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Louis Armstrong - Louis Armstrong and the Blues Singers: 1924-1930 (CD)

Louis Armstrong and the Blues Singers: 1924-1930
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Album Details: Louis Armstrong and the Blues Singers: 1924-1930

Release Date:11/01/1995
Label:Affinity Records
UPC:082333145825

Track List: Louis Armstrong and the Blues Singers: 1924-1930

Disk 1

  1. See See Rider Blues
  2. Jelly Bean Blues
  3. Countin' the Blues
  4. Countin' the Blues
  5. Early in the Morning
  6. You've Got the Right Key But the...
  7. Everybody Loves My Baby
  1. Everybody Loves My Baby
  2. Baby, I Cant' Use You No More
  3. Poor House Blues
  4. Thunderstorm Blues
  5. If I Lose, Let Me Lose (Mamma Do...
  6. Good Time Flat Blues

Disk 2

  1. Nobody Knows the Way I Feel This...
  2. Early in the Morning
  3. Nobody Knows the Way I Feel This...
  4. Broken Busted Blues
  5. Cake Walking Babies from Home
  6. Pickin' on Your Baby
  7. St. Louis Blues
  1. Reckless Blues
  2. You've Been a Good Ole Wagon
  3. You've Got to Beat Me to Keep Me
  4. Mining Camp Blues
  5. Mining Camp Blues
  6. Castaway
  7. Papa De-Da-Da

Disk 3

  1. World's Jazz Crazy (And So Am I)
  2. World's Jazz Crazy (And So Am I)
  3. Railroad Blues
  4. Railroad Blues
  5. Shipwrecked Blues
  6. Court House Blues
  7. Court House Blues
  8. My John Blues
  9. Nashville Woman's Blues
  1. Nashville Woman's Blues
  2. J.C. Holmes Blues
  3. I Ain't Gonna Play No Second Fiddle
  4. You Dirty Mistreater
  5. Come on Coot Do That Thing
  6. Have Your Chill, I'll Be Here Wh...
  7. Find Me at the Greasy Spoon (If ...
  8. Find Me at the Greasy Spoon (If ...

Disk 4

  1. Santa Claus Blues
  2. Squeeze Me
  3. Lucy Long
  4. I Ain't Gonna Play No Second Fid...
  5. Low Land Blues
  6. Kid Man Blues
  7. Lazy Woman Blues
  8. Lonesome Lovesick Blues
  9. Gambler's Dream
  1. Sunshine Baby
  2. Adam and Eve Had the Blues
  3. Put It Where I Can Get It
  4. Washwoman Blues
  5. I've Stopped My Man
  6. Lonesome, All Alone and Blue
  7. Trouble in Mind
  8. Georgia Man

Disk 5

  1. You've Got to Go Home on Time
  2. What King O' Man Is That?
  3. Deep Water Blues
  4. G'man, I Told You
  5. Listen to Ma
  6. Lonesome Hours
  7. Jealous Woman Like Me
  8. Special Delivery Blues
  1. Jack O'Diamond Blues
  2. Mail Train Blues
  3. I Feel Good
  4. Man for Every Day in the Week
  5. He Likes It Slow
  6. Pratt City Blues
  7. Lonesome Weary Blues

Disk 6

  1. Dead Drunk Blues
  2. Have You Ever Been Down?
  3. Lazy Man Blues
  4. Flood Blues
  5. You're a Real Sweetheart
  1. Baby!
  2. S'posin'
  3. To Be in Love
  4. Funny Feathers
  5. Standin' on the Corner [Blue Yod...

Pro Reviews: Louis Armstrong and the Blues Singers: 1924-1930

  • All Music Guide

    During 1924-26 (and to a lesser extent 1927-30), Louis Armstrong appeared as a sideman on a series of sessions by a variety of blues-oriented singers. All of these recordings are included on this attractive six-CD set issued by the English Affinity label (which also includes a lengthy booklet), Armstrong's cornet (and, by 1928, trumpet) is heard backing and occasionally taking solos on record dates led by singers Ma Rainey, Virginia Liston, Eva Taylor, Alberta Hunter, Margaret Johnson, Sippie Wallace, Maggie Jones, Clara Smith, Bessie Smith, Trixie Smith, Billy Jones, Grant and Wilson, Perry Bradford, Chippie Hill, Blanche Calloway, Hociel Thomas, Baby Mack, Nolan Welsh, Butterbeans and Susie, Lillie Delk Christian, Seger Ellis, Victoria Spivey and even the country pioneer Jimmie Rodgers ("Blue Yodel No. 9"). The Bessie Smith recordings are the most powerful but there are other memorable selections including those with the remarkably nasal Lillie Delk Christian (Armstrong even joins in... and scats during "Too Busy"), Eva Taylor (during "Mandy Make up Your Mind" soprano-great Sidney Bechet switches to the remarkable sarrusophone), Eva Taylor (Armstrong's solo on "Cake Walking Babies from Home" was one of his first great ones), Chippie Hill (the original version of "Trouble in Mind") and Ma Rainey (the earliest recording of "See See Rider"). These recordings on a whole are not as essential as his own classic sessions from the 1920s so this perfectly packaged set is recommended mostly to the more fanatical early jazz and blues collectors rather than the more general listeners who are advised to get Armstrong's Hot Five recordings first. - Scott Yanow, All Music Guide Read more Less

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