mixtapes for weathers and moods / music for good days and bad days


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A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Bill Haley. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése
A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Bill Haley. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése

2018. december 13., csütörtök

MiXTAPE: other 100 from bestofs / #1960 PnM.MiX

Annie Ross

1 9 6 0
OTHER HUNDRED SONGS




Henry Mancini - The Beat from The Blues and the Beat
Henry Mancini - The Blues from The Blues and the Beat

Annie Ross - Invitation to the Blues from A Gasser!

Memphis Slim - Whiskey Drinking Blues from Memphis Slim and the Real Honky Tonk

Jackie Wilson - Nothing But The Blues from Jackie Sings the Blues

Black Ace - Little Augie from I'm the Boss Card in Your Hand

Horace Parlan - C Jam Blues from Movin' & Groovin'

Jim Hall and The Modest Jazz Trio - Good Friday Blues from Good Friday Blues

The John Wright Trio - South Side Soul from South Side Soul

Curtis Jones - Fool Blues from Trouble Blues

The Mose Allison Trio - Night Ride from I Love the Life I Live

B.B. King - Whole Lotta' Love from The Great B.B. King

Muddy Waters - Lonesome Road Blues from Sings Big Bill Broonzy

Sonny Red - Blues in the Pocket from Out of the Blue

John Lee Hooker - I Wanna Walk from Travelin'

B.B. King - Be Careful with a Fool from The Great B.B. King

Muddy Waters - Double Trouble from Sings Big Bill Broonzy

Wes Montgomery - D-Natural Blues from The Incredible Jazz Guitar of Wes Montgomery

Sonny Stitt - Two Bad Days Blues from Saxophone Supremacy

Mundell Lowe and His All Stars - Naked City from TV Action Jazz!

Jimmy Rushing - Pink Champagne from Rushing Lullabies

Memphis Slim - Good Bye Blues from Travelling With The Blues
Lightnin' Slim - I'm a Rollin Stone from from Rooster Blues
Muddy Waters - Just a Dream on my Mind from Sings Big Bill Bronzy
Lonnie Johnson - Blues Round My Door from Blues by Lonnie Johnson
Memphis Slim - Boogie Woogie from Travelling With The Blues
Muddy Waters - Southbound Train from Sings Big Bill Bronzy
Lonnie Johnson - Big Leg Woman from Blues by Lonnie Johnson
Josh White - One for My Baby from Josh White Sings Ballads And Blues
Lightnin' Hopkins - Get Off My Toe from Autobiography in Blues
John Lee Hooker - Solid Sender from Travelin'
Etta James with Harvey Fuqua - Spoonful from At Last!
Lightnin' Slim - Rooster Blues from Rooster Blues
Roosevelt Sykes - Night Time is the Riht Time from The Return of Roosevelt Sykes
Billy Boyd - Bolero Boogie from Twangy Guitars
The Coasters - Don't Get Around Much Anymore from One by One
Johnny and the Hurricanes - Beating Fly from The Big Sound of Johnny and the Hurricanes
The Fireballs - Vaquéro from Vaquéro
Ricky Nelson - Here I Go Again from More Songs by Ricky
The Crickets - Great Balls of Fire from In Style With The Crickets
Chuck Berry - Worried Life Blues from Rockin' at the Hops
James Brown - Think! from Think!
Link Wray & The Wraymen - Studio Blues from Link Wray & The Wraymen
Jackie Davis - Ain't She Sweet from Hammond Gone Cha-Cha
Bill Haley and His Comets - The Catwalk from Strictly Instrumental
Skeeter Davis - Devil's Doll from I'll Sing You a Song and Harmonize Too
Hank Ballard & the Midnighters -  Sugaree from The One and Only
Brenda Lee - Jambalaya from Miss Dynamite
Bo Diddley - Gun Slinger from Bo Diddley Is A Gunslinger
Elvis Presley - Fever from Elvis is Back!
Ventures - Sleep Walk from Morgen
Johnny And The Hurricanes - Rockin' T from Stormsville
Link Wray & The Wraymen - Rumble from Link Wray & The Wraymen
Bo Diddley - No More Lovin' from Bo Diddley Is A Gunslinger
The Swan Silvertones - I'll Be Satisfied from Singin' in My Soul
Johnny And The Hurricanes - James Bond Theme from Stormsville
Peter Appleyard - Peter Gunn from Per-cus-sive Jazz
Preston Epps - Bongo In The Congo from Bongo Bongo Bongo
Terry Snyder and the All Stars - Rocka Bongo Boogie from Persuasive Percussion: Volume 2
Les Baxter -  Acapulco from The Sacred Idol
The Surfmen - Taboo from The Sounds of Exotic Island
Joe Meek - Love Dance of the Saroos from I Hear a New World
Bobby Scott - A Taste of Honey from A Taste of Honey OST
George Russell - Waltz from Outer Space from Jazz in the Space Age
Felix Slatkin - Blues in the Night from Fantastic Percussion
Barney Kessel - Little Susie from The Poll Winners Exploring the Scene!
Wes Montgomery - Four on Six from The Incredible Jazz Guitar of Wes Montgomery
Lorez Alexandria & Ramsey Lewis - I'm Just Lucky So and So from Early in the Morning
The Joe Newman Quintet - Don't Worry 'Bout Me from Jive at Five
Shirley Scott, The Latin Jazz Quintet - The Lady is a Tramp from Mucho, mucho
Benny Carter - All Or Nothing At All from Sax ala Carter
Rita Reys, The Pim Jacobs Trio - How Deep Is the Ocean from Marriage in Modern Jazz
Johnny "Hammond" Smith & Lem Winchester - Gettin' The Message from Talk That Talk
Sam Lazar - Dig a Little Deeper from Space Flight
Paul Horn - Something Blue from Something Blue
Bill Jennings, Jack McDuff - Azure-Te from Glide On
Lou Donaldson - Crosstown Shuffle from The Time Is Right
Kay Starr - My Man from Kay Starr: Jazz Singer
Sarah Vaughan - Can't Get Out This Mood from Sarah Vaughan Quintessence 1950-1960: New York Paris Chicago
Bill Jennings - Fiddlin' from Glide On
Irving Joseph - Prison Break from Murder, Inc.
Chet Atkins - Lullaby of Birdland from Workshop
Charlie Byrd - The House of The Risin Sun from The Guitar Artistry of Charlie Byrd
Donald Byrd - Bo from Byrd in Flight
Anita O'Day - I've Got You Under My Skin from Cool Heat: Anita O'Day Sings Jimmy Giuffre Arrangements
Blue Mitchell - I Wish I Knew from Blue's Moods
Bud Shank - Surf Pipes from Slippery When Wet
Cal Tjader - September Song from Demasiado caliente
Doug Watkins, Yusef Lateef - Imagination from Soulnik
John Coltrane  - Giant Steps from Giant Steps
The Cannonball Adderley Quintet -  Them Dirty Blues from Them Dirty Blues
Nat Adderley - Work Song from Work Song
The Modern Jazz Quartet - Pyramid from European Concert
Yusef Lateef - From Within from The Three Faces of Yusef Lateef
Stanley Turrentine - Little Sheri from Look Out!
Duke Ellington - Arabesque Cookie from Three Suites
The Modern Jazz Quartet - How High the Moon from Pyramid
Louis Prima & Keely Smith - Cheek to Cheek from Louis and Keely!
Etta Jones - Bye Bye Blackbird from Don't Go to Strangers



2018. június 24., vasárnap

24-06-2018 12:07 - PREHiSTORiC:MiX ~ 33 pieces excavation finds from ancient sounds ~ 1952-1943

Radio DJ Alan Freed in the 1950s.

24-06-2018 12:07 - PREHiSTORiC:MiX ~ 33 pieces excavation finds from ancient sounds ~ 1952-1943   >>Bill Haley, Wally Mercer, Merrill Moore, John Lee Hooker, Les Baxter, Ray Charles, Sarah Vaughan, Lowell Fulson, Thelonious Monk, Alberta Hunter, Cecil Gant, Big Joe Turner, Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Four Clefs, Lester Young, Tommy Dorsey, Lena Horne, Xavier Cugat<<

Z E N E  /  M U S I C



LISTEN THE PLAYLIST ON DEEZER.COM
http://www.deezer.com/playlist/1681171971

magyarugar címke A lejátszó mindig a legújabb playlist számait játssza. / The player always plays the latest playlist tracks.

1952-1943

Wally Mercer - Rock Around the Clock (Wallace Mercer) 2:42
Bill Haley - Rock the Joint (Doc Bagby / Harry "Fats" Crafton) 2:56
John Lee Hooker - Walkin' the Boogie (John Lee Hooker) 2:44
 from Roots of Rock N' Roll Vol 8 1952
This is the eighth volume in a series of double-disc anthologies from French label Fremeaux Records that chronicles the years that led up to the birth of rock & roll. While the magic year of 1954 is usually accepted as the dawn of the rock & roll age, the whole matter has always generated a good deal of debate, and this installment in the Fremeaux series only muddies the waters, since the year it covers, 1952, shows things rocking along pretty well... Whether these tracks contain the musical DNA that begat rock & roll or not is, in the end, fairly irrelevant, since these records rock, pedigree or no.

Exotica pioneer whose blend of Polynesian forms and orchestral arrangements appealed to the bachelor pad set of the 1950s and '60s. 
Les Baxter
Jalousie (Jacob Gade) 2:59
Venezuela (Alfredo Corenzo) 2:38
La Cumparsita (Gerardo Matos Rodríguez) 2:29
from Arthur Murray's Favorites: Tangos 1951
"Personally recommended for dancing by Arthur Murray." 




A brilliant, towering musical figure who through his singing and piano playing helped invent
soul and R&B music. Ray Charles was the musician most responsible for developing soul music. Singers like Sam Cooke and Jackie Wilson also did a great deal to pioneer the form, but Charles did even more to devise a new form of black pop by merging '50s R&B with gospel-powered vocals, adding plenty of flavor from contemporary jazz, blues, and (in the '60s) country. Then there was his singing; his style was among the most emotional and easily identifiable of any 20th century performer, up there with the likes of Elvis and Billie Holiday. He was also a superb keyboard player, arranger, and bandleader. The brilliance of his 1950s and '60s work, however, can't obscure the fact that he made few classic tracks after the mid-'60s, though he recorded often and performed until the year before his death.
Ray Charles
I Love You, I Love You (I Will Never Let You Go) (J. Lee Lawrence) 2:40
Rockin' Chair Blues (Aaron McKee) 2:44
Sitting on Top of the World (Lonnie Chatmon / Walter Vinson) 2:15
from Blues & Rhythm Classics 1949-1950
1949-1950 highlights the earliest Ray Charles sessions for the Swingtime and Downbeat labels, featuring 15 tracks from 1949 and six from 1950. Anyone with the slightest interest in Charles should investigate this material. It's amazing to hear Charles' metamorphosis from silky-voiced pop crooning (imitating his idols Charles Brown and Nat King Cole) into his passionate gospel-powered voice shortly after he signed with Atlantic Records in 1952.