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Jean Goldkette Bands 1924-1929

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Download links and information about Jean Goldkette Bands 1924-1929 by Jean Goldkette. This album was released in 2003 and it belongs to Jazz genres. It contains 24 tracks with total duration of 01:12:18 minutes.

Artist: Jean Goldkette
Release date: 2003
Genre: Jazz
Tracks: 24
Duration: 01:12:18
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. In the Evening 3:14
2. It's the Blues 2:49
3. Play Me Slow 2:50
4. Dinah 3:04
5. Drifting Apart 3:08
6. "Gimme" a Little Kiss, Will "Ya"? Huh? 2:43
7. Lonesome and Sorry 3:03
8. My Ohio Home 3:06
9. So Tired 3:18
10. Here Comes the Show Boat (1) 3:13
11. Here Comes the Show Boat (2) 3:11
12. Just a Little Kiss from a Little Miss 3:10
13. Just Imagine (1) 3:01
14. Just Imagine (2) 2:59
15. Just Imagine (3) 3:00
16. That's Just My Way of Forgetting You 3:02
17. That's What Puts the "Sweet" In Home Sweet Home 2:51
18. My Blackbirds Are Bluebirds Now (1) 2:53
19. My Blackbirds Are Bluebirds Now (2) 2:54
20. Don't Be Like That (1) 2:59
21. Don't Be Like That (2) 3:02
22. Take a Good Look At Mine 2:56
23. Ya' Comin' Up to NIght, Huh? 2:59
24. Birmingham Blues 2:53

Details

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Traditionally, the Jean Goldkette orchestra has been remembered mainly as an appendage of the Bix Beiderbecke story, as the short-lived cornetist shows up briefly at different junctures in the Goldkette discography. Perhaps this explains why the Timeless label's sampler of Goldkette's Victor recordings (waxed in Detroit, Camden N. J., Kansas City and Chicago between March 27, 1924 and January 14, 1929) neatly sidesteps each and every record that Beiderbecke ever made with this little dance band. (That material appears on the Transatlantic Radio label's Goldkette compilation, which was released in 2002.) Please note that "Birmingham Bertha" was originally issued as by Jean Goldkette and His Orchestra but was in reality performed by McKinney's Cotton Pickers, an Afro-American ensemble largely led by Don Redman and also based in Michigan. A native of Valenciennes France, Goldkette made a name for himself in Detroit during the early to mid-'20s by providing the public with high quality dance music, some of which found its way onto 78 rpm phonograph records. The examples presented on this collection clearly demonstrate the importance of skilled arrangers (Russ Morgan, Don Redman) and inspired instrumentalists (trumpeter Sterling Bose), trombonists Spiegel Wilcox, Pee Wee Hunt and Tommy Dorsey, reedmen Jimmy Dorsey and Volly de Faut, violinist Joe Venuti and bassist Steve Brown, whose primary influence appears to have been Pops Foster. Most of the singing is done by members of the band; guest vocalists include Hoagy Carmichael (who also plays piano and cornet) and a trio of females who were billed as "Wynken, Blynken and Nod."