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At the Jazz Band Ball - Early Hot Jazz, Song and Dance
Click here to buy At the Jazz Band Ball - Early Hot Jazz, Song and Dance by Yazoo. At the Jazz Band Ball - Early Hot Jazz, Song and Dance
by Yazoo
Sales Rank: 53103
Price: $19.98
0.0 out of 5 stars
Get More Info On At the Jazz Band Ball - Early Hot Jazz, Song and Dance! Buy At the Jazz Band Ball - Early Hot Jazz, Song and Dance Now!

<I>At the Jazz Band Ball</I> features rare, archival film clips from 1925 to 1933 that showcase a wonderful potpourri of musicians, bandleaders, singers, dancers, and entertainers that characterized the best of the Harlem Renaissance and the Jazz Age. The range of this collection represents early 20th-century Americana, from the hometown charm of the Boswell sisters performing the jazz-scat classic "Heebie Jeebies" to the Al Jolson-like antics of Charly Wellman's take on "Alabamy Snow." Of course, jazz is the heartbeat of this pre-World War II time and it's manifested in many ways. There's the classical sophistication of Paul Whiteman's orchestra rendition of "My Ohio Home" with the young trumpet pioneer Bix Beiderbecke, and the elegant and enduring Duke Ellington swinging like mad on "Old Man Blues" with baritone saxophonist Harry Carney, and an imaginative medley consisting of "The Duke Speaks Out," the evocative "Black Beauty," and Cotton Club Stomp" in which the lovely dancer Fredi Washington--and the innovative mirror shots--steal the show. <p> There's also the "Empress of the Blues," Bessie Smith, with her sorrow-song version of W.C. Handy's "St. Louis Blues." But Louis Armstrong, the first major jazz improviser and vocalist, is the prince of this era, as evidenced by his down-home trumpet solos, stage charisma, and gravel-like vocals on "I Cover the Waterfront," the fast and furious "Dinah" (as seen on Ken Burns's <I>Jazz</I>), and "Tiger Rag." Add the dapper Dorsey Bros. Band, the tap-dance wizardry of Bill "Bojangles" Robinson, and Ben Burnie's burning big band treatment of the Harlem Globetrotters' theme "Sweet Georgia Brown" and you know the exuberance and artistry of this brilliant chapter in American history. <I>--Eugene Holley Jr.</I>


Viewer Reviews
In the Whiteman clip, it still is possible that Bix wasn't faking it. He was a self-taught trumpet player, and all of his fingerings are completely different from anyone else's. As for the different cut off, I'm not sure. But I don't think anyone should discredit the Bix clip entirely. He had his own style of playing.

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At the Jazz Band Ball - Early Hot Jazz, Song and Dance
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Get More Info On At the Jazz Band Ball - Early Hot Jazz, Song and Dance! Buy At the Jazz Band Ball - Early Hot Jazz, Song and Dance Now!


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