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Bill Samuels - 1945-1947 (CD)

1945-1947
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Album Details: 1945-1947

Release Date:11/23/2004
Label:Classics R&B
UPC:3307510511222

Track List: 1945-1947

  1. I Cover the Waterfront
  2. Jockey Blues
  3. I'm Coming Home to Stay
  4. My Bicycle Tillie
  5. One Hundred Years from Today
  6. Candy Store Jump
  7. That Chick's Too Young to Fry
  8. I Cover the Waterfront
  9. Jockey Blues
  10. Port Wine
  11. Ghost of a Chance
  12. I'm Falling for You
  13. I Surrender, Dear
  1. Open the Door, Richard
  2. For You
  3. My Baby Didn't Even Say Goodbye
  4. Lilacs in the Rain
  5. I Know What You're Puttin' Down
  6. When I Closed My Eyes
  7. Where's My Baby
  8. If I Had Another Chance
  9. One for the Money
  10. It's Love Time
  11. That Someone Is You
  12. Stompin' These Blues Away
  13. Moonglow

Pro Reviews: 1945-1947

  • All Music Guide

    One of the very first acts signed to the newly founded Mercury label in 1945 was a quartet calling itself the Cats 'N Jammer Three, a name derived from Rudolph Dirks' oldtime comic strip, The Katzenjammer Kids. Their pianist and lead vocalist was Mississippi native and Chicagobased entertainer Bill Samuels. Adam Lambert played mellifluous amplified guitar, and rhythmic support was provided by bassist Sylvester Hickman and drummer Hillard Brown. The first of two versions of "I Cover the Waterfront" was terrifically successful for the Jammers and for Mercury. Stylistically, Samuels and his group sounded something like the King Cole Trio, tempered with the quaintness of the Charioteers and, at times, the cheerful carnality of the rising RB movement. Comparisons could also be drawn with the Mills Brothers, the Ink Spots, the Cats the Fiddle, Slim Gaillard, the Delta Rhythm Boys, the Three Keys, the Four Blazes, and the Five Red Caps. "Waterfront" is smoothly romantic with cool background ...vocals, and the lovely "One Hundred Years from Today" epitomizes the oldfashioned aspect of Samuels' act. On the raunchier end of the spectrum, "Jockey Blues" and "My Bicycle Tillie" with its repeated references to "pumping" are distinctly and daringly copulative. This combination of cuteness and relatively overt sexuality was an important ingredient in RB and early rock roll. Tapping into a rowdy novelty routine popularized by both Count Basie and Louis Jordan, bassist Sylvester Hickman tried to outsqueal Jordan during the Jammers' rendition of "Open the Door, Richard." Three sides from July of 1947 find Samuels in front of a small band led by Ram Ramirez, with trumpet solos from Bill Coleman and guitar passages by Mundell Lowe. The Cats 'N Jammer Three seem to have disbanded during the 1948 recording ban. Samuels waxed only a couple of sides in 1949, then moved to Minneapolis where he managed to form a trio, eventually recording an LP and one last single. Bill Samuels passed away in March of 1964 at the age of 53. This is the heart of his musical legacy. - arwulf arwulf, All Music Guide Read more Less

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