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Format: CD
 Feb 1992
 Record Label: Milestone Records
 Recording Type: Studio
 UPC: 025218471725 |
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* ML=ships from multiple locations, AE/AP/AA=ships from U.S. Military location.
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Track Listing 1. Just Gone 2. Canal Street Blues 3. Mandy Lee Blues 4. I'm Going Away to Wear You Off My Mind 5. Chimes Blues 6. Weather Bird Rag 7. Dipper Mouth Blues 8. Froggie Moore 9. Snake Rag 10. Alligator Hop 11. Zulu's Ball 12. Workingman Blues 13. Krooked Blues 14. Mabel's Dream - (take 1) 15. Mabel's Dream - (take 2) 16. Southern Stomp - (take 1) 17. Southern Stomp - (take 2) 18. Riverside Blues 19. Texas Moaner Blues 20. Of All the Wrongs You've Done to Me 21. Terrible Blues 22. Santa Claus Blues 23. Nobody Knows the Way I Feel This Morning 24. Early Every Morn 25. Cake Walking Babies From Home
Album Notes Personnel: Louis Armstrong (cornet); Alberta Hunter, Clarence Todd (vocals); Stump Evans (C-melody saxophone); Charlie Johnson (bass saxophone); King Oliver (cornet); Charlie Irvis, Honore Dutrey, Aaron Thompson (trombone); Sidney Bechet (soprano saxophone, clarinet); Buster Bailey, Johnny Dodds (clarinet); Lil Hardin Armstrong (piano); Buddy Christian, Johnny St. Cyr, Bill Johnson (banjo); Baby Dodds (drums). Recorded between 1923 & 1925. Includes original liner notes by Ralph J. Gleason. Digitally remastered by Joe Tarantino (1991, Fantasy Studios, Berkeley, California). The recordings on LOUIS ARMSTRONG AND KING OLIVER are not only Satchmo's earliest sides but represent what many consider jazz's first recorded masterpieces. Cut in 1923 on extremely primitive recording equipment, the CD's first 18 tracks are by King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band, a group that Oliver founded in Chicago several years after leaving his native New Orleans. Featuring Oliver and his protege, the 22-year-old Armstrong, on dual cornets, the group swings ferociously and plays together so well that their interplay often borders on the telepathic. While at this early stage of Louis Armstrong's career his playing was little more than a carbon copy of his mentor's, this fact works to the music's advantage, as the two musicians' simultaneous improvised solos are so in sync that they often sound completely arranged. These historic tracks also include standout playing from the great Johnny Dodds on clarinet and Lil Hardin Armstrong (Louis Armstrong's future wife) on piano, and suprisingly modern sounding C-Melody sax work from Stump Evans. The remainder of the disc's tracks are 1924 recordings by The Red Onion Jazz Babies, an Armstrong-led group which included the legendary Sidney Bechet on clarinet and tenor sax.
Industry Reviews ...Armstrong seems about ready to bust out, suspended between the polyphonic interplay of the New Orleans ensemble and his love for role model Joe Oliver (it's often challenging to tell who's who), with teasing intimations of the solo breakthroughs to come... Musician (04/01/1993)
4.5 Stars - Very Good Plus - ...Louis Armstrong and King Oliver together with the Creole Jazz Band in 1923, confidently took jazz beyond showiness to majesty...Creole tracks are the first jazz masterworks... Down Beat (08/01/1992)
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