The Encyclopedia of Jazz The Bebop Story Vol 1 - 10)(jazz)(mp3@320)[rogercc][h33t]seeders: 1
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The Encyclopedia of Jazz The Bebop Story Vol 1 - 10)(jazz)(mp3@320)[rogercc][h33t] (Size: 1.45 GB)
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The Encyclopedia of Jazz: The Bebop Story
Discs 1 – 10 of 100 Released : December 9, 2008 Label: Membran Quality: Mp3@ 320 span style="font-size:150Disc 1- Teddy Hill, Cab Calloway, Lionel Hampton, Alice O'Connell (1937-40) [.size] [size=150]Teddy Hill (December 7, 1909 in Birmingham, Alabama – May 19, 1978 in Cleveland, Ohio) was a big band leader and the manager of Minton's Playhouse, a seminal jazz club in Harlem. He played a variety of instruments, including drums, clarinet, soprano and tenor saxophone. After moving to New York City, Hill had early gigs with the Whitman Sisters, George Howe and Luis Russell's orchestra in the 1920s, later forming his own band in 1934, which found steady work over the NBC radio network. Over several years it featured such major young musicians as Roy Eldridge, Bill Coleman, Frankie Newton and Dizzy Gillespie.[1] Hill's band played at the Savoy Ballroom regularly, and toured England and France in the summer of 1937. After leaving the band business, Hill began to manage Minton's Playhouse in 1940, which became a hub for the bebop style, featuring such major musicians as Thelonious Monk and Kenny Clarke. Hill left Minton's in 1969, long after its musical significance had declined; he then became the manager of Baron's Lounge. 01. Yours And Mine [02:39] 02. King Porter Stomp [03:02] 03. Blue Rhythm Fantasy [02:40] 04. For The Last Time I Cried Over You [02:50] 05. Twee-Twee-Tweet [02:43] 06. Pluckin'The Bass [02:42] 07. I Ain't Gettin' Nowhere Fast [02:46] 08. Hot Mallets [02:15] 09. A Bee Gezindt [02:52] 10. Give, Baby, Give [02:37] 11. Do It Again [02:54] 12. Pickin'The Cabbage [02:48] 13. Chop, Chop, Charlie Chan [03:01] 14. Paradiddle [03:02] 15. Boog It [02:55] 16. Calling All Bars [02:52] 17. Do I Care, No No [02:52] 18. The Lone Arranger [02:31] 19. Topsy Turvy ( Hard Times) [03:25] 20. Once In A Lifetime [02:46] 21. Shades Of Twilight [02:49] Teddy Hill and His NBC Orchestra (Tracks 1-3) Cab Callaoway and His Orchestra (Tracks 4-7,9-19 ) Lionel Hampton and His Orchestra (Track 8 ) Alice O'Connell with Glenn Hardman and His Trio (Tracks 20-21) Disc 2 Cab Calloway, Pete Brown, Woody Herman, Lucky Millinder (1940-42) James Ostend "Pete" Brown (November 9, 1906, Baltimore, Maryland - September 20, 1963, New York City, New York) was an American jazz alto saxophonist and bandleader. Brown learned to play piano, trumpet, and saxophone while young. He played in New York with Bernie Robinson's orchestra in 1928, and played from 1928 to 1934 with Charlie Skeets. In 1937 he worked in the band of John Kirby; for several years in the 1930s he worked with Frankie Newton, who was also a member of Kirby's band. Brown and Newton recorded often. In addition to recording under his own name, Brown also recorded as a session musician with Willie "The Lion" Smith, Jimmy Noone, Buster Bailey, Leonard Feather, Joe Marsala, and Maxine Sullivan in the 1930s. He worked on 52nd Street in New York in the 1940s, both as a sideman (with Slim Gaillard, among others) and as a bandleader; he was in Allen Eager's 52nd Street All-Stars in 1946. In the 1950s Brown's health began to fail, and he receded from full-time performance. He played with Joe Wilder (1954), Big Joe Turner (1956), Sammy Price, and Champion Jack Dupree, and appeared at the 1957 Newport Jazz Festival with Coleman Hawkins and Roy Eldridge. His last appearance was in 1960 with Dizzy Gillespie. 01. Come On With The 'Come On' [02:56] 02. Bye Bye Blues [02:53] 03. Limehouse Blues [02:20] 04. Hard Times (Topsy Turvy) [03:11] 05. Cupid's Nightmare [05:42] 06. Boog-It [03:43] 07. Cab Calloway - King Porter Stomp [03:50] 08. Papa's In Bed With His Britches On [02:34] 09. Boo-Wah-Boo-Wah [02:49] 10. Hot Air [02:51] 11. A Chicken Ain't Nothin' But A Bird [02:52] 12. The Workers' Train [03:15] 13. Are You All Reet? [03:03] 14. Hey Doc [03:14] 15. Miss Finnigan [02:46] 16. Mound Bayou [02:40] 17. Unlucky Woman [03:08] 18. Gonna Buy Me A Telephone [03:11] 19. The Cannonball [02:47] 20. Down Under [02:48] 21. Mason Flyer [02:49] 22. Little John Special [03:06] Cab Callaoway and His Orchestra (Tracks 1-15) Pete Brown and His Band (Tracks 16-19) Woody Herman and His Orchestra (Track 20) Lucky Millender and His Orchestra (Tracks 21-22) Disc 3 Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Christian, Jamming At Minton's (1941) 01. Stardust [06:18] 02. Stardust [03:26] 03. Kerouac [07:39] 04. Swing To Bop [09:00] 05. Stompin' At The Savoy [08:17] 06. Up On Teddy's Hill [06:13] 07. Down On Teddy's Hill [03:09] 08. Guy's Go To Go (I Got Rhythm) [02:26] 09. Lips Flips (aka Stompin' At The Savoy) [04:58] Dizzy Gillespie (Tracks 1-3) Jamming at Minton’s (Tracks 4-9) Disc 4 Coleman Hawkins, Teddy Wilson, Billy Eckstine, Sarah Vaughan (1944) 01. Woody'n You [03:00] 02. Bu-Dee-Daht [03:13] 03. Yesterdays [02:57] 04. Disorder at the Border [02:59] 05. Feeling Zero [03:00] 06. Rainbow Mist [03:00] 07. I Got a Date with the Rhythm Man [02:55] 08. I Stay in the Mood for You [02:58] 09. Good Jelly Blues [02:53] 10. If That's the Way You Feel [02:39] 11. I Want to Talk About You [02:38] 12. Blowin' the Blues Away [03:08] 13. Blowin' the Blues Away [03:11] 14. Opus X [02:42] 15. I'll Wait and Pray [02:55] 16. The Real Thing Happened to Me [02:41] 17. Signing Off [02:40] 18. Interlude (A Night in Tunisia) [02:30] 19. No Smokes Blues [02:26] 20. East of the Sun [02:51] Coleman Hawkins and His Orchestra (Tracks 1-6) Billy Eckstine with Deluxe All-Stars (Tracks 7-9) Billy Eckstine and His Orchestra (Tracks 10-16) Sarah Vaughan with Dizzy Gillespie and His Orchestra (Tracks 17-20) Disc 5 Jay McShann, Charlie Parker, Clark Monroe's Band (1940-42 Jay McShann (January 12, 1916 – December 7, 2006) was a jump blues, mainstream jazz, and swing bandleader, pianist and singer. During the 1940s, McShann was at the forefront of blues and hard bop jazz musicians mainly from Kansas City. He assembled his own big band, with musicians that included some of the most influential artists of their time, including Charlie Parker, Bernard Anderson, Ben Webster and Walter Brown. His kind of music became known as "the Kansas City sound 01. Variations on Honeysuckle Rose & Body and Soul [03:04] 02. Walkin' and Swingin' (I Got Rhythm) [03:37] 03. I've Found a New baby [03:00] 04. Body and Soul [02:52] 05. Moten Swing [02:48] 06. Coquette [03:10] 07. Oh, Lady be Good [02:56] 08. Wichita Blues [03:09] 09. Honeysuckle Rose [02:57] 10. Swingmatism [02:36] 11. Hootie Blues [02:54] 12. Dexter Blues [02:54] 13. One Woman's Man [03:03] 14. Cherokee [02:49] 15. Lonely Boy Blues [02:55] 16. Get Me On Your Mind [03:02] 17. The Jumpin' Blues [03:00] 18. Sepian Bounce (Sepian Stomp) [03:06] 19. Cherokee [03:09] 20. My Heart Tells Me (Should I Believe My Heart?) [03:18] 21. I've Found a New Baby [03:30] 22. Body and Soul [03:42] Charlie Parker (Tracks 1,19-22) Jay McShann and His Orchestra (Tracks 2-12,15-18 ) Jay McShann Quartet (Track 13) Clark Monroes's Band (Track 14) span style="font-size:150Disc 6 Cootie Williams And His Orchestra (1944-45) Charles Melvin "Cootie" Williams (July 10, 1911 – September 15, 1985) was an American jazz, jump blues, and rhythm and blues trumpeter.Born in Mobile, Alabama, United States, Williams began his professional career with the Young Family band, which included saxophonist Lester Young, when he was 14 years old According to Williams he acquired his nickname as a boy when his father took him to a band concert. When it was over his father asked him what he'd heard and the lad replied "Cootie, cootie, cootie". In 1928, he made his first recordings with pianist James P. Johnson in New York, where he also worked briefly in the bands of Chick Webb and Fletcher Henderson. He rose to prominence as a member of Duke Ellington's orchestra, with which he first performed from 1929 to 1940. He also recorded his own sessions during this time, both freelance and with other Ellington sidemen. Williams also sang occasionally, a notable vocal collaboration with Ellington was the piece, "Echoes of the Jungle".[2] Cootie Williams was renowned for his growling "jungle" style trumpet playing (in the manner of Ellington's earlier trumpeter Bubber Miley and trombonist Joe "Tricky Sam" Nanton) and for his use of the plunger mute.In 1940 he joined Benny Goodman's orchestra, a highly publicized move that caused quite a stir at the time[ (commemorated by Raymond Scott with the song "When Cootie Left the Duke"), then in 1941 formed his own orchestra, in which over the years he employed Charlie Parker, Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, Bud Powell, Eddie Vinson, and other young players. In 1947, Williams wrote the song "Cowpox Boogie" while recuperating from a bout with smallpox. He contracted the disease from a vaccination he insisted all band members receive.By the late 1940s Williams had fallen somewhat into obscurity, having had to reduce his band numbers and finally to disband. In the 1950s, he began to play more rhythm and blues, and toured with small groups. In the late 1950s he formed a small jazz group and recorded a number of albums with Rex Stewart, as well as his own album, Cootie in Hi-Fi (1958 ). In 1962, he rejoined Ellington and stayed with the orchestra until 1974, after Ellington's death. In 1975, he performed during the Super Bowl IX halftime show. Cootie Williams died in New York on September 15, 1985, at age 74. Williams is a 1991 inductee of the Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame. 01. You Talk A Little Trash [03:01] 02. Floogie Boo [02:39] 03. I Don't Know [03:12] 04. Gotta Do Some War Work, Baby [03:05] 05. My Old Flame [03:14] 06. Sweet Lorraine [03:11] 07. Echoes Of Harlem [03:07] 08. Honeysuckle Rose [03:12] 09. Now I Know [03:00] 10. Tess's Torch Song (I Had A Man) [02:31] 11. Cherry Red Blues [03:05] 12. Things Ain't What They Used To Be [03:14] 13. Is You Is, Or Is You Ain't My Baby [02:45] 14. Somebody's Gotta Go [03:16] 15. 'Round Midnight (Round About Midnight) [03:15] 16. Blue Garden Blues (1) [03:18] 17. You Talk A Little Trash [03:22] 18. Blue Garden Blues (2) [03:37] 19. 'Round Midnight [03:18] 20. Birmingham Special [02:51] 21. The Rhythm Is Jumpin' [03:45] Cootie Williams and His Orchestra Disc 7 Billy Eckstine And His Orchestra (1944) Billy Eckstine's smooth baritone and distinctive vibrato broke down barriers throughout the 1940s, first as leader of the original bop big band, then as the first romantic black male in popular music. An influence looming large in the cultural development of soul and R&B singers from Sam Cooke to Prince, Eckstine was able to play it straight on his pop hits "Prisoner of Love," "My Foolish Heart" and "I Apologize." Born in Pittsburgh but raised in Washington, D.C., Eckstine began singing at the age of seven and entered many amateur talent shows. He had also planned on a football career, though after breaking his collar bone, he made music his focus. After working his way west to Chicago during the late '30s, Eckstine was hired by Earl Hines to join his Grand Terrace Orchestra in 1939. Though white bands of the era featured males singing straight-ahead romantic ballads, black bands were forced to stick to novelty or blues vocal numbers until the advent of Eckstine and Herb Jeffries (from Duke Ellington's Orchestra). 01. Blue'n Boogie (Theme) [01:26] 02. Blowin' The Blues Away [01:58] 03. 'Deed I Do [02:39] 04. I Wanna Talk About You [03:18] 05. Blue'n Boogie (Theme) 1 [00:45] 06. Blue'n Boogie (Theme) 2 [00:47] 07. Together [04:00] 08. Mean To Me [04:26] 09. Without A Song [04:15] 10. Mr. Chips [03:00] 11. Blue 'n' Boogie (Theme) 3 [00:55] 12. Blue 'n' Boogie (Theme) 4 [01:21] 13. Air Mail Special [03:51] 14. Don't Blame Me [03:33] 15. If That's The Way You Feel [03:42] 16. Blue 'n' Boogie (Theme) 5 [01:13] 17. Blue 'n' Boogie (Theme) 6 [01:11] 18. Opus X [02:38] 19. Love Me Or Leave Me [04:25] 20. One O'Clock Jump [01:38] 21. Lonesome Lover Blues [02:47] 22. A Cottage For Sale [02:46] 23. I Love The Rhythm In A Riff [02:48] 24. Last Night [02:59] Billy Eckstine And His Orchestra Disc 8 Billy Eckstine And His Orchestra (1945-46) 01. My Deep Blue Dream [03:00] 02. Prisoner Of Love [02:54] 03. It Ain' Like That [02:52] 04. A Penny For Your Thoughts [02:56] 05. I'm In The Mood For Love [02:55] 06. You Call It Madness [03:01] 07. All I Sing Is Blues [02:49] 08. Long Long Journey [03:06] 09. I Only Have Eyes For You [02:34] 10. You're My Everything [02:44] 11. The Jitney Man [02:44] 12. Blue [02:57] 13. Second Balcony Jump [02:52] 14. Tell Me Pretty Baby [02:58] 15. Love Is The Thing [02:49] 16. Without A Song [02:52] 17. Cool Breeze [02:52] 18. Don't Ever Take Your Love From Me [02:55] 19. Oo Bop Sh'Bam [03:03] 20. Oo Bop Sh'Bam [03:00] 21. In The Still Of The Night [02:53] 22. Jelly Jelly [03:16] Billy Eckstine and His Orchestra Disc 9 Woody Herman And His Orchestra (1944-45) Woodrow Charles "Woody" Herman (May 16, 1913 – October 29, 1987) was an American jazz clarinetist, alto and soprano saxophonist, singer, and big band leader. Leading various groups called "The Herd," Herman was one of the most popular of the 1930s and 1940s bandleaders. His bands often played music that was experimental for its time. 01. Flying Home [03:05] 02. It Must Be Jelly [02:52] 03. Red Top [04:31] 04. Jones Beachhaed [03:28] 05. Apple Honey [04:39] 06. John Hardy's Wife [04:29] 07. Apple Honey [03:16] 08. Caldonia [03:01] 09. Goosey Gander [03:22] 10. Northwest Passage [03:10] 11. Bijou [03:21] 12. Ah Your Father's Moustache [06:12] 13. Don't Worry 'Bout The Mule [03:58] 14. 125th St. Prophet [04:11] 15. Meshugah [05:58] 16. Caldonia [03:43] 17. Jackson Fiddles While Ralph Burns [03:53] 18. Blowin' Up A Storm [04:11] Woody Herman and His Orchestra (First Herd) (Tracks 1-5,7-18 ) Woody Herman and The V-Disc All-Stars (Track 6) Disc 10 Red Norvo, Stan Hasselgard (1943-47 01. 1-2-3-4 Jump [03:57] 02. Seven Come Eleven [04:16] 03. In A Mellotone (Red Norvo Repeats) [05:11] 04. Flying Home [04:16] 05. The Sergeant On Furlough [05:01] 06. NRC Jump [04:56] 07. Lagwood Walk [05:05] 08. Red Dust [04:49] 09. Blues Skies [04:41] 10. Purple Feathers [04:45] 11. Subtle sextology [03:44] 12. Blues A La red [04:00] 13. The Man I Love [04:13] 14. Seven Come eleven [04:07] 15. Swedish Pastry [03:01] 16. Sweet And Hot Mop [02:41] 17. Who Sleeps [02:50] 18. I'll Never Be The Same [03:14] Red Norvo and His Overseas Spotlight Band (Tracks 1-7) Red Norvo Quintet (Tracks 8-10) Red Norvo All-Star Sextet (Tracks 11-14) Stan Hasselgard and His Smorgasbirds (Tracks 15-18 ) Related Torrents
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