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Clara Smith Vol. 5 (1927-1929)

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Download links and information about Clara Smith Vol. 5 (1927-1929) by Clara Smith. This album was released in 1995 and it belongs to Blues genres. It contains 20 tracks with total duration of 59:51 minutes.

Artist: Clara Smith
Release date: 1995
Genre: Blues
Tracks: 20
Duration: 59:51
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Black Cat Moan 2:39
2. Strugglin' Woman's Blues 2:58
3. Jelly Look What You Done Done 2:56
4. It's All Coming Home to You 2:54
5. Gin Mill Blues 3:09
6. Steamboat Man Blues 3:07
7. Sobbin' Sister Blues 3:11
8. Got My Mind On That Thing 3:05
9. Wanna Go Home 3:00
10. Ain't Got Nobody to Grind My Coffee 3:07
11. Tell Me When 2:56
12. Empty House Blues 3:01
13. Daddy Don't Put That Thing On Me Blues 3:01
14. It's Tight Like That 3:23
15. Papa I Don't Need You Now 2:31
16. Tired of the Way You Do 3:04
17. Oh! Mister Mitchell 2:48
18. Where Is My Man? 3:08
19. You Can't Stay Here No More 3:10
20. Let's Get Loose 2:43

Details

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Volume five of Clara Smith's complete works as reissued by Document during the 1990s covers a segment of her career from July 30, 1927 to December 31 1929, beginning with her recording of Tiny Parham's "Black Cat Moan." The title of that song apparently engendered an executive decision at Columbia Records causing her backing band (which included cornetist Gus Aiken, reedman Bob Fuller, and pianist Stanley Miller) to be listed as Her Five Black Kittens. This seasoned blues vocalist closed out the decade by making records with some of New York's finest jazz musicians, including Duke Ellington's trumpeter Freddy Jenkins (tracks six and seven) as well as pianist and composer James P. Johnson (tracks 17 and 18). Other noteworthy instrumentalists include pianist Lemuel Fowler, cornetists Ed Allen and Joe Smith, trombonist Big Charlie Green (who sounds especially pungent during Thomas A. Dorsey's "It's Tight Like That"); cellist Marion Cumbo (listen for him during "Got My Mind on That Thing" and "Wanna Go Home"), and an unidentified kazooist (who was probably pianist Porter Grainger) on "Ain't Got Nobody to Grind My Coffee."