12-07-2018 11:40 - PREHiSTORiC:MiX ~ 33 pieces excavation finds from ancient sounds ~ 1940s-1930s >>Alberta Hunter, Cecil Gant, Big Joe Turner, Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Four Clefs, Lester Young, Tommy Dorsey, Lena Horne, Xavier Cugat,Charlie Parker, Charlie Christian, Marilyn Monroe, Lonnie Johnson, Memphis Jug Band, Blind Lemon Jefferson, The Boswell Sisters, Django Reinhardt,Fats Waller & His Rhythm, Count Basie and His Orchestra, Billie Holiday<<
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1940s-1930s
Jazz-blues singer soared to popularity in the '20s & '30s, returned in the '80s. Alberta Hunter was a pioneering African-American popular singer whose path crosses the streams of jazz, blues and pop music. While she made important contributions to all of these stylistic genres, she is claimed exclusively by no single mode of endeavor. Hunter recorded in six decades of the twentieth century, and enjoyed a career in music that outlasted most human lives.
Alberta Hunter
You Can't Tell the Difference After Dark (Alberta Hunter / Maceo Pinkard) 2:58
Beale Street Blues (W.C. Handy) 3:17
from Alberta Hunter Vol. 4 (1927-c. 1946)
The fourth and final volume of Alberta Hunter's early recordings as reissued by Document during the 1990s covers a substantially longer stretch of time than any of the preceding installments, beginning in May 1927 and following her progress through the year 1946. Although she recorded sporadically during these years, she worked with an impressive roster of instrumentalists as her voice gradually deepened, enabling her to deliver the goods with visceral fortitude and earthy candor. This fine disc opens with three duets featuring Thomas "Fats" Waller at the pipe organ, with Hunter singing in a mellifluous contralto. Dazzled by his amazing ability to play real jazz on an instrument usually confined to churches...
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Alberta Hunter, far right, performs Vaudeville |
Cecil Gant - I Wonder 2:45
Big Joe Turner - S.K. Blues, Part 1
Sister Rosetta Tharpe - Strange Things Happening Every Day 2:53
Four Clefs - V Day Stomp 3:10
from Blowing the Fuse: 28 R&B Classics That Rocked the Jukebox in 1945
Blowing the Fuse is a killer series of compilation CDs issued by Germany's premier archivist label, Bear Family. Subtitled "R&B Classics That Rocked the Jukebox," each volume is compiled by year. This one, covering 1945, hosts 26 tunes. What is immediately arresting is the sequencing here...
A tenor sax legend, known as Pres, whose melodic, smooth-flowing lines made him the most influential and inventive player of the pre-bop era. Lester Young was one of the true jazz giants, a tenor saxophonist who came up with a completely different conception in which to play his horn, floating over bar lines with a light tone rather than adopting Coleman Hawkins' then-dominant forceful approach. A non-conformist, Young (nicknamed "Pres" by Billie Holiday) had the ironic experience in the 1950s of hearing many young tenors try to sound exactly like him.
Lester Young
Jones-Smith Incorporated - Shoe Shine Boy (1936-11-09, Chicago) 2:57
Kansas City Six With Lester Young - Countless Blues (1936-11-09, Chicago) 2:58
Kansas City Six - I Got Rhythm 3:14
from The Ultimate Jazz Archive Set 20 - CD 2 / Lester Young 1936-1944
Tommy Dorsey & His Orchestra - Boogie Woogie (Pinetop Smith) 3:10
Lena Horne - Stormy Weather (Harold Arlen / Ted Koehler) 3:23
Xavier Cugat & His Orchestra - Brazil (Ary Barroso / Bob Russell) 2:48
from TIME LIFE MUSIC Your Hit Parade: 1943
1943, the second full year of World War II for the U.S., and the first full year of the recording ban called by the musicians union (though Decca Records settled with the union by the fall), was an odd time in American popular music, one in which vintage recordings were re-released for hits and in which new recordings were made a cappella to circumvent the ban....