Label: Retrieval
Format: CD
Barcode: 0608917901825
Catalog number: RTR 79018
Releasedate: 10-05-99
Format: CD
Barcode: 0608917901825
Catalog number: RTR 79018
Releasedate: 10-05-99
Bix Beiderbecke, Boswell Sisters, Tommy Dorsey, Bud Freeman, Benny Goodman, Eddie Lang, Red Nichols, Pee Wee Russell, Jack Teagarden, Joe Venuti, A.O.
These forty-nine selections constitute a sampler. Much of the music may well be unfamiliar, even to students of jazz history; but there is no questioning its place in the larger historical picture. Important, even indispensable, it rounds out perception, tells listeners where the phenomenon we now accept as jazz, in all its multifarious forms, came from, what it is, and perhaps even how it can survive. Like Lost Chords itself, the music offers a portrait of the white presence in early jazz. Objectively and fairly approached, both book and disks will prove informative, perhaps even enlightening; if they spur curiosity; the urge to find out more about this vast; and largely neglected aspect of jazz history, the excersice will not have been in vain.
Lost Chords, published by Oxford University Press concurrently with release of this double CD set, chronicles not only the role played by white jazzmen over a thirty-year period, but the countless ways in which they interacted with, influenced and were influenced by, their black and creole colleagues. The true story of those early jazz years, then, is a picaresque tale of cooperation, mutual admiration, cross-fertilization; fusion and fission – all despite, rather than because of, the segregation of the larger society.
These forty-nine selections constitute a sampler. Much of the music may well be unfamiliar, even to students of jazz history; but there is no questioning its place in the larger historical picture. Important, even indispensable, it rounds out perception, tells listeners where the phenomenon we now accept as jazz, in all its multifarious forms, came from, what it is, and perhaps even how it can survive. Like Lost Chords itself, the music offers a portrait of the white presence in early jazz. Objectively and fairly approached, both book and disks will prove informative, perhaps even enlightening; if they spur curiosity; the urge to find out more about this vast; and largely neglected aspect of jazz history, the excersice will not have been in vain.
Lost Chords, published by Oxford University Press concurrently with release of this double CD set, chronicles not only the role played by white jazzmen over a thirty-year period, but the countless ways in which they interacted with, influenced and were influenced by, their black and creole colleagues. The true story of those early jazz years, then, is a picaresque tale of cooperation, mutual admiration, cross-fertilization; fusion and fission – all despite, rather than because of, the segregation of the larger society.
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1I've Lost My Heart In Dixieland
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2Tiger Rag
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3Tiger Rag
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4Tin Roof Blues
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5Panama
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6Sizzlin' The Blues
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7There Ain't No Gal Like My Gal
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8Mamma Loves Papa
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9San
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10He May Be Your Man
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11Snakes Hips
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12A Good Man Is Hard To Find
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13Original Dixieland One-Step
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14Imagination
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15The Wild Dog
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16Sensation Stomp
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17Sittin' In A Corner
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18After You've Gone
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19Jazz Me Blues
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20Maple Leaf Rag
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21The Eel
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22Ja-Da
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23Shimme-Sha Wabble
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24I've Got A Crush On You
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1It's The Blues
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2Clementine
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3Buy, Buy For My Baby
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4White Jazz
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5It's Right Here For You
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6There'll Be Some Changes Made
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7Call Me A Taxi
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8Royal Garden Blues
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9Crying All Day
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10March Of The Hoodlums
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11For No Reacon At All In C
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12What's The Use Of Cryin', Baby?
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13Nothin' But The Blues
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14Stage Fright
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15The Chant
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16Taking Off
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17I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles
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18Carolina In The Morning
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19It Had To Be You
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20Small Fry
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21New Orleans
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22Dance Of The Octopus
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23A Porter's Love Song To A Chambermaid
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24The Last Time I Saw Chicago
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25Jack Hits The Road