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3.981 Ft
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1. | Lullaby In Rhythm
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2. | Hoopdee Whodee
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3. | If Dreams Come True
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4. | Stompin' At The Savoy
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5. | I'll Be Back For More
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6. | Happy And Satisfied
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7. | Cool And Groovy
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8. | Blue Lou
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9. | The Blues Made Me This Way
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10. | Light And Sweet
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11. | The Sweetness Of You
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12. | Don't Be That Way
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13. | Tain't What You Do It's The Way That Cha Do It
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14. | Uptown Blues
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15. | Margie (2a)
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16. | Annie Laurie
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17. | Well All Right Then
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18. | Blues In The Night
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19. | My Blue Heaven
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20. | Four Or Five Times (2b)
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21. | I'm Walking Through Heaven (2c)
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22. | For Dancers Only
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23. | Cheatin' On Me
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24. | Rhythm Is Our Business (2d)
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Jazz
Recorded: 1957
Vocalists: 2a- Trummie Young 2b- Joe Thomas 2c- Dan Grissom 2d- Willie Smith Willie Smith, Alvin Stoller, Pete Candoli, Si Zentner, Ollie Mitchell, Jimmy Rowles, Mannie Klien
Savoy Stomp features two great big band arranger/composers and their great orchestras recorded in 1957. Edgar Sampson and Billy May share the twenty four tracks on this disc. Edgar Sampson's Orchestra play twelve of his arrangements including Lullaby In Rhythm, Stompin At The Savoy, Blue Lou, The Sweetness Of You and Don't Be That Way. Billy May and his Orchestra play the music of Jimmy Lunceford. Willie Smith, Pete Candoli, Si Zentner, Oliie Mitchell, Mannie Klein and Jimmy Rowles are featured and Alvin Stoller is the "engine room" on Drums. Tunes featured include Taint What You Do, Uptown Blues, Annie Laurie, Blues In The Night and Margie sung by Trummy Young.
Billy May
Active Decades: '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s and '90s Born: Nov 10, 1916 in Pittsburgh, PA Died: Jan 22, 2004 in San Juan Capistrano, CA Genre: Jazz Styles: Big Band, Orchestral Pop, Instrumental Pop, Swing, Traditional Pop
The last of the great arrangers who wrote regularly for Frank Sinatra, Billy May had several varied careers in and out of jazz. His first notable gig was as an arranger/trumpeter with Charlie Barnet (1938-1940), for whom he wrote the wah-wah-ing hit arrangement of Ray Noble's "Cherokee." Later, he worked in the same capacities for Glenn Miller (1940-1942) and Les Brown (1942) before settling into staff jobs, first at NBC studios, then at Capitol Records, where he led his own studio big band from 1951 to 1954. His arrangements for Sinatra, beginning with Come Fly With Me (1957) and ending with Trilogy (1979), are often in a walloping, brassy, even taunting swing mode, generating some of the singer's most swaggering vocals. May also did extensive scoring for television, film, and commercials. Although May was largely inactive in the '80s and '90s , he unexpectedly surfaced in 1996 with some typically bright big band charts for comic Stan Freberg's The United States of America, Vol. 2 (Rhino), 25 years after his contributions to Vol. 1. The veteran arranger died quietly at home on January 22, 2004 at the age of 87. ---Richard S. Ginell, All Music Guide
Edgar Sampson
Active Decades: '30s, '40s, '50s and '60s Born: Aug 31, 1907 in New York, NY Died: Jan 16, 1973 in Englewood, NJ Genre: Jazz Styles: Swing
However long and varied Edgar Sampson's career was, he became a jazz immortal solely on basis of the brilliant contributions he made for a few short years as a member of the Chick Webb band. Sampson songs like "Stompin' at the Savoy" and "Don't Be That Way" still evoke the cozy yet swinging ambience of the big band era like few others, and he was also responsible for "Blue Lou," "Lullaby in Rhythm," "Blue Minor," and "If Dreams Come True." Sampson started playing the violin at age six, following that up with alto sax study while in high school. He began working professionally as a teenager in a violin/piano duo with Joe Coleman in 1924, and then spent a season with Duke Ellington at the Kentucky Club in 1925. He worked his way through several bands, including those of Bingie Madison, Billy Fowler, Arthur Gibbs (at the Savoy Ballroom), Charlie Johnson, Alex Jackson, Fletcher Henderson, and Rex Stewart, until he landed a spot in the Webb band in 1933. There, Sampson made his reputation as an arranger and composer, and after he left in July 1936, he had become an in-demand freelance arranger for Benny Goodman (who made huge hits of some of his tunes), Artie Shaw, Red Norvo, Teddy Hill, Teddy Wilson, and Webb himself. After Webb's death in 1939, Sampson briefly served as musical director for Ella Fitzgerald when she took over the band. He played alto and baritone sax for Al Sears in 1943, and then led his own band in New York (1949-1951). By the late '40s, Sampson had become interested in Latin music, arranging for Marcellino Guerra, Tito Puente, and Tito Rodriguez through the '50s; later in the decade, he started leading small groups. He recorded only one album under his own name in 1956, Swing Softly, Sweet Sampson (Coral). Sampson became inactive in the late '60s when illness forced him to have a leg amputated. ---Richard S. Ginell, All Music Guide |
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