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Tag Archives: Eddie Lang

Jimmy Blythe

Considering just how many okay documenting sessions he was on in Chicago within the 1920s (particularly with Johnny Dodds), it really is astonishing how little is well known in regards to the mysterious Jimmy Blythe. He grew up in Kentucky, transferred to Chicago in 1918, and examined with pianist Clarence …

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Nick Lucas

Hearing Nick Lucas’ high-pitched tone of voice and understanding that he presented “Tip Toe With the Tulips” makes one immediately recognize that he was a significant influence over the infamous Tiny Tim in the past due ’60s. But there is a lot more to Nick Lucas than that; also beyond …

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Scrapper Blackwell

Scrapper Blackwell was most widely known for his use pianist Leroy Carr through the early and mid-’30s, but he also recorded many single edges between 1928 and 1935. A unique stylist whose function was nearer to jazz than blues, Blackwell was a fantastic player with a method constructed around single-note …

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Lonnie Johnson

Blues electric guitar simply wouldn’t normally have developed in the way it did otherwise for the prolific brilliance of Lonnie Johnson. He was there to greatly help define the instrument’s upcoming inside the genre as well as the genre’s upcoming itself at the starting, his melodic conception up to now …

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Dick McDonough

Using the premature death of Eddie Lang in 1933, Dick McDonough and Carl Kress were considered his likely successors both on jazz dates and in the studios. McDonough had been a very active player. He previously began in 1927 like a banjoist with Crimson Nichols, had turned over to acoustic …

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Lennie Hayton

Lennie Hayton’s profession could be easily split into two. In early stages he was a jazz-oriented pianist and arranger involved with classic jazz schedules of the past due 1920’s. With the middle-1940’s he was mainly an arranger for orchestras and quite active as a studio room musician. Hayton excelled during …

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Howdy Quicksell

Howdy Quicksell (whose name sounded like he must have been a traveling salesman) was an excellent rhythmic banjoist who appeared about many traditional recordings during his short career. Quicksell was an associate of Jean Goldkette’s Orchestra from 1922-27, like the period that Bix Beiderbecke is at the band. Furthermore, Quicksell …

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Dick Voynow

You can find more different recordings of “Riverboat Shuffle” than there have been years in the life span of the person who wrote and published the jazz standard in collaboration using the better-known Hoagy Carmichael and Irving Mills. One reason behind Dick Voynow’s comparative lack of popularity is his position …

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Charlie Green

Among the finest early trombonists as well as the initial strong jazz soloist within the Fletcher Henderson orchestra (signing up for slightly before Louis Armstrong), Charlie Green played locally in Omaha (1920-1923) before his two stints with Henderson (July 1924-Apr 1926 and later 1928-springtime 1929). An excellent blues participant who …

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Charlie Johnson

A good pianist who seldom soloed, Charlie Johnson is of greatest significance for leading his Heaven Ten, an orchestra that had five excellent saving periods during 1925-1929, and played at Smalls’ Heaven during 1925-1935. One of the sidemen who show up on Johnson’s information are trumpeters Jabbo Smith, Thomas Morris, …

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