| Jazz / Dixieland 
 Bill Armstrong	Producer
 Bill Carroll	Tuba, Trombone, Vocals
 Bob Helm	Sax (Soprano), Clarinet, Vocals
 Bob Schulz	Vocals, Cornet
 Colin Freeman	Engineer
 Ern Rose	Remixing
 George H. Buck, Jr.	Producer, Author
 Houcine Harrabi	Production Coordination
 Jesse Osborne	Engineer
 Leon Oakley	Cornet, Vocals
 Pat Yankee	Vocals
 Pete Clute	Piano
 Turk Murphy	Vocals, Arranger, Trombone
 
 This CD along with GHB 492 collects all the Studio recordings engineered by Ron Halstead of Turk Murphy and his San Francisco jazz band. Tracks 1-14 on this disc were recorded in Halsteads' native Australia, Dec. 29, 1878.   The other tracks were recorded in San Francisco during the same session as all the material found on "Ragged but Right Vol 2", June 19, 1980.
 
 
 
 Turk Murphy
 
 Active Decades: '30s, '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s and '80s
 Born: Dec 16, 1915 in Palermo, CA
 Died: May 30, 1987 in San Francisco, CA
 Genre: Jazz
 
 Turk Murphy led one of the most popular bands of the San Francisco Dixieland movement. After playing with various big bands (including Mal Hallett and Will Osborne), Murphy first gained fame for his work with Lu Watters' highly influential Yerba Buena Jazz Band (1940-1947). He formed his own group in 1947 and after 13 years, they found a permanent home at Earthquake McGoon's and also toured occasionally. Although not thought of as a virtuoso trombone soloist and his occasional singing was just passable, Murphy's ensemble work was superior and he put together a stimulating repertoire filled with obscurities and favorites from the 1920s (along with some newer originals). His bands were always very musical; among his sidemen through the years were trumpeters Don Kinch, Bob Short, and Leon Oakley; clarinetist Bob Helm; pianists Wally Rose, Pete Clute, and Ray Skjelbred; and singer Pat Yankee. Turk Murphy and his beloved group made many records for such labels as Good Time Jazz, Fairmont, Columbia (1953-1956), Verve, Dawn Club, Roulette, RCA, Motherlode, Atlantic, GHB, MPS, Stomp Off, and Merry Makers.
 ---Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
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