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The Mills Brothers, Vol. 4: 1937-1940 (feat. Louis Armstrong)

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Download links and information about The Mills Brothers, Vol. 4: 1937-1940 (feat. Louis Armstrong) by Mills Brothers, The. This album was released in 1998 and it belongs to Jazz, Pop, Theatre/Soundtrack genres. It contains 24 tracks with total duration of 01:08:12 minutes.

Artist: Mills Brothers, The
Release date: 1998
Genre: Jazz, Pop, Theatre/Soundtrack
Tracks: 24
Duration: 01:08:12
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Flat Foot Floogie (featuring Louis Armstrong) 3:01
2. My Walking Stick (featuring Louis Armstrong) 2:43
3. The Song Is Ended (featuring Louis Armstrong) 3:11
4. Organ Grinder's Swing 2:54
5. Let Me Dream 2:51
6. Caravan 2:42
7. Carry Me Back to Old Virginny (featuring Louis Armstrong) 3:05
8. Darling Nellie Gray (featuring Louis Armstrong) 2:48
9. In the Shade of the Old Apple Tree (featuring Louis Armstrong) 2:21
10. The Old Folks At Home 2:26
11. Funiculì Funiculà 2:29
12. Asleep In the Deep 2:23
13. Side Kick Joe 2:38
14. Julius Caesar 2:35
15. Cherry (featuring Louis Armstrong) 2:49
16. Marie (featuring Louis Armstrong) 2:22
17. Boog It (featuring Louis Armstrong) 2:39
18. W.P.A. (featuring Louis Armstrong) 2:48
19. The Lambeth Walk 2:43
20. The Yam 2:27
21. Just a Kid Named Joe 3:03
22. Sixty Seconds Got Together 2:43
23. Elder Eatmore's Sermon On Yhrowing Stones (featuring Harry Mills, Louis Armstrong) 4:15
24. Elder Eatmore's Sermon On Generosity (featuring Harry Mills, Louis Armstrong) 4:16

Details

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The compilers of the Italian four-volume series of Mills Brothers recordings for which this is the concluding volume allowed overlap between it and the third volume (the discs are not, in any case, sequenced chronologically), probably in order to keep all of the group's recordings with Louis Armstrong on a single disc. Armstrong joins the brothers on 13 of 24 tracks and proves to be an excellent fifth member. The late 1930s was not one of the Mills Brothers' more successful periods, and none of their big hits are included, nor does the set include all of the brothers' recordings in these years. But the collaborations with Armstrong are a joy.