Jelly Roll Morton - 1929-1930 (CD)

1929-1930
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Album Details: 1929-1930

Release Date:11/19/1996
Label:Melodie Jazz Classic
UPC:3307517064226

Track List: 1929-1930

  1. I Hate A Man Like You
  2. Don't Tell Me Nothin Bout My Man
  3. Smillin The Blues Away
  4. Turtle Twist
  5. My Little Dixie Home
  6. That's Like It Ought To Be
  7. Each Day
  8. If Someone Would Only Love Me
  9. That'll Never Do
  10. I'm Looking For A Little Bluebird
  11. Little Lawrence
  1. Harmony Blues
  2. Fussy Mabel
  3. Ponchartrain
  4. When They Get Lovin They's Gone
  5. You Done Played Out Blues
  6. Oil Well
  7. Load Of Coal (Load Of Cole)
  8. Crazy Chords
  9. Primrose Stomp
  10. Big Time Woman
  11. I'm Her Papa, She's My Mama

Pro Reviews: 1929-1930

  • All Music Guide

    With the exception of two dates as a leader and the remainder of the Wilton Crawley set that closes this album, this disc has the final Jelly Roll Morton recordings before the Great Depression temporarily halted his recording career. The pianist-composer is heard backing singers Lizzie Miles and Billie Young on two songs apiece and interacting with the wild vaudevillian clarinetist Wilton Crawley on "Big Time Woman" and "I'm Her Papa, She's My Mama." The best all-round session has four numbers performed by the trio of Morton, clarinetist Barney Bigard, and drummer Zutty Singleton. Of the band sides (some of which are a bit undisciplined), highlights include "Little Lawrence," "Load of Coal" (with Cozy Cole on drums), and "Fussy Mabel," which has a classic solo from trumpeter Bubber Miley. Whether acquired in this series or on a five-CD Bluebird set, this music is highly enjoyable and often quite essential in appreciating 1920s jazz and the musical genius Jelly Roll Morton. - Scott Yano...w, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Jelly Roll Morton

One of the very first giants of jazz, Jelly Roll Morton did himself a lot of harm posthumously by exaggerating his worth, claiming to have invented jazz in 1902. Morton's accomplishments as an early innovator are so vast that he did not really need to stretch the truth.Morton was jazz's first great composer, writing such songs as "King Porter Stomp," "Grandpa's Spells,"... Read more