http://www.dixielandcrackerjacks.com
Live in Jazz Club Noord Nederlands Jazz gilde, Appingedam.
H.H. - bass
Koos Greven - banjo
Ray Vanderhooft - drums
Bert Brandsma - clarinet
Slidin' Selena - trombone
Michel Muller - trumpet
Original Dixieland Jass Band (ODJB) was a New Orleans, Dixieland Jazz band that made the first jazz recordings early in 1917, their "Livery Stable Blues" became the first issued Jazz single. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7]
The group composed and made the first recordings of many jazz standards, the most famous being "Tiger Rag". In late 1917 it changed the name's spelling to "Jazz."
The band consisted of five musicians who had previously played in the Papa Jack Laine bands, a diverse and racially integrated collection of musicians who played for parades, dances, and advertising in New Orleans.
The ODJB were frequently billed as the "Creators of Jazz", because they were the first band to record jazz commercially and to have hit recordings in the new genre. The appellation is accurate in that they were the first band to create successful and popular recordings of jazz. Band leader and trumpeter Nick LaRocca argued that the ODJB deserved recognition as the first band to record jazz commercially and the first band to establish jazz as a musical idiom or genre.
The seminal 78 releases by the ODJB include the following Victor, Columbia, and Aeolian Vocalion recordings:
1) Dixie Jass Band One Step/Introducing That Teasin' Rag/Livery Stable Blues, 1917, Victor 18255.
2) At the Jazz Band Ball/Barnyard Blues, 1917, Aeolian Vocalion A1205.
3) Ostrich Walk/Tiger Rag, 1917, Aeolian Vocalion A1206.
4) Reisenweber Rag/Look at 'Em Doing it Now, 1917, Aeolian Vocalion 1242.
5) Darktown Strutter's Ball/(Back Home in) Indiana, 1917, Columbia A2297. The ODJB's recording of Darktown Strutter's Ball was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame on February 8, 2006.
6) Skeleton Jangle/Tiger Rag (1918 version), 1918, Victor 18472.
7) Bluin' the Blues/Sensation Rag, 1918, Victor 18483.
8) Mournin' Blues/Clarinet Marmalade, 1918, Victor 18513. Mourin' Blues also appeared as Mornin' Blues on some releases.
9) Fidgety Feet (War Cloud)/Lazy Daddy, 1918, Victor 18564.
10) 'Lasses Candy/Satanic Blues, 1919, Columbia 759.
11) Oriental Jazz or Jass, 1919, recorded November 24, 1917 and issued as Aeolian Vocalion 12097 in April, 1919 with Indigo Blues by Ford Dabney's Band.
12) Soudan (also known as Oriental Jass or Oriental Jazz), 1920, recorded in London in the UK in May, 1920 and released as English Columbia 829. Soudan was composed by Czech composer Gabriel Sebek in 1906 as In the Soudan: A Dervish Chorus or Oriental Scene for Piano, Op. 45. The B side was "Me-Ow" by the London Dance Orchestra.
13) Margie/Singin' the Blues/Palesteena, 1920, Victor 18717.
14) Broadway Rose/Sweet Mama (Papa's Getting Mad)/Strut, Miss Lizzie, 1920, Victor 18722.
15) Home Again Blues/Crazy Blues/It's Right Here For You (If You Don't Get It, Tain't No Fault O' Mine), 1921, Victor 18729.
16) Tell Me/Mammy O' Mine, 1921, recorded in the UK and released as Columbia 804.
17) I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles/My Baby's Arms, 1921, Columbia 805.
18) I've Lost My Heart in Dixieland/I've Got My Captain Working for Me Now, 1921, Columbia 815.
19) Sphinx/Alice Blue Gown, 1921, Columbia 824.
20) Jazz Me Blues/St. Louis Blues, 1921, Victor 18772.
21) Royal Garden Blues/Dangerous Blues, 1921, Victor 18798.
22) Bow Wow Blues (My Mama Treats Me Like a Dog), 1922, Victor 18850. The B side featured Railroad Blues by the Benson Orchestra of Chicago under pianist and composer Roy Bargy.
23) Toddlin' Blues/Some of These Days, 1923, Okeh 4738.
24) You Stayed Away Too Long/Slipping Through My Fingers, 1935, Vocalion 3099.
25) Original Dixieland One-Step/Barnyard Blues, 1936, Victor 25502.
26) Who Loves You?/Did You Mean It?, 1936, Victor 25420, which featured vocals by Chris Fletcher and Nick LaRocca on trumpet.
27) Ooooo-Oh Boom!/Please Be Kind, 1938, RCA Bluebird B-7442.
28) Good-Night, Sweet Dreams, Good-Night/In My Little Red Book, 1938, RCA Bluebird B-7444, which featured vocals by Lola Bard.
29) Tiger Rag (1943 version), 1944, V-Disc 214.
30) Sensation Rag (1943 version), 1944, V-Disc 214B2.
31) Shake It and Break It/When You and I Were Young, Maggie, 1946, Commodore C-613.
BRAVISSIMO ! ! ! !
cidcampeador1952 1 month ago
@cidcampeador1952 Thanks a lot!
ABrandsma 1 month ago