his own image, personalizing it, popularizing it, and giving it a template to follow into the modern age. He did this with his trumpet skills, obviously, joyously swinging and playing his way around melodies in breathtaking improvisations, but he also did it with his singing, which used a horn man's lexicon to slide, slur, and bend melodies into delightfully new and surprisingly natural shapes until it isn't difficult to say that American popular singing begins with Louis Armstrong. The 14 songs presented here, recorded in the wide span between 1929 and 1958, simply prove the point. Armstrong lifted songs like "On the Sunny Side of the Street" (featured here in a 1956 live version from Chicago), "Stardust," and "Ain't Misbehavin'" (drawn from a 1947 performance at New York's Town Hall) from their Tin Pan Alley roots into the annals of classic American song, and he set the standard for how to sing and occupy a song on a personal level, literally inventing modern pop singing. It wasn't a matter of following a melody as written. Any reasonably able singer could do that. Armstrong, again using improvisational tools no doubt learned from his horn playing, bent the melody to other purposes, shortening it, lengthening it, syncopating it, and circling it until it shone far past its original shape, yet retained that shape as well, and this innovative, playful approach to singing has been aped by thousands of singers since until it is impossible to imagine modern pop or jazz singing without Armstrong's considerable influence. Listen to how he makes Hoagy Carmichael's "Lazy River" (the version presented here is from 1931) take unexpected turns and shifts, bending and rolling onward the way a real river would, never static or still but full of endless little variations in motion, always in sight of its original shape, but also changing down the length of its melody until it is possible to equate Armstrong's singing with a long, gliding, and improvised trumpet solo, the whole thing done with such warmth and joy that it uplifts even as much as it redefines and restructures. That's singing. That's jazz. That's Louis Armstrong. Oh, and he plays some pretty cool trumpet on these sides, too. ~ Steve Leggett, All Music Guide |
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