Swingstrumentals that ARE alike
In 1933 David Rose, then conductor at WGN-Chicago, penned I've Got "It", first plattered by Jack Teagarden.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w20Zh7tVMuY
Teagarden later joined Paul Whiteman, who did the chart as Itchola, with Frank Trumbauer's sax soli writing...
More of those great Bluebird platters...one side each, anyway.
These cats played and sang with Whiteman - sort of an early-day Four Freshmen. They project a jazz feeling while keeping the actual jazz to a minimum.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=px4_7cWtOoY
Next, an atmospheric rumba-foxtrot...
Good news...the show is just starting a new series. This time out you meet Michael's mom and dad, who are nice as pie. The show visited some cool collections and collectors, gents of laid back enthusiasm. One 89yo dude in LA even sang Auf Wiedersehen My Dear as Mike played an old pianola. And...
2 early-day Johnny Mercer hits with Mr. 78 himself, Dick Robertson. 1934.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ICZSgyWVjfY
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SOYDfvHHIMo
Joe's obviously been favored by nature too - he has a modest build and all his hair. Some of us into our difficult middle years couldn't model much beyond sober bankers' and politicians' suits with the requisite straining about the vest buttons.
Ted Lewis' Band (or so the label says) in 1933 with a sort of ultra-jazz-novelty feature with hillbilly singin'. Don't be scairt, it's good!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eS-c1U47v90
Appalachian songster Roscoe Holcomb, who just from his appearance, might be called the William S. Burroughs of the 5-string banjo.
I don't think Armstrong wore hats enough.
Earl Hines sure did.
Jimmy Dorsey with (hatless) arranger Fud Livingston.
Those particular glasses add 20 years to her face. Lynn becomes Evalyn before our very eyes.
I see he did OCS at Newport. My mom did, too, in 1957.
Housing was unbelievably tight there during the war (so much so they made movies about it). They're lucky they had a window.
This is kind of the "hidden cost" of having high-end repro jackets. The zippers will occasionally lose a tooth, etc., and you basically have to send them back to the maker and pay thru the nose or you really devalue the jacket.
80 is the new...what?
Ponder the answer to the rhythms of the year 1932.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vwRrUHDxTpU
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gX8BFJhm_-k
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A08n_JBUbyk
And admire the new Chevrolet Six while you listen to this sales talk...
One of my favorite fedora pics is of orchestra leader Joe Haymes.
A dapper 5'6", he was affectionately called the "little giant of jazz."
(I have to tell you, I'm 5'11", stocky and bigheaded and I couldn't bring off this hat.)
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