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The Original Mr. Jelly Lord 1923-1941

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Download links and information about The Original Mr. Jelly Lord 1923-1941 by Jelly Roll Morton. This album was released in 2000 and it belongs to Jazz genres. It contains 50 tracks with total duration of 02:35:29 minutes.

Artist: Jelly Roll Morton
Release date: 2000
Genre: Jazz
Tracks: 50
Duration: 02:35:29
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. London Blues 3:10
2. Soap Suds 2:55
3. Black Bottom Stomp 3:14
4. Smoke House Blues 3:28
5. The Chant 3:14
6. Sidewalk Blues 3:31
7. Dead Man Blues 3:24
8. Steamboat Stomp 3:10
9. Grandpa's Spells 2:58
10. Original Jelly Roll Blues 3:09
11. Doctor Jazz 3:29
12. Cannon Ball Blues 2:56
13. Hyena Stomp 3:14
14. Billy Goat Stomp 3:33
15. Wild Man Blues 3:11
16. Jungle Blues 3:29
17. Beagle Street Blues 3:18
18. The Pearls 3:30
19. Midnight Mama 2:51
20. Mr Jelly Lord 3:03
21. Georgia Swing 2:33
22. Kansas City STomps 2:58
23. Shoe Shiner's Drag 3:27
24. Boogaboo 3:22
25. Shreveport 3:20
26. Mournful Serenade 3:33
27. Deep Creek 3:33
28. Seattle Hunch 3:11
29. Freakish 2:56
30. Burnin' the Iceberg 3:05
31. Courthouse Bump 3:04
32. Pretty Lil 3:16
33. Sweet Aneta Mine 2:47
34. New Orleans Bump 3:35
35. Sweet Peter 2:55
36. Jersey Joe 2:30
37. Mississippi Mildred 3:20
38. Mint Julep 3:02
39. Smilin' the Blues Away 2:56
40. Turtle Twist 3:10
41. Fusst Mabel 3:20
42. Ponchatrain 2:57
43. Low Gravy 2:47
44. Blue Blood Blues 3:07
45. Climax Rag 2:30
46. Don't You Leave Me Here 2:39
47. West End Blues 2:57
48. Ballin' the Jack 2:21
49. Sweet Substitute 2:59
50. Panama 2:32

Details

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Here's a core sample of 40 classic ensemble recordings by New Orleans jazz master Jelly Roll Morton. Most of these are Victor recordings, dating from the years 1926-1930, the golden years of Jelly Roll Morton's Red Hot Peppers. The first two tracks are substantially rarer items originally issued on the OKeh label. "London Blues," played by Jelly Roll Morton's Jazz Band, was recorded in Chicago in 1923; "Soap Suds" (later known as "Fickle Fay Creep") was performed by the St. Louis Levee Band in St. Louis on October 30, 1926 — this one is gloriously obscure, and its inclusion on this anthology is a major asset. Anyone who knows Morton's discography will detect a few inevitable gaps even while admiring the selection of tunes that did make it onto this compilation. It's a shame the producers didn't haul off and plant an extra five tracks on each disc. This would have filled in some of those gaps, hopefully allowing for the inclusion of something from the magnificent occasion in 1930 when trombonist Wilbur de Paris sat in as a Red Hot Pepper, and more from the 'New Orleans Jazzmen' sessions of 1939 — especially the missing tracks that feature Sidney Bechet! But these problems can be solved by tapping into additional compilations, most especially the Jelly Roll Morton portion of the Classics Chronological Series or JSP's budget-priced four-CD Morton box. Avid's approach is always to assemble a smattering of great recordings that epitomize the life and work of the artist, and this they have achieved most admirably. A pair of marvelous recordings waxed for the General label in 1940 round off this most enjoyable portrait album dedicated to the memory of Jelly Roll Morton.