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3.801 Ft
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1. | Howdy, Friends (E.T.O. Curtain Call)
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2. | Love in the First Degree
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3. | New Orleans Parade
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4. | Smack in the Back
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5. | Fingerwave
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6. | The Love Bug Will Bite You
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7. | Beat Me, Daddy, Eight to the Bar
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8. | Scrub Me, Mama, With a Boogie Beat
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9. | Chicken Gumboogie
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10. | Southpaw Serenade
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11. | Bounce Me, Brother, With a Solid Four [From Buck Privates]
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12. | In the Hall of the Mountain King
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13. | Down the Road a Piece
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14. | Borderline
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15. | Jiminy Crickets
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16. | Red Silk Stockings and Green Perfume
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17. | Civilisation (Bongo, Bongo, Bongo) [From Angel in the Wings]
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18. | Tambourine [From Angel in the Wings]
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19. | You Came a Long Way from St. Louis
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20. | For You, My Love
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21. | Blue Moon
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22. | Memphis Blues
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23. | Long Gone
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24. | Rock-A-Bye the Boogie
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Jazz
Ray McKinley - Drums, Vocals Al Klink - Sax (Tenor) Alberto Mitchell - Trumpet Alec FILA - Trumpet Artt Mendelsohn - Clarinet, Sax (Alto) Bill Ainsworth - Sax (Alto) Bill Corti - Trombone Bill Hodges - Trumpet Bill Stegmeyer - Sax (Alto) Billy Butterfield - Trumpet Bob Holt - Piano Bobby Byrne - Trombone Bobby Lee Jones - Sax (Alto) Bobby Styles - Trumpet Bruce Squires - Trombone Bunny Bardach - Clarinet, Sax (Tenor) Charlie Frazier - Flute, Sax (Tenor) Chubby Kuster - Trumpet Chuck Genduso - Trumpet Chuck Grant - Sax (Tenor) Cliff Leeman - Drums Curly Broyles - Trumpet Cutty Cutshall - Trombone Danny Bank - Sax (Baritone) Dave Pitman - Trombone Deane Kincaide - Arranger, Sax (Baritone) Doc Goldberg - Double Bass Don Mattison - Trombone Eddie Sauter - Arranger Ernie Perry - Sax (Tenor) Freddie Slack - Piano Fud Livingston - Sax (Tenor) George Thow - Piano Harry Wuest - Sax (Alto) Harvey Nevins - Clarinet, Flute, Sax (Alto) Irv Dinkin - Trombone Jack Lesberg - Double Bass Jack Ryan - Double Bass Jack Steele - Trumpet Jim Harwood - Trombone Jimmy Dorsey - Clarinet, Sax (Alto) Jimmy Emert - Trombone Joe Cribari - Piano Joe Ferrante - Trumpet Joe Graves - Trumpet Joe Meyer - Trumpet Joe Sullivan - Piano Joe Wiedman - Trumpet Joe Yukl - Trombone Joey Huffman - Clarinet, Sax (Alto) John Barnes Chance - Double Bass John Michael Gray - Guitar John Van Eps - Sax (Tenor) Johnny Potoker - Piano Larry Forand - Trumpet Lee Castle - Trumpet Leonard Whitney - Arranger, Sax (Alto) Lou McGarity - Trombone Lou Stein - Piano Mark Ranshaw - Cover Art Mundell Lowe - Guitar Nick Travis - Trumpet Paul Kashishian - Drums Peanuts Hucko - Clarinet, Sax (Tenor) Pete Chico - Trumpet Pete Terry - Sax (Tenor) Peter Dempsey - Compilation, Liner Notes, Transfers Ray Beller - Clarinet, Sax (Alto) Ray Crick - Compilation Roc Hillman - Guitar Rollo Laylan - Drums Sam Butera - Sax (Tenor) Sam Sachelle - Sax (Baritone), Sax (Tenor) Simon Haram - Audio Restoration, Remastering Skeets Herfurt - Clarinet Slim Taft - Double Bass Steve Lipkins - Trumpet Tony Mottola - Guitar Toots Camarata - Trumpet Toots Mondello - Sax (Alto) Vern Friley - Trombone Walt Milford - Sax (Baritone) Ward Erwin - Double Bass Will Bradley - Trombone Will Bradley, Jr. - Trombone Yank Lawson - Trumpet
Ray McKinley
Active Decades: '30s, '40s, '50s and '60s Born: Jun 18, 1910 in Fort Worth, TX Died: May 07, 1995 in Largo, FL Genre: Jazz Styles: Swing
A top drummer during the swing era and a likable and personable singer who always displayed good humor, Ray McKinley was most significant in the 1940s in several settings. He played at the start of his career in territory bands, with Smith Ballew and then the Dorsey Brothers Orchestra, staying with Jimmy after the battling Dorseys went their separate ways. In 1939, McKinley became the co-leader (in reality, if not in its name) of the new Will Bradley Orchestra. His vocals and the boogie-woogie piano playing of Freddie Slack made the band a hit with such numbers as "Beat Me Daddy, Eight to the Bar" and "Celery Stalks at Midnight." By 1942, trombonist Bradley had gotten sick of the repertoire (which also included "Rock-A-Bye the Boogie," "Scrub Me Mama With a Boogie Beat," "I Boogied When I Should Have Woogied," "Boogie Woogie Conga," "Bounce Me Brother With a Solid Four," "Booglie Wooglie Piggy," and "Fry Me Cookie With a Can of Lard") and the group broke up. McKinley led a short-lived big band and then went in the military, playing in Europe with Glenn Miller's Army Air Force Orchestra and a small group also including Peanuts Hucko and Mel Powell. After Miller's death, McKinley was one of the band's co-leaders. In 1946, he put together his own orchestra, which used some very modern arrangements by Eddie Sauter, was open to the influence of bop, and yet had a Dixieland flavor at times. Not too surprisingly, it failed to catch on (although a Savoy LP shows how strong the band could be). Ray McKinley led the Glenn Miller ghost band during 1956-1966 and freelanced with small groups and headed another Glenn Miller-type orchestra until drifting into semi-retirement. --- Scott Yanow, All Music Guide |
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