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The Complete Library of Congress Recordings

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Download links and information about The Complete Library of Congress Recordings by Jelly Roll Morton. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Jazz genres. It contains 128 tracks with total duration of 08:58:58 minutes.

Artist: Jelly Roll Morton
Release date: 2005
Genre: Jazz
Tracks: 128
Duration: 08:58:58
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. The Story of "I'm Alabama Bound" 4:03
2. Time In Mobile 4:13
3. King Porter Stomp 4:06
4. The Story of "King Porter Stomp" 3:53
5. Jelly Roll's Background 4:21
6. Music Lessons 4:06
7. Miserere 4:05
8. The Stomping Grounds 4:15
9. The Style of Sammy Davis 4:18
10. Tony Jackson Was the Favorite / Dope, Crown, and Opium 4:00
11. Poor Alfred Wilson 4:03
12. Honky Tonk Blues / In New Orleans, Anyone Could Carry a Gun 4:21
13. New Orleans Was a Free and Easy Place 4:08
14. The Story of Aaron Harris 4:06
15. The Story of Aaron Harris, Continued / Aaron Harris Blues 4:06
16. Aaron Harris, His Hoodoo Woman, and the Hat That Started a Riot 4:10
17. The Story of the 1900 New Orleans Riot and the Song of Robert Charles 4:05
18. The Story of the 1900 New Orleans Riot, Continued 4:05
19. Game Kid Blues 3:57
20. New Orleans Funerals 4:18
21. Funeral Marches 4:12
22. Oh! Didn't He Ramble 4:07
23. Tiger Rag, Third, Fourth, and Fifth Strains 4:01
24. Tiger Rag / Panama 4:03
25. The Right Tempo Is the Accurate Tempo 4:40
26. Jazz Discords and Story of the Kansas City Stomp 4:31
27. Kansas City Stomp, Continued 4:35
28. Slow Swing and "Sweet Jazz Music" 4:34
29. Salty Dog / Bill Johnson, Jelly's Brother-in-Law 4:23
30. Hestitation Blues 4:30
31. My Gal Sal 3:53
32. The St. Louis Scene 4:10
33. Maple Leaf Rag, St. Louis Style / Maple Leaf Rag, New Orleans Style 4:20
34. Jelly Roll Carves St. Louis 4:20
35. Jelly Roll Carves St. Louis, Continued 4:24
36. New Orleans Blues 3:59
37. Winin' Boy Blues 3:45
38. Winin' Boy Blues, Continued 4:24
39. The Anamule Dance 3:47
40. The Anamule Dance, Continued 4:20
41. The Great Buddy Bolden / Buddy Bilden's Blues 4:12
42. The Great Buddy Bolden, Continued 4:11
43. Mr. Jelly Lord 4:10
44. How Jelly Roll Got His Name 4:15
45. Original Jelly Roll Blues 4:10
46. Honky Tonk Blues 4:07
47. Real Tough Boys 4:32
48. Sporting Attire and Shooting the Agate 4:33
49. Sweet Mamas and Sweet Papas 4:21
50. See See Rider 4:25
51. Parading With the Broadway Swells 4:24
52. Fights and Weapons 4:28
53. Luis Russell and New Orleans Riffs 4:27
54. Jelly's Travels: From Yazoo to Clarksdale 4:14
55. Jelly's Travels: From Clarksdale to Helena 4:34
56. Jelly's Travels: From Helena to Memphis 4:23
57. In Memphis: The Monarch Saloon and Benny Frenchy 4:24
58. Benny Frenchy's Tune, Continued 4:24
59. Make Me a Pallett On the Floor 4:16
60. Make Me a Pallett On the Floor, Continued 4:15
61. Make Me a Pallett On the Floor, Part 3 4:14
62. Make Me a Pallett On the Floor, Concluded 4:35
63. The Dirty Dozen 4:31
64. The Murder Ballad, Pt. 1 4:03
65. The Murder Ballad, Pt. 2 4:18
66. The Murder Ballad, Pt. 3 4:28
67. The Murder Ballad, Pt. 4 4:20
68. The Murder Ballad, Pt. 5 4:13
69. The Murder Ballad, Pt. 6 4:25
70. The Murder Ballad, Pt. 7 4:30
71. Fickle Fay Creep 3:16
72. Jungle Blues 3:45
73. King Porter Stomp 2:57
74. Sweet Peter 3:05
75. Hyena Stomp 3:34
76. Wolverine Blues, Begun 3:47
77. Wolverine Blues, Concluded 4:02
78. State and Madison 3:45
79. The Pearls, Begun 3:31
80. The Pearls, Concluded 3:35
81. Bert Williams 3:42
82. Freakish 4:00
83. Pep 3:34
84. The Georgia Skin Game 3:56
85. The Georgia Skin Game, Continued 3:04
86. The Georgia Skin Game, Conclusion 3:21
87. Ungai Hai 4:11
88. New Orleans Blues 4:08
89. The Spanish Tinge 4:15
90. Improving Spanish Tempos 4:07
91. Creepy Feeling, Concluded 4:20
92. The Crave 4:32
93. Mamanita 4:09
94. C'était N'aut' Can-Can, Payez Donc 4:23
95. Spanish Swat 4:14
96. Ain't Misbehavin' 4:13
97. I Hate a Man Like You / Rolling Stuff 4:13
98. Michigan Water Blues 3:52
99. Winin' Boy Blues 4:10
100. Winin' Boy Blues, Continued 4:16
101. Boogie Woogie Blues 4:22
102. Buddy Bertrand's Blues, Continued / Mamie's Blues 4:27
103. When the Hot Stuff Came In 8:41
104. The First Hot Arrangements 9:02
105. The Pensacola Kid and the Cadillac Café 8:00
106. At the Cadillac Café, Los Angeles 9:56
107. Little Liza Jane, Continued / On the West Coast 9:47
108. In the Publishing Business 8:50
109. Original Jelly Roll Blues 1:52
110. Jelly Roll's Early Playing Days In the District 1:23
111. Hot Bands and Creole Tunes 4:30
112. Eh, la Bas 2:03
113. Old-Time Creole Musicians and the French Element 3:33
114. Playing Hot With Buddy Bolden 3:18
115. High Society 2:17
116. Sporting Life Costumes 1:39
117. Buddy Bolden: Man and Musician 2:24
118. Creoles Playing With Negroes: Getting That Drive 4:29
119. Jelly Roll's Compositions 3:23
120. How Johnny St. Cyr Learned to Play Guitar 2:21
121. Guitar Blues 2:18
122. Bad Men and Pimps 3:39
123. The Story of the Coon Blues 1:35
124. Coon Blues 2:23
125. Jazz Is Just a Makeup: Buddy Bolden, Honky Tonks, Brass Band Funerals, and Parades 5:26
126. Young Sidney Bechet: Jim Crow and the Dangers of the District 3:41
127. The Main Idea In Jazz: "Just Watch Me" - Improvising and Reading Music 3:25
128. Of All His Mother's Children He Loved Jelly the Best 6:18

Details

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The Complete Library of Congress Recordings of Jelly Roll Morton is staggering in its depth and magnitude. Here is an intimate oral history of music and culture in New Orleans and along the Gulf Coast with demonstrative musical accompaniment. Beautifully restored — especially considering the fact that this material was originally etched onto aluminum platters — the Morton interviews are able to seep into the mind of the listener with unprecedented clarity and precision, along with numerous instrumental piano solos. Sipping whiskey and narrating in what Alistair Cooke described as his "billiard ball baritone," Morton speaks of spirituals, blues, jazz, ragtime, opera, symphonies, and overtures. He airs his own theories of harmony, melody, discords, rhythms, breaks and riffs, scat singing, swing, and the value of jazz when played slowly so as to enhance its bouquet. He speaks of musical origins, antecedents and precedents, originality and piracy, of nocturnal entertainments, musical cutting contests and impromptu fisticuffs, 24-hour honky tonks and street parades. With all the descriptive power of a Zola novel Morton describes horses, fine food, alcohol, narcotics and body lice; cardsharps, pool sharks, prostitutes, pianists, and hoodoos; race riots and funerals, gang violence and cold-blooded murder. He tells stories of hitting the road and scuffling to get by, even selling bogus patent medicine door to door. He plays Miserere from Verdi's Il Trovatore, explains the use of tangos, waltzes, and habanera rhythms, traces the quadrille origins of the "Tiger Rag," sings Mardi Gras Indian chants, and describes the circumstances which led to his being called "Jelly Roll." Loosened by liquor and encouraged by Alan Lomax, Morton even revives the smutty songs he used to perform in the sporting houses of Storyville. Morton's scatological lyrics to "Make Me a Pallet on the Floor" and his own cheerfully lewd "Winin' Boy Blues" are almost as bracing as his version of the ever-popular "Dirty Dozen," peppered with references to inter-species copulation. Even the epically proportioned "Murder Ballad" contains its share of overt sexual verbiage. Disc eight contains a series of interviews recorded in 1949 with New Orleans musicians Johnny St. Cyr, Alphonse Picou, Albert Glenny, Paul Dominguez, Jr., and Sidney Bechet's brother, the trombone-blowing dentist Dr. Leonard Bechet. Also included on this disc is an Adobe Acrobat PDF document packed with extra liner notes, word-for-word transcriptions of all lyrics and dialogue heard on this set, unrecorded interviews and research notes, as well as rare documents from the Jelly Roll Morton archive. The eight discs, a paperback edition of Lomax's excellent biography Mister Jelly Roll, and a wonderfully informative, insightful booklet are encased in a rather ungainly, piano-shaped package that seems precariously fragile. The words and music housed within, however, will now be able to circulate anew and endure in the body politic for many years to come.