Shopping > Music > The Charleston Chasers > Charleston Chasers

The Charleston Chasers - Charleston Chasers (CD)

Charleston Chasers
$31.66
Not Yet Rated 0 Ratings (0 Reviews)

Album Details: Charleston Chasers

Release Date:12/25/1999
Label:Asv Living Era
UPC:743625531626

Pro Reviews: Charleston Chasers

  • All Music Guide

    The year 1999 saw the release of two different retrospectives involving records originally issued under the name of the Charleston Chasers. While Timeless Historical chose the strictly chronological approach, Living Era assembled a series of mostly excellent picks, making this the best overall taste of the Chasers available on compact disc. Even though Living Era didn't include two wonderful sides from 1925, the disc does open up with no less than twelve consecutive instrumentals. To be able to spend more than a half hour absorbing the sound of this band without any vocal intrusions is a wonderful experience, satisfying for any seasoned traditional jazz fiend and crucial for those who are approaching this music for the first time. Both “Sugar Foot Strut" and “Mississippi Mud" appear here as instrumentals. This is an improvement on the Timeless collection in which these two titles were burdened with foolish vocalists, and, in the case of “Mud", racist lyrics. The Chasers' personnel chan...ged constantly, with a few mainstays like Miff Mole and Jimmy Dorsey providing continuity and, in the case of Mr. Mole, a surefooted, rocksolid intensity. Primal percussionist Vic Berton appears on the first dozen tunes, at times utilizing what sounds like a rudimentary vibraphone. This instrument was listed in the original credits as both “harpophone" and “metallophone". Subsequent drummers were Davey Tough, Stan King and eventually Gene Krupa. Clarence Williams' wife Eva Taylor sings pleasantly on five tracks including “Turn On The Heat", which Fats Waller was to cook up so marvelously three months later as a piano solo. Eva and the Chasers perform the song at a deliberately relaxed tempo, generating surprisingly sexual overtones even before Eva gets around to calling her beau “my little radiator". As for the rest of the vocalists, Roy Evans was a silly singer, and Paul Small sounds kinda tiresome. As the chronology moves through 1930 to 1931, Tommy Dorsey, Jack Teagarden, Glenn Miller and Benny Goodman all show up as premonitions of where popular jazz was heading. For dessert, Mr. Tea sings “Basin Street Blues" and “Beale Street Blues" in his laid back Texas drawl. With only 4 dud vocals out of 24 selections, Living Era came dangerously close to giving the world a perfect set of sides by the Charleston Chasers. - arwulf arwulf, All Music Guide Read more Less

Compare Prices: Charleston Chasers

Store Store Rating Price Notes/Coupons

Amazon.com Marketplace

48 Ratings

(29 Reviews)

Write a review

$31.66Total Price N/A New Item fantastic prices with ease & comfort of amazon Go to Store

Rate & Write a Review: Charleston Chasers

All fields marked with * are required
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
Maximum of 4,000 characters
Cancel

Rate & Write a Review: Charleston Chasers

Thank You. Your review has been posted.
View your postClose

Biography

The Charleston Chasers

The Charleston Chasers was a name used between 1925 and 1931 for a series of recording groups that did not exist outside of the studios. The 1925 edition (which recorded two numbers) matched cornetist Leo McConville with trombonist Miff Mole and pianist Arthur Schutt. By their second session two years later, The Charleston Chasers was a group similar to Red Nichols' Fiv... Read more