~ Papa Jo Jones
Views: 97183 |  |  |  |  | This is very cool...he puts down the drumsticks and plays the kit like a large set of handrums...then pics up the sticks again and rocks it out! Papa Jo Jones has played with Billie Holiday, Count Basie, Elle Fitzgerald, Duke Ellington, Lester Young, Lio ...More nel Hampton, Roy Eldridge, Chuck Berry, Buddy Tate, Benny Goodman, John Coltrane... |
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~ Harmonica - Blue Skies - Irving Berlin
Views: 130729 |  |  |  |  | My DVD at http://dvd.12FREEMUSIC.com
( visit http://www.12freemusic.com for more... )
Please comment on my videos.
Blue Skies by Irving Berlin played on chromatic harmonica.
If you play the harmonica and have videos on YouTube then join the Harm ...More onica Group:
http://www.youtube.com/group/harmonica
"Blue Skies" is a popular song, written by Irving Berlin.
Here are the lyrics:
I was blue, just as blue as I could be
Every day was a cloudy day for me
Then good luck came a-knocking at my door
Skies were gray but theyre not gray anymore
Blue skies
Smiling at me
Nothing but blue skies
Do I see
Bluebirds
Singing a song
Nothing but bluebirds
All day long
Never saw the sun shining so bright
Never saw things going so right
Noticing the days hurrying by
When youre in love, my how they fly
Blue days
All of them gone
Nothing but blue skies
From now on
I should care if the wind blows east or west
I should fret if the worst looks like the best
I should mind if they say it cant be true
I should smile, thats exactly what I do
History
The song was composed in 1926 as a last minute addition to the Rodgers and Hart musical, Betsy. Although the show only ran for 39 performances, "Blue Skies" was an instant success, with audiences on opening night demanding 28 encores of the piece from star, Belle Baker. During the final repetition, Baker forgot her lyrics, prompting Berlin to sing them from his seat in the front row.
In 1927, the music was published and Ben Selvin's recorded version was a #1 hit. That same year, it became the first song to be featured in a talkie, when Al Jolson performed it in The Jazz Singer. 1946 was also a notable year for the song, with a Bing Crosby/Fred Astaire film taking its title, and two recorded versions by Count Basie and Benny Goodman reaching #8 and #9 on the pop charts, respectively. Crossing genres, Willie Nelson's recording of "Blue Skies" was a #1 country music hit in 1978.
Recorded Versions
* Ben Selvin (1927)
* Tommy Dorsey and his orchestra (with vocal by Frank Sinatra) (1941)
* Count Basie and his orchestra (with vocal by Jimmy Rushing) (1946)
* Bing Crosby (1946)
* Benny Goodman and his orchestra (with vocal by Art Lund) (1946)
* Frank Sinatra (1946)
* The McGuire Sisters (1957)
* Ella Fitzgerald (1958)
* Jim Reeves (1962)
* Willie Nelson (1978)
* Rosemary Clooney
* Cassandra Wilson (1988)
* Lavay Smith & Red Hot Skillet Lickers (1996)
* Groove Armada (1999)
* Fiona Apple and Brad Mehldau (2002) -- unreleased, but performed at Club Largo.
* Brent Spiner performing as Lt. Cmdr. Data, in the 2002 movie Star Trek: Nemesis.
* Caetano Veloso (2004)
Selected Appearances in Film
* The Jazz Singer (1927)
* Alexander's Ragtime Band (1938)
* Blue Skies (1946)
* White Christmas (1954)
* Glengary Glen Ross 1994
* With Honors (1994)
* Patch Adams (1998)
* Star Trek: Nemesis (2002)
* The Aviator (2004) |
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~ Frank "Sugarchile" Robinson - Caldonia
Views: 114957 |  |  |  |  | From movie "No Leave No Love" 1946
Frank "Sugarchile" Robinson
SUGAR CHILE ROBINSON (By Dave Penny)
Born Frank Robinson, 1940, Detroit, Michigan
The history of 20th century entertainment is littered with child prodigies; from Shirley Temple in the 1 ...More 930s, Toni Harper in the 1940s and Frankie Lymon in the 1950s. On the whole, although precociously talented, child entertainers were usually saddled with inferior, childish material that, while perhaps cute at the time, were usually novelty acts that grew tiresome pretty quickly. Some couldn't handle the swift drop in popularity and turned to drink or drugs, while others retired gracefully and concentrated their energies in other directions. One such was that tiny bundle of Detroit dynamite, "Sugar Chile" Robinson. Born Frankie Robinson, the youngest of six children, in Detroit in 1940, "Sugar Chile" began pounding on the family piano as a toddler - he reputedly banged out a recognisable version of Erskine Hawkins' Tuxedo Junction at the age of two - and by 1945 he had been "discovered" by pianist and bandleader Frankie Carle. Within a year he was asked to play at a Whitehouse party for President Harry Truman, had guested with Lionel Hampton's Orchestra and even appeared performing the title song in the 1946 MGM romantic comedy film "No Leave, No Love". It was not until July 1949, however, that he made his first records for the Capitol label, when, in the consummate company of jazz veterans Leonard Bibbs on bass and drummer Zutty Singleton, Robinson took his first two releases into the Billboard R&B chart in late 1949; Numbers Boogie made it to number four, while Caldonia (What Makes Your Big Head So Hard) only reached number 14. His subsequent national tour broke box-office records eve rywhere and it is claimed that his appearance at Chicago's Regal Theatre remains the biggest one-week attraction of the theatre's entire history, easily beating the jazz royalty of the day like Count Basie and Duke Ellington. Robinson toured with Basie in 1950 and made a celebrated musical short with the Basie Sextet and Billie Holiday in Hollywood in August to showcase his hits. The Christmas season of 1950 witnessed Sugar Chile's first European release and Christmas Boogie c/w Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer sold well enough to spark a European tour in 1951, including rave reviews for his spot at the London Palladium. He was a big hit on US radio and TV all through 1951 and then, while still in his pre-teens, Robinson's career was suddenly over; his last single release was issued in August 1952, shortly followed by a 10" compilation LP of boogie woogie that featured many of his 1952 recordings.
Apart from a few radio transcriptions and film soundtracks, "Sugar Chile" Robinson's complete recording career - a period of just under three years - has been reissued in its entirety on one 2003 CD compilation, "Chronological Classics 1949-52". If he really was only nine years old at the time, the performances from his first session such as Vooey, Vooey Vay, Caldonia and Numbers Boogie were quite astonishing. As with other child stars, like Toni Harper, Robinson was frequently burdened with immature material, but even nursery rhyme knock-offs such as Sticks And Stones, Christmas Boogie and (Rock-A-Bye) Baby Blues were transformed into entertaining performances with hip and clever touches. The youngster acquitted himself as a pianist exceptionally well on the few instrumentals, particularly Lazy Boy's Boogie, and for variety he occasionally switched to organ or celeste on later sessions.
Once the hits had dried up and he was released from his Capitol Records contract, there were one or two more reports in the trade papers of the day - he was reported in August 1954 as playing The Blue Note in Chicago with modern jazzer Gerry Mulligan (!) - and then nothing! What happened? Did his voice break? Did the novelty of an infant boogie virtuoso suddenly lose its appeal when he hit 12? Was he really found out to be an adolescent midget in disguise? Last year it was announced that a 62 year-old "Sugar Chile" Robinson had been rediscovered living in Detroit, where he has worked mainly outside music for almost 50 years (although he is rumoured to be the same Frank Robinson who co-owned the obscure Detroit-based soul label, Lando Records, in the 1960s) , and was brought out of retirement to pound the ivories once again at a music festival which celebrated pre-Motown music from the Motor City. The internet has been strangely silent since, so I am unsure whether the festiva l even took place. Does anybody know?
CD: The Chronological Sugar Chile Robinson, 1949-1952 (Classics 5052, released in 2003). 24 tracks. |
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~ Real Word Problems From My Physics Book - PH17
Views: 362841 |  |  |  |  | The concept behind this: this word problem would look absolutely ridiculous if it was reenacted in real life.
Mission accomplished.
This is an actual homework problem from my Physics book. Special thanks to Olivia in my Physics class for pointing ou ...More t how stupid this world problem actually is.
Music by Count Basie and the Mills Brothers - "Gentle on My Mind." |
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~ COUNT BASIE & HIS ORCHESTRA WITH JOE WILLIAMS - NEWPORT `62
Views: 38581 |  |  |  |  | This clip was taken from Count Basie & His Orchestra who featured at the Newport Jazz Festival in 1962.
Joe Williams sings along with `Big` Jimmy Rushing.(Many thanks for identifying him).
Sadly, all are no longer with us, but hopefully they still give ...More sell-out performances on the other side.
The world is a sadder place without them. |
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