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(Jazz, Swing, Dixieland) [CD] Eddie Condon featuring Wild Bill Davison - Dr. Jazz Series, Vol. 5 - 1994 (Storyville)
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Релиз подготовлен Proper SelfMade Lossless Group "Always Proper, Ever SelfMade"--Eddie Condon's Band From Eddie Condon's 47 W. 3rd St. featuring Wild Bill Davison, No. 1 - Dr. Jazz Series, Vol. 5 - 1993 (Storyville)--Жанр: Jazz, Swing, Dixieland Носитель: CD (Album, Remastered, Mono, Archival) Страна-производитель диска (релиза): Sweden, Printed in Denmark Год издания оригинала: 1994 Серия: The Doctor Jazz Series Vol. 1 Издатель (лейбл): Storyville Номер по каталогу: STCD 6045 Страна исполнителя (группы) : USA Дата / место записи: broadcast on WMGM from Eddie Condon's, 47 West Third Street in Greenwich Village, New York City Аудио кодек: FLAC (*.flac) Тип рипа: (tracks + .cue) Битрейт аудио: lossless Наличие сканов в содержимом раздачи: full scans, png, 300 dpi Продолжительность: 56:16 Источник (релизер): Моя коллекция, мой рип Трэклист: 1. Improvisation For The March Of Time 1:00 (Eddie Condon) 2. Blue (And Broken Hearted) 4:51 (Grant Clarke, Edgar Leslie. Lou Handman) 3. Wolverine Blues 5:17 (Jelly Roll Morton. Ben Spikes, J.C. Spikes) 4. If I Had You 4:35 (Shapiro Campbell, Conelly) 5. Baby, Won't You Please Come Home? 3:39 (Charles Warfield, Clarence Williams) 6. The Sheik Of Araby 1.56 (Smith, Wheeler, Snyder). 7. When My Sugar Walks Down The Street 4:48 (Irving Mills, Gene Austin, Jim McHugh) 8. The Birth Of The Blues 4:02 (B.G. DeSylva, Lew Brown, Ray Henderson) 9. Medley: 4:51 ..... Stars Fell On Alabama (Mitchell Parish, Frank Perkins) ..... Summertime (DuBose Heyward. George Gershwin) ..... Don't Blame Me (Dorothy Fields, Jimmy McHugh) ..... 10. Linger Awhile 4:09 (Harry Ownes, Vincent Rose) 11. Alice Blue Gown 4:23 (Joseph McCarthy Harry Tierney) 12. (I Would Do) Anything For You 4:17 (Alex Hill. Claude Hopkins) 13. Avalon 4:03 (Al Jolson, B.G. DeSylvia Vincent Rose) 14. Squeeze Me 4:34 (Clarence Williams, Thomas Waller) 15. Oh By Jingo 4.03 (Lew Brown, Albert Von Tilzer) Exact Audio Copy V1.3 from 2. September 2016 REM GENRE Jazz [CUETools log; Date: 11/9/2019 4:31:07 PM; Version: 2.1.5] Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector foobar2000 1.3.10 / Замер динамического диапазона (DR) 1.1.1 ABOUT "DR. JAZZ"
The previously unissued jazz masterpieces in this series of compact discs are drawn from a remarkable radio series called "Dr. Jazz." Aime Gauvin, a staff announcer at a major New York City station, WMGM, approached his bosses with the idea of broadcasting remotes six nights a week from each of the city's most important jazz clubs. Live music remotes, the backbone of radio programming in the 1930s and 1940s, were a thing of the past by the early 1950s when that new medium, television, was just beginning to steal the audience. But Gauvin, an avid jazz fan, persisted. He described the incredible wealth of jazz talent playing at the different venues in Greenwich Village, the lower east side and in midtown Manhattan. Jazz stars like Wild Bill Davision, Buck Clayton, Hot Lips Page, Red Allen, Bobby Hackett, Vic Dickenson, Jimmy Archey, Wilbur De Paris, Ed Hall, Johnny Windhurst, Bud Freeman, Omer Simeon, and many, many more, were playing every night in those venues. Why not tap all this talent for the station? He offered to continue his staff announcing duties during the day, and volunteered to do the announcing on the nightly programs gratis. Thanks to Gauvin persuasiveness, we can now enjoy the special pleasures preserved here. The series started on Monday night, December 10, 1951, from the bandstand of Eddie Condon's. In the beginning, the regular weekly sequence of half-hour (or less) broadcasts started at Central Plaza (Second Avenue between Sixth and Seventh Streets) on Sunday, Condon's (47 West Third Street) on Monday. Tuesday was a night off, followed by Jimmy Ryans (52nd Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenues) on Wednesday, Lou Terassi's (West 47th Street near Eighth Avenue) on Thursday, Stuyvesant Casino (Second Avenue at Ninth Street) on Friday and Nick's (Tenth Street and Seventh Avenue) on Saturday. As the series progressed, this rotation was not always followed and in June, 1952 it was reduced to only one broadcast a week - from Nick's. It ended on June 25 having failed to secure a sponsor. It was scheduled immediately after live broadcasts of sports events which sometimes ran over cutting short some great sessions. In some instances, the entire program was cut. Maury Cagle whose family was friendly with Gauvin's, said "Aime was a very warm human being who could converse intelligently on just about any subject." One of Gauvin's children took clarinet lessons from Edmond Hall and Gauvin himself was a respected figure among the jazz musicians he broadcast. He was also a devotee of classical music. When the series ended he returned to his duties as staff announcer at WMGM. Gauvin opened each program with "Hello, this is Dr. Jazz, with a prescription for what ails you" and closed with the Ducal admonition that "it don't mean a thing if it ain't got that swing. "He kept his comments to a minimum on the broadcasts, usually just introducing the musicians and the tunes. Once in a while he would briefly interview one of the leaders. But Gauvin's interest was in getting as much of the music on the air as possible. In keeping with his philosophy, we have cut his announcements between tunes in order to present more of the music. But his opening and closing comments have been retained in tribute to the man who made all of this possible. (2,3) Wild Bill Davison, cornet; Cutty Cutshall, tb; Edmond Hall, clarinet; Gene Schroeder, piano; Eddie Condon, guitar: Bill Goodall, bass: George Wettling, drums; December 24, 1951.
(4,5,6) same except Bob Casey, bass, replaces Goodall; Buzzy Drootin, drums, replaces Wettling; January 7, 1952. (7,8) same; January 14, 1952. (9,14) same except Don Lamond, drums, replaces Drootin, add Eddie Condon, guitar; February 11, 1952. (10) same except Cliff Leeman, drums, replaces Lamond, Condon out; February 18, 1952. (1) same; February 25, 1952. (11,12,13) same except Ralph Sutton (2), piano, replaces Schroeder; March 3, 1952. (15) same except Schroeder, piano, replaces Sutton; March 31, 1952. Для того, чтобы скачать .torrent Вам необходимо зарегистрироваться |
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