2009. október 12., hétfő

Bob Fournier - Accordeon de Paris

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01 - Bob Fournier - Pigalle
02 - Bob Fournier - Le Gamin De Paris
03 - Bob Fournier - Java
04 - Bob Fournier - Sous Les Ponts De Paris
05 - Bob Fournier - C Est Si Bon
07 - Bob Fournier - Domino
08 - Bob Fournier - La Java Bleue
09 - Bob Fournier - French Cancan
10 - Bob Fournier - Sous Le Ciel De Paris
12 - Bob Fournier - Le P Tit Bal Du Samedi Soir
13 - Bob Fournier - Mademoiselle De Paris
14 - Bob Fournier - Les Yeux Noirs
15 - Bob Fournier - Ah Le Petit Vin Blanc
16 - Bob Fournier - La Plus Belle Des Javas
17 - Bob Fournier - Les Roses De Picardie
18 - Bob Fournier - Bal Musette

Organ Royalty


Download_DATA

01 Just In Time
02 Squeeze Me (But Don't Tease Me)
03 Mean, Angry, Nasty and Lowdown
04 Can't Buy Me Love
05 Like Blue
06 Cute
07 Rapid Shave
08 That's for Me
09 The Theme

Oscar Peterson and Nelson Riddle


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01-My Foolish Heart
02-Judy
03-´Round Midnight
04-Someday My Prince Will Come
05-Come Sunday
06-Nightingale
07-My Ship
08-A Sleeping Bee
09-Portrait Of Jenny
10-Goodbye

Ernestine Anderson - Big City


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01-All I Need Is You (Bob Friedman)
02-Street Of Dreams (Young,Lewis)
03-Spring Is Here (Hart,Rodgers)
04-The 59th Street Bridge Song (Paul Simon)
05-I'll Never Pass This Way Again (Bob Friedman)
06-Big City (Marvin Jenkins)
07-All Blues (Davis,Brown)
08-Welcome To The Club (Mel Tormé)
09-I Didn't Know What Time It Was (Hart,Rodgers)

Buddy DeFranco and Nelson Riddle - Cross Country Suite

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01-Tall Timber
02-Smokey Mountain Country
03-The Rockies
04-The Great Lakes
05-The Great Plains
06-Gulf Coast
07-The Mississippi
08-Down East
09-El Camino Real
10-Metropolis
11-Longhorn

Organs In Orbit and Easy music


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01.The Ernie Freeman Combo - Rockhouse 03:52
02.The John Buzon Trio - Ill Wind 02:16
03.Denny McLain - The Girl From Ipanema/Meditation 03:17
04.Jackie Davis - Love Is Just Around the Corner 02:47
05.Sir Julian - Movin' at Midnight 03:09
06.Walter Wanderley - Voce E Eu 02:11
07.The Joe Bucci Trio - Li'l Darlin' 02:41
08.Billy May & His Orchestra - Patricia 02:10
09.The Don Baker Trio - The Third Man Theme 02:05
10.Sir Julian - A Man And A Woman 02:32
11.The John Buzon Trio - Mr Ghost Goes To Town 02:20
12.Denny Mclain - Laura/More 06:13
13.Jackie Davis - Perfidia 02:36
14.Milt Buckner - The Late Late Show 03:38
15.The Ernie Freeman Combo - Fever/Comin' Home Baby 05:58
16.Shay Torrent - Flying Fiddles 01:55
17.Martin Denny - Song Of The Bayou 03:33
18.The Forbidden Five - Enchanted Farm 02:00
19.French Guy - Where Was I 02:48

2009. október 11., vasárnap

Mario del Monaco - Es Singt Mario del Monaco LP 1974 Digital transfer, noise cleaning and mixed, at Audio Design Studio Home Sound Recording Studio


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01 - Der Troubadour (Verdi) Dirigent: Alberto Erede
02 - Ein Maskenba (Verdi) Dirigent: Alberto Erede
03 - Die Macht des Schicksas (Verdi)
04 - Carmen (Bizet) Dirigent: Alberto Erede
05 - Die Afrikanerin (Meyerbeer) Dirigent: Alberto Erede
06 - Andrea Chénier (Giordano) Dirigent: Giannadrea Gavazzeni
07 - Der Bajazzo (Leoncavo!Io) Dirigent: Francesco Molinari-Pradelli
08 - Nein ! bin Bajazzo nicht mehr ( finale ) (Leoncavo!Io) Dirigent: Francesco Molinari-Pradelli
09 - Madame Butterf]y (Puccini) Dirigent: Alberto Erede
10 - Das Mödchen aus dem goldenen Westen Dirigent: Franco Capuana
11 - Turandot (Puccini) Dirigent: Alberto Erede
12 - Tosca (Puccini) Dirigent: Francesco Molinari-Pradelli
13 - Tosca ( Puccini ) Und es blitzen die sterne

VEB Deutsche
Schallplatten
Berlin DDR 1974

2009. október 7., szerda

Nelson Riddle and His Orchestra - Let's Face The Music And Dance



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01 Let's Face The Music And Dance
02 Just One Of Those Things
03 You Do Something To Me
04 You Are My Lucky Star
05 I Get Along Without You Very Well
06 Let's Do It
07 I Love Paris
08 You Leave Me Breathless
09 For All We Know
10 Jeannie, I Dream Of Lilac Time

The Incredible Blues Puppies-In The Doghouse


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01 - Tuff Days
02 - I Dont Get It
03 - Zip You Lip
04 - A Hard Way To Suffer
05 - Away From Here
06 - Too Bad
07 - Chilled Down To The Bone
08 - Mean Mistreatin Mama
09 - Shivering In My Shoes
10 - No Time For You
11 - In The Doghouse
12 - Dont Keep Me Waiting
13 - Hungry Man
14 - Gerards Jump
15 - Got Love If You Want It

T - Bear And The Dukes Of Rhythm - Let The Sweet Talk Flow


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01 - Boogie And Soul
02 - Lipstick Woman
03 - Baby Please Dont Lie To Me
04 - Dont Touch Me Baby
05 - Thats What The Blues Is Al About
06 - Do You Think Im Wrong
07 - Let The Sweet Talk Flow
08 - T - Bear Blues
09 - She Moves Me
10 - Barefottin
11 - Please Love Me
12 - Youre Gone Need Me

2009. október 4., vasárnap

Sonny and Cher - The Best Of


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01 - Baby Don't Go ( RA 0392 ) 1965
02 - Just You ( ATL 70 143 ) 1965
03 - Sing C'est La Vie ( ATL 70 143 ) 1965
04 - I Got You Babe ( ATL 4035 ) 1965
05 - Why Don't They let Us fall In Love 1965
06 - Laugh At Me ( Sonny solo ) ( ATL 70 142 ) 1965
07 - But You're Mine ( Atco 45-6381, ATL 70 147 ) 1965
08 - The Revolution Kind ( Sonny solo ) ( ATL 70 147 ) 1965
09 - What Now My Love ( ATL 70 160 ) 1966
10 - Have I Stayed Too Long ( ATL 70 172 ) 1966
11 - Leave Be Me ( ATL 70 172 ) 1966
12 - Little Man ( ATL 70 181 ) 1966
13 - Living For You ( ATL 70 190 ) 1966
14 - Love Don't Come ( ATL 70 190 ) 1966
15 - The Beat Goes On ( ATL 70 198 ) 1967
16 - Beautiful Story 1967
17 - It's The Little Things 1967
18 - My Best Friend's Girl Is Out Of Sight ( Sonny solo ) 1967
19 - Good Combination 1967
20 - I Got You Babe ( Soundtrack ) 1965
21 - Hello ( Atco 45-6381 ) 1965

2009. október 2., péntek

Orchester Claudius Alzner - Tango Bolero LP 1976 Digital transfer, noise cleaning and mixed, at Audio Design Studio Home Sound Recording Studio 2009.



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Seite A


01 - BIue Tango
(Leroy Anderson)
02 - Avant de mourir
(Georges Boulanger)
03 - Hör’ mein Lied, Violetta
(Othmar Klose - Rudi Lukesch)
04 - Hernando’s Hideaway
(Richard Adler - Jerry Ross)
05 - Jalousie
(Jakob Gade)
06 - Gitarren-Serenade (Zwei Gitarren am Meer)
(Franz Funk)
07 - Tango notturno
(Hans-Otto Bormann)

Seite B


08 - A media luz
(E. Donato)
09 - Blauer Himmel
(Joe Rixner)
10 - La Cumparsita
(G. H. Matos Rodriguez)
11 - Tango Manna
(Ludwig Schmidseder)
12 - Olé Guapa
(A. Malando)
13 - Tango Bolero
(Juan Liossas)
14 - Granada
(Juan Liossas)

Orchester Claudius Alzner ( P ) 1976

Harmonika szerenad MC - CD 1990 Digital transfer, noise cleaning and mixed, at Audio Design Studio Home Sound Recording Studio 2009.

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01 - Gyöngéden Öleu Át - Speak Softly Love
02 - Alexanders Ragtime Band
03 - Rumba Negra
04 - La Paloma
05 - El Condor Pasa
06 - La Cucaracha
07 - Marina
08 - Moliendo Kaffee
09 - Michelle
10 - Csupa Könny A Szobám - Without You
11 - Gyertyafény Keringo

2009. október 1., csütörtök

Amanda Lear - I Am A Photograph LP Digital transfer, noise cleaning and mixed, at Audio Design Studio Home Sound Recording Studio 2009.


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01 - Blood and Honey
02 - Alphabet
03 - These Boots Are Mode Fo Walkin
04 - Tomorrow
05 - Pretty Boys
06 - Queen Of China-Town
07 - Alligator
08 - The Lady In Black
09 - I Am A Photograph
10 - Blue Tango

2009. szeptember 29., kedd

Jean Shepard - Someone`s Gotta Cry

Jean Shepard

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01. A Thief In The Night
02. You'd Better Go
03. Mockin' Bird Hill
04. Lake Lonely
05. It's Never Too Late
06. I Love You Because
07. I'd Rather Die Young (Than Grow Old Without You)
08. One Less Heartache
09. A Tear Dropped By
10. You're The Only Good Thing (That's Happened To Me)
11. You Win Again
12. The Waltz Of The Angels
13. I Can't Stop Loving You
14. Nobody But Myself
15. Born To Loose
16. I'll Hold You In My Heart
17. Half A Mind
18. I'm Thinking Tonight Of My Blue Eyes
19. Two Voices, Two Shadows, Two Faces
20. The Violet And A Rose
21. I Can't Seem To Say Goodbye
22. Two Little Boys
23. When Your House Is Not A Home



Jean Shepard

* "A THIEF IN THE NIGHT" *

This is our last kiss, our last moment of bliss
Darling, our love can never be right
For your ring's on her hand and my heart just can't stand
Stealing love like a thief in the night

Never more shall we meet on some dim-litted street
Darling, two wrongs just don't make a right
So I'm sending you home for I just can't go on
Stealing love like a thief in the night

Never more shall we meet on some dim-litted street
Darling, two wrongs just don't make a right
So I'm sending you home for I just can't go on
Stealing love like a thief in the night

(Artist: Jean Shepard
Songwriter: Harlan Howard)
---
* After departing the smaller GRT label at the end of the 1970s, Shepard did not record again until 1981, when she released a final studio album under the label Laselight titled, Dear John, which included remakes of her hits, including "A Dear John Letter" and "Slippin' Away," but also included a new song, "Too Many Rivers."

She continued to perform at the Grand Ole Opry and tour, particularly in the UK, where she had a strong fan base. Her work has also been reissued by Bear Family Records. Although in her seventies, Shepard continues to regularly tour and perform. Her touring show, "The Jean Shepard Show," has toured the U.S. and she performs at the Grand Ole Opry regularly.

In 2006, Shepard celebrated 50 years as a member of the Opry and is the longest-living female member of the Opry to date. *

2009. szeptember 28., hétfő

Perry Como in Italy 1966 LP


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Side A
01. Souvenir d'Italie
02. Oh Marie
03. Cominciamo Ad Amarci
04. Traveling Down a Lonely Road (Love Theme from La Strada)
05. Forget Domani
06. Anema e Core

Side B
07. Giorno Dopo l'Altro [One Day Is Like Another]
08. Santa Lucia
09. E Lei (To You)
10. Toselli's Serenade [Dreams and Memories]
11. 'O Marenariello
12. Arrivederci Roma [Goodbye to Rome]

Patsy Cline - Fingerprints

Patsy Cline -Fingerprints

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01 - A Church, A Courtroom And Then Goodbye
02 - A Poor Man's Roses
03 - Cry Not For Me
04 - Fingerprints
05 - Got A Lot Of Rhythm In My Soul
06 - Honky Tonk Merry Go Round
07 - Hidin' Out
08 - I Cried All The Way To The Altar
09 - I've Loved And Lost Again
10 - I Can't Forget
11 - In Care Of The Blues
12 - Just Out Of Reach
13 - Let The Teardrops Fall
14 - Never No More
15 - Stop The World And Let Me Off
16 - Today, Tomorrow And Forever
17 - Turn The Cards Slowly
18 - Too Many Secrets
19 - Three Cigarettes In An Ashtray
20 - Walkin' After Midnight



Patsy Cline (September 8, 1932 – March 5, 1963), born Virginia Patterson Hensley, was an American country music singer who enjoyed pop music crossover success during the era of the Nashville sound in the early 1960s. Since her death at age 30 in a 1963 plane crash at the height of her career, she has been considered one of the most influential, successful, revered, and acclaimed female vocalists of the 20th century.

Cline was best known for her rich tone and emotionally expressive bold contralto voice, which, along with her role as a mover and shaker in the country music industry, has been cited and praised as an inspiration by many vocalists of various music genres. The story of her life and career has been the subject of numerous books, movies, documentaries, articles and stage plays.

Posthumously, millions of her albums have been sold over the past 46 years and she has been given numerous awards, which has given her an iconic status with some fans similar to that of legends Johnny Cash and Elvis Presley. Only ten years after her death, she became the first female solo artist inducted to the Country Music Hall of Fame. In 2002, she was voted by artists and members of the country music industry as number one on CMT's television special of the 40 Greatest Women of Country Music, and in 1999 she was voted number 11 on VH1's special The 100 Greatest Women in Rock and Roll by members and artists of the rock industry. According to her 1973 Country Music Hall of Fame plaque, "Her heritage of timeless recordings is testimony to her artistic capacity." Among those hits are "Walkin' After Midnight," "I Fall to Pieces," "She's Got You," "Crazy" and "Sweet Dreams."


Patsy Cline -USA stamp


Born September 8, 1932, in Winchester, Virginia, she was the daughter of Sam and Hilda Patterson Hensley, a blacksmith and a seamstress; Hilda was only 16 when Patsy was born. Patsy was the eldest of three children, the others being Samuel and Sylvia. The three children, despite their given names, were called "Ginny," "John" and "Sis", respectively. Patsy grew up a poor girl "on the wrong side of the tracks," but except for the fact that her father deserted the family in 1947, when she was 15, the Hensley home was quite happy.

The family lived in many different places around Virginia, before settling in Winchester. Cline often said as a child that she would one day be famous, and admired stars such as Judy Garland and Shirley Temple. A serious illness as a child caused a throat infection which, according to Cline, resulted in her gift of "a voice that boomed like Kate Smith's." Well-rounded in her musical tastes, Cline cited everyone from Kay Starr to Hank Williams as influences. As a child, she often sang in church with her mother. Cline was also a by-ear pianist who sang with perfect pitch.

Patsy Cline -painting by Jeff D`Ottavio

Cline began performing in area variety/talent showcases. She went to the local radio station (WINC-AM) in Winchester and asked DJ Jimmy McCoy if he would let her sing on his radio show. He did, which was a great opportunity for Patsy, as McCoy's radio show was a great showcase for local talent. As she grew older, she began to play in popular nightclubs.

To help support her family after her father abandoned them, she dropped out of high school and worked various jobs, soda jerking and waitressing by day at The Triangle Diner across the street from her high school, (John Handley High School). At night, Cline could be found singing at local nightclubs, wearing her famous fringed Western stage outfits she designed herself and which were made by her mother, Hilda.

Patsy Cline
Patsy Cline

During this period in her early 20s, Cline met two men who would provide early influence in her rise to stardom. The first was contractor Gerald Cline, whom she married in 1953 and divorced in 1957. The dissolution of the marriage was blamed not only on a considerable age difference, but also Patsy's desire to sing professionally and Gerald Cline's lack of support of Patsy's quest for stardom. While she dreamed of a career as a superstar, he wanted her to conform to the role of a housewife first. The second was Bill Peer, her new manager, who gave her the name "Patsy", from her middle name and her mother's maiden name, "Patterson".

Cline began making numerous appearances on local radio, and she attracted a large following in the Virginia/Maryland area — especially when Jimmy Dean learned of her. She became a regular on Connie B. Gay's Town and Country television show, broadcast out of Washington, D.C, which also featured Dean, himself an established young country star. She also began making appearances at the Grand Ole Opry.

Patsy Cline


Patsy Cline

In 1955, Cline was signed to Four Star Records. However, her contract only allowed her to record compositions by Four Star writers; Cline disliked this, and later expressed regret over signing with the label. Her first record for Four Star was "A Church, A Courtroom & Then Good-Bye," which attracted little attention, although it did lead to several appearances on the Grand Ole Opry. Between 1955 and 1957, Cline recorded honky tonk material, with songs like "Fingerprints," "Pick Me Up On Your Way Down," "Don't Ever Leave Me Again," and "A Stranger In My Arms," the latter two both co-written by Cline, and also experimented with rockabilly. None of these songs, however, gained any notable success.

According to Owen Bradley, her Decca Records producer, the Four Star compositions only seemed to hint at the potential that lurked inside of Cline. Bradley thought her voice was best suited for singing pop music. However, the Four Star producers insisted that Cline would record only country songs, as her contract also stated. During her contract with Four Star, Cline recorded 51 songs.

Cline made her network TV debut on January 7, 1956 on ABC-TV's Grand Ole Opry; followed by an appearance on the network's Ozark Jubilee later that month, returning in April.

The year 1957 was a year of great change in Cline's life which made her undoubtably one of the greatest country and western singers of the 1950's. as she found national stardom and she met Charlie Dick. Dick was a good-looking, well-known ladies' man who frequented the local club circuit Cline played on weekends. His charismatic personality and admiration of Cline's talents captured her attention. Their relationship resulted in a marriage that would last the rest of Cline's lifetime. Though their dramatic love affair has long been publicized as controversial, it was he whom Cline regarded as "the love of her life."

While looking for material for her first album Patsy Cline, a song appeared titled "Walkin' After Midnight", written by Don Hecht and Alan Block. Cline initially did not like the song because it was, according to her, "just a little old pop song." However, the song's writers and record label insisted she should record it.

She auditioned for Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts in New York City, and was accepted to sing on the CBS-TV show on January 21, 1957. Godfrey's "discovery" of Cline was typical. Her scout, actually her mother Hilda Hensley, presented Patsy who sang her recent release, "Walkin' After Midnight". Though heralded as a country song, recorded in Nashville, Godfrey's staff insisted Cline not wear one of her mother's hand crafted cowgirl outfits but appear in a cocktail dress.

The audience's ovations stopped the meter at its apex, and for a couple of months thereafter Cline appeared regularly on Godfrey's radio program. Initially, Cline was supposed to sing the song "A Poor Man's Roses (Or a Rich Man's Gold)"; however, the show's producers insisted Cline instead sing "Walkin' After Midnight". That night, she won the competition and was invited to return. The song was so well-liked by the audience that she decided to release "Walkin' After Midnight" as a single. In short, although Cline had been performing for nearly a decade and had been recording and appearing on local Washington, D.C. TV for more than two years, Godfrey was responsible for making Cline a star.

The song was released in early 1957, and before long it was a hit, reaching #2 on the country charts and #12 on the pop charts. Cline became one of the first country singers to have a crossover pop hit. Cline rode high on the hit for the next year, doing personal appearances and performing regularly on Godfrey’s show and on Ozark Jubilee (later Jubilee USA). She couldn't follow up "Walkin' After Midnight" with another hit, however, in part because of the deal with Four Star that limited her to songs from its publishing company. After the birth of their daughter, Julie, in 1958, Patsy and Charlie moved to Nashville, Tennessee.

In 1959, Cline met Randy Hughes, who became her manager. With Randy's promotion and a new contract with Decca Records-Nashville, Cline would begin her ascent to the top.

When her Four Star contract expired in 1960, Cline signed with Decca Records-Nashville, under the direction of legendary producer Owen Bradley. He was not only responsible for much of the success behind Cline's recording career, but also for the careers of Brenda Lee and Loretta Lynn.

Thanks to her vocal versatility, and with the help of Bradley's direction and arrangements, Cline enjoyed both country and pop success. Bradley's arrangements incorporated strings and other instruments not typical of country recordings of the day. He considered Cline's voice best-suited for country pop-crossover songs, and helped smooth her voice into the silky, torch song style for which she is famous. Nevertheless, she did not really enjoy singing pop material. This new, more sophisticated instrumental style became known as “The Nashville Sound,“ founded by Bradley and RCA’s Chet Atkins, who produced Jim Reeves, Skeeter Davis, Connie Smith, and Eddy Arnold.

Cline's first Decca release was the country pop ballad "I Fall to Pieces" (1961), written by Hank Cochran and Harlan Howard. The song was promoted at both country and pop music stations across the country, leading to success on both country and pop charts. The song slowly climbed up the charts, until it officially hit No. 1 on the country charts — Cline's first No. 1. The song also made No. 12 on the pop charts, as well as No. 6 on the adult contemporary charts, a major feat for any country singer at the time, especially a woman. The song made her a household name, and proved that a woman country singer could enjoy as much crossover success as a man.

In 1961, Cline also joined the cast of the Grand Ole Opry, realizing a lifelong dream. She became one of the Opry's greatest stars, and is believed to be the only person granted Opry membership merely by asking for it.

Believing that there was "room enough for everybody", and confident of her abilities and appeal, Cline befriended and encouraged a number of women when they were starting out in country music, including Loretta Lynn, Dottie West, Barbara Mandrell (with whom Cline once toured), Jan Howard, and Brenda Lee, all of whom cite her as an influence in their careers. According to Lynn and West, Cline always gave of herself to her friends, buying them groceries and new furniture when they were hard up. On occasion, she would even pay their rent, enabling them to stay in Nashville and continue their quest for stardom. In Ellis Nassour's 1980 biography Patsy Cline, Cline's friend, honky tonk pianist and Opry star Del Wood, was quoted as follows: "Even when she didn't have it, she'd spend it — and not always on herself. She'd give anyone the skirt off her backside if they needed it."

Cline also befriended Roger Miller, Hank Cochran, Faron Young, Ferlin Husky, Harlan Howard, and Carl Perkins, male artists and songwriters with whom she socialized at Tootsies Orchid Lounge, next door to the Grand Ole Opry. In the 1986 documentary The Real Patsy Cline, singer George Riddle said of her, "It wasn't unusual for her to sit down and have a beer and tell a joke. She'd never be offended at the guys' jokes, because most of the time she'd tell a joke better than you! Patsy was full of life, as I remember".

Cline used the term of endearment "Hoss" to refer to her friends, and referred to herself as "The Cline." Though she never met Elvis Presley, she admired his music, called him "The Big Hoss", and recorded with his male vocal backup group, the Jordanaires.

While Cline would continue to thrive in 1961, she also gave birth to a son, Randy. However, on June 14, 1961, Patsy and her brother, Sam, were involved in a head-on car collision on Old Hickory Boulevard in Nashville, the second and more serious of two during her lifetime. The impact of the accident threw Patsy into the windshield, nearly killing her. Upon her arrival at the scene, singer Dottie West picked glass from Patsy's hair, while Patsy insisted that the other car's driver be treated first (when West was fatally injured in a car accident in 1991, she insisted that the driver of her car be treated first ). Patsy later stated that she saw the female driver of the other car die before her eyes at the hospital.

Suffering from a jagged cut across her forehead that required stitches, a broken wrist, and a dislocated hip, she spent a month hospitalized. While in the hospital, Cline, according to the Nassour biography Patsy Cline and to friend Billy Walker (who died in a vehicle accident of his own in 2006), rededicated her life to Christianity. She received thousands of cards and flowers sent by fans.

When she left the hospital, her forehead was still visibly scarred. For the remainder of her career, she wore wigs and careful makeup to hide the scars and headbands to relieve pressure on her forehead. She returned to the road on crutches, determined to be a survivor with a new appreciation for life.

Years later in the 1990s, a series of recordings from her first concert since the accident was released. These archives, recorded in Tulsa, Oklahoma, were found in the attic of one of Cline's former residences by the current owners and given to the family. The album, released in 1997, is titled Patsy Cline: Live At the Cimarron Ballroom, and features dialogue of Cline interacting with the audience, thus giving an historical archive of what her live performances were like.

After the success of "I Fall to Pieces", Cline needed a follow-up, particularly because the car accident had required that she spend a month in the hospital, which meant lost time from touring and promotions. The famous follow-up to her hit was written by Willie Nelson and called "Crazy", which Cline originally hated. Her first session recording "Crazy" turned out to be a disaster, and Cline claimed that the song was too difficult to sing. She tried to record "Crazy" like its demo recording, which featured Nelson's idyosyncratic singing, but had a tough time recording it not only because of its demo, but because she found the high notes hard to sing due to her injured ribs from her car accident. The entire day in the studio at Decca was a head-on fight between Cline and Owen Bradley.

However, Cline finally recorded the song the next week in one take, a version completely different from the demo. Because of this, it turned out to become a classic and, ultimately, Cline's signature song – the one for which she remains best known. In late 1961, the song was an immediate country pop crossover hit, and was also her biggest pop hit, making the Top 10. Friend Loretta Lynn later reported that the night Cline premiered "Crazy" at the Grand Ole Opry, she received three standing ovations.

"Crazy" was a hit on three different charts in late 1961 and early 1962 — the Hot Country Songs list (No. 2), the US Hot 100 list (No. 9), and the Adult Contemporary list (also No. 2). An album released that November entitled Patsy Cline Showcase featured Cline's two big hits of 1961. The album brought success to Cline late that year...


* As stated in the 1980 Ellis Nassour biography, Patsy Cline, friends Dottie West and June Carter Cash both recalled Cline telling them that she felt a sense of impending doom and didn't expect to live much longer in the months leading up to her death. Cline also told Loretta Lynn of this, along with Cash and West, as early as September 1962. Cline, though known for her extreme generosity, even began giving away personal items to friends, writing out her own last will on Delta Air Lines stationery and asking close friends to care for her children if anything should happen to her. She reportedly told Jordanaire back up singer Ray Walker as she exited the Grand Ole Opry a week before her death: "Honey, I've had two bad ones (accidents). The third one will either be a charm or it'll kill me."

On March 3, 1963, Patsy, though ill with the flu, gave a performance at a benefit show at the Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Hall, Kansas City, Kansas, for the family of a disc jockey, Cactus Jack Call, who had recently died in an automobile accident. Also performing on the show were George Jones, George Riddle and The Jones Boys, Billy Walker, Dottie West, Cowboy Copas, Hawkshaw Hawkins, Wilma Lee and Stoney Cooper, and George McCormick and the Clinch Mountain Clan. Cline wore a white chiffon gown and closed the show with her performance to a thunderous ovation. Her last song was the last one she recorded during her last sessions the previous month, "I'll Sail My Ship Alone."

Dottie West, wary of Cline flying, pleaded with her to ride back in the car with her and her husband, Bill. Cline, anxious to get home to her children, refused West's offer, saying, "Don't worry about me, Hoss. When it's my time to go, it's my time." She called her mother from the airport and then boarded a Piper Comanche bound for Nashville, flown by her manager Randy Hughes, along with Cowboy Copas and Hawkshaw Hawkins. After stopping to refuel in Dyersburg, Tennessee, the plane took off at 6:07 pm. According to revelations by the airfield manager in the Nassour biography, he suggested that they stay the night after advising of high winds and inclement weather on the flight path, but Hughes responded, "I've already come this far. We'll be there before you know it."

However, they never made it to Nashville. The plane flew into severe weather and crashed at 6:20 p.m., according to Patsy's wristwatch, in a forest outside of Camden, Tennessee, 90 miles from the destination. There were no survivors.


Patsy Cline -Plane crash

Throughout the night, reports of the missing plane flooded the radio airwaves. Roger Miller told Patsy Cline author Ellis Nassour that he and a friend went searching for survivors in the early hours of the morning: "As fast as I could, I ran through the woods screaming their names — through the brush and the trees, and I came up over this little rise, oh, my God, there they were. It was ghastly. The plane had crashed nose down."

PCline-Crash site WestOfCamden,BentonCity,TN


Not long after the bodies of the victims were removed, scavengers came to take what they could of the stars' personal belongings and pieces of the plane. Many of these items were later donated to The Country Music Hall of Fame; the white chiffon dress that Patsy had worn for her last concert was never found.

As per her wishes, Cline was brought home to her dream house for the last time before her memorial service, which thousands attended. Hours later, news that singer Jack Anglin had died on the way to her service surfaced, and the Opry mounted a tribute show to honor the victims.

She was buried in her hometown of Winchester, Virginia, at Shenandoah Memorial Park. Her grave is marked with a simple bronze plaque, which reads: Virginia H (Patsy) Cline "Death Cannot Kill What Never Dies: Love." A bell tower in her memory at the cemetory, erected with the help of Loretta Lynn and Dottie West, plays hymns daily at 6:00 p.m., the hour of her death. A memorial marks the place where the plane crashed in the still remote forest outside of Camden, Tennessee.

Patsy Cline - Dreaming 16 original great hits

Patsy Cline

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01 - I Fall To Pieces
02 - Heartaches
03 - Crazy
04 - Tra Le La Le La Triangle
05 - Have You Ever Been Lonely
06 - There He Goes
07 - Back In Baby's Arms
08 - Faded Love
09 - Sweet Dreams
10 - Your Cheatin' Heart
11 - San Antonio Rose
12 - She's Got You
13 - Walking After Midnight
14 - Three Cigarettes In An Ashtray
15 - When You Need A Laugh
16 - Always



Tragically, Patsy Cline`s success was to be shortlived and on March 5, 1963, she perished in the plane crash that also took the lives of stalwart performers Cowboy Copas and Hawkshaw Patsy Cline Memorial

Hawkins. Her name, and chart records, lived on and ten years after she was afforded country music`s finest honour by gaining entrance into the Country Music Hall Of Fame.
Patsy Cline
Sadly, Patsy Cline`s life was too short and her catalogue of recordings too small, but the legend was estabilishes and, over the years, her material has always continued to sell and attract new fans. Then, in 1985, she became the focus of attention of a brand new generation with the release of the biographical motion picture "Sweet Dreams", in which Jessica Lange gave a vivid portrayal of the tempestuous singer. The soundtrack album become an instant best seller which led to a complete revival of the singer`s recordings. In 1987 Patsy Cline was back in the pop charts with the Willie Nelson song "Crazy", a quarter of a century after she first delighted local audiences. *
(Tony Byworth, 1988)


* REMEMBERING MARCH 5, 1963 *

Patsy Cline

* On one of the darkest days in country music history, a private plane carrying Opry stars Cowboy Copas, Hawkshaw Hawkins, and Patsy Cline, as well as Cline’s manager Randy Hughes, crashed near Camden, Tennessee, killing all on board. They were returning from Kansas City, where they had taken part in a benefit concert for the family of Cactus Jack Call who had died in an automobile accident. Hawkshaw Hawkins was married to Jean Shepard who is still a regular performer on the Opry.

Cline’s musical legacy is well known, but Cowboy Copas and Hawkshaw Hawkins are unfamiliar names to many people today. *
---
Patsy Cline Memorial

Jean Shepard - Honky Tonk Heroine

Jean Shepard

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01 Twice The Lovin' (In Half The Time)
02 Crying Steel Guitar Waltz
03 A Dear John Letter
04 My Wedding Ring
05 Two Whoops And A Holler
06 Don't Fall In Love With A Married Man
07 A Satisfied Mind
08 Beautiful Lies
09 Sad Singin' And Slow Ridin'
10 Under Suspicion
11 I Want To Go Where No One Knows Me
12 The Other Woman
13 Act Like A Married Man
14 A Thief In The Night
15 He's My Baby
16 How Do I Tell It To A Child
17 Color Song (I Lost My Love)
18 The Root Of All Evil (Is A Man)
19 Under Your Spell Again
20 One White Rose
21 I've Learned To Live With You (And Be Alone)
22 That's What Lonesome Is
23 Cigarettes And Coffee Blues
24 Second Fiddle (To An Old Guitar)
"You gaze at that guitar on your knee
In a way that you never look at me
This love affair of yours has gone too far
And I’m tired of playing second fiddle to an old guitar"

(From “Second Fiddle (To an Old Guitar),” Capitol Records, 1964)

* Kitty Wells may have been the reigning Queen of Country Music during the the 1950s, but in the eyes of many (including myself) Jean Shepard had at least as good a claim to the title. Whereas Kitty Wells, after the uncharacteristically defiant “It Wasn’t God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels,” reverted back to songs of domestic bliss and of being the “wronged woman,” Jean Shepard kept pushing the boundaries for female country singers. Jean may not have pushed things as far as Loretta Lynn did during the late 1960s and 70s, but she laid the groundwork for Loretta and those to follow. Among Europeans, whose tastes in country music run to more traditional sounds, many regard her as the greatest of all female country singers, a sentiment that was echoed by such leading British county music journalists as Pat Campbell, Bob Powell, and David Allen. While I don’t regard Shepard quite that highly, on my personal list of the greatest female country singers of all time, she would be well within my top five (greatest, as opposed to most popular or most influential, singers). During her peak years (roughly 1953-75) she was a definite force of nature.

Born Ollie Imogene Shepard on November 21, 1933 in Oklahoma, she was the child of parents who moved to Bakersfield, California, as a result of the Dust Bowl that engulfed the midwest during the 1930s. Since Shepard has been staunchly performing modern traditional country music for over sixty years, it seems only fitting that she grew up and started her career in the area surrounding Bakersfield, CA.

Jean began her career as a bass player in the Melody Ranch Girls, an all-female band formed in 1948. Not long thereafter, she came to the attention of Hank Thompson, who, impressed by her talents, helped her get a record deal with Capitol Records–where she worked with Thompson’s producer, Ken Nelson. At the time she inked her deal, Shepard was still a teenager.

On her Capitol recordings, Shepard was a honky-tonker whose hard-core sound could rival any of her male counterparts. While her first single “Crying Steel Guitar Waltz” failed to chart, it showed enough promise for Capitol to team her with another promising singer, Ferlin Husky, for the 1953 chart-topper “A Dear John Letter,” a song which resonated with many returning Korean War veterans. After this, the solo hits started coming with “Beautiful Lies” and “A Satisfied Mind” being among the biggest hits of 1955 ( “A Satisfied Mind” was also a major hit for Porter Wagoner and Red Foley, but after you’ve heard Jean Shepard’s version, you will forget about the others).

Along the way, Shepard became a part of Red Foley’s Ozark Jubilee (broadcast from Springfield, MO on ABC TV) from 1955 to 1957, and she was inducted as a member of the Grand Ole Opry in 1956, where she has remained a member to this day. It was during this period that Jean released what may have been country music’s first album centered around a theme in Songs of a Love Affair. Shepard had a hand in writing all twelve songs on this album.

She continued to have hits throughout the fifties and sixties, although like many other traditional country singers her hits became increasingly smaller as rock ‘n roll and the Nashville sound came into prominence. Lost in the shuffle were such excellent singles as “Act Like A Married Man,” “Tomorrow I’ll Be Gone,” “I Used To Love You,” and “Have Heart, Will Love.”

In 1960 Shepard married Hawkshaw Hawkins, a minor star whose forte was his live stage shows rather than recording success. Jean was pregnant with his son Hawkshaw Hawkins, Jr. at the time of the 1963 plane crash that claimed Hawkins’ life (as well as that of Lloyd “Cowboy” Copas and Patsy Cline).
Jean Shepard & Hawkshaw Hawkins


After her son’s birth, Shepard dealt with the tragedy of her husband’s death by pouring herself back into her career. In 1964 she rebounded back near the top of the charts with the feisty “Second Fiddle (To an Old Guitar),” a song which spotlighted her yodeling ability. The next few years would produce more hits including “Seven Lonely Days,” “Many Happy Hangovers To You,” and a rare ballad “Another Lonely Night.” She also teamed up with Ray Pillow for several duets, including the big hit “I’ll Take the Dog” in 1966.

Between 1965 and 1970 Shepard charted fifteen Top 40 hits. Eventually, though, Capitol–blessed with a deep roster that included Wanda Jackson, Buck Owens, Merle Haggard, Glen Campbell and Sonny James–quit pushing her recordings to radio.

A switch to United Artists (UA) in 1973 re-ignited her career as her first single for the label, the Bill Anderson-penned “Slippin’ Away,” went to #4, and was followed by such great singles as “At The Time,” “I’ll Do Anything It Takes (To Stay With You),” “Poor Sweet Baby,” “Tip of My Fingers,” and “Another Neon Night.” One of her UA albums, Poor Sweet Baby, was comprised entirely of songs written by Bill Anderson. Shepard remained with UA for five years. Since then she has recorded only occasionally for various minor labels.

Along the way, Shepard married Benny Birchfield, (best known for his tenor harmonies during his tenure with the Osborne Brothers bluegrass group). She also served as president of the Association of Country Entertainers, the perfect spokesperson for this very traditionalist organization.

Jean Shepard continues to perform regularly on the Grand Old Opry where she is indeed, the “Grand Lady of the Opry,” and a national treasure. She also tours occasionally, sometimes performing with her son Hawkshaw Hawkins, Jr. She’s lost a little off her vocal ‘chops’ over the course of time, but even 85% of Jean Shepard is a lot more than 100% of most singers.


Jean Shepard


Shepard issued a number of albums on vinyl during the period of 1953 to 1975. Albums on either Capitol (1953-1969) or United Artist (1970-1975) will all capture Jean at the peak of her vocal prowess. Later albums will still catch Jean in good voice but with less care given to the accompaniment and production, although the album Stars of the Grand Ole Opry issued in 1981 on Pete Drake’s First Generation Records, is a pretty good effort.

The CD catalog for Shepard isn’t what it should be, although the Bear Family boxed set titled Melody Ranch Girl is available. The folks at Collector’s Choice Music describe it thus, “151 legendary Capitol sides from the woman who broke through the thick gender barrier in country music without looking back! This is everything Jean recorded from 1952–1964—from ‘A Dear John Letter’ up through ‘Second Fiddle (to an Old Guitar)’—including her landmark album ‘Songs of a Love Affair,’ the first concept album recorded by a female country artist, plus her ‘Got You on My Mind, Lonesome Love’ and ‘Heartaches and Tears’ albums. A 36-page book with a newly researched biography, discography and rare photos completes the story.”

For folks wanting to sample Jean’s work without shelling out over $100, the pickings are fairly slim at the present time. Collector’s Choice Music currently has only one title available The Best of the Best which contains but nine songs. I am not sure of the vintage of the recordings used on this particular disc.

The Ernest Tubb Record Shop currently lists eight titles available, including the above-mentioned Melody Ranch Girl boxed set and Best of the Best, plus the CD version of Stars of the Grand Ole Opry. I am not sure of the vintage of the recordings on the other sets available from Ernest Tubb, but if you call them, the folks taking your order often can give useful information.

The Country Music Foundation in 1995 issued the stellar Jean Shepard: Honky-Tonk Heroine, which has 24 songs taken from her tenure at Capitol. It may still be possible to obtain this disc. That same year Castle Communications (Australasia) issued A Satisfied Mind which has 26 tracks (17 Capitol recordings and 9 United Artist recordings)–this is the only set (of which I am aware) that contains original United Artist recordings.

Other collections available are of uncertain vintage. Jean has issued some CDs herself (Jean, Personal Favorites, and perhaps other titles) that are often remakes but contain some song titles otherwise unavailable.
(Paul W. Dennis)

This is our last kiss, our last moment of bliss
Darling, our love can never be right
For your ring's on her hand and my heart just can't stand
Stealing love like a thief in the night

Never more shall we meet on some dim-litted street
Darling, two wrongs just don't make a right
So I'm sending you home for I just can't go on
Stealing love like a thief in the night

Never more shall we meet on some dim-litted street
Darling, two wrongs just don't make a right
So I'm sending you home for I just can't go on
Stealing love like a thief in the night

(Artist: Jean Shepard
Songwriter: Harlan Howard)
---
Jean Shepard

2009. szeptember 27., vasárnap

Slágeremlékek - emlékezetes ságerek - Hit memories Memorable Hits



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01. Újra itt vannak a boldog napok! Happy Days Are Here Again (Jack YelIen - Milton Ager) BILLY VAUGHN CHOR. 1956
02. Fekete szemek! Otchi-Tcor-Ni-Ya (Black Eyes) (Trad. arr: Armstrong) LOUIS ARMSTRONG 1958
03. A chattanoogai cipőtisztító fiú! Chattanooga Shoe Shine Boy (Harry Stone - Jack Stapp) RED FOLEY 1954
04. Vártam rád! Cest Sí Bon (Betty - Hornez - Seelen) EARTHA KITT 1953
05. Csinos kék szemek! Pretty Blue Eyes (Teddy Randazzo - B. Weinstein) STEVE LAWRENCE 1959
06. Kőszív! Heart ot Stone (Rudy Jackson - Eddje Ray) THE FONTANE SISTERS 1954
07. A szerelem dalai Melodie d’amour (Henry Salvador - Leo Johns) EDMUNDO ROS 1956
08. Torreador!Torero (Carosone - Nisa) RENATO CAROSONE 1957
09. Miért vársz?! Why Wait? (Perez Prado) PEREZ PRADO 1958
10. Bűvölet! Fascination (Marchetti - Manning) NAT KINO COLE 1957
11. Mesebeli Afrika! Skokiaan (August Msarurgwa - Tom Glazer) THE FOUR LADS 1954
12. Cukorbokor! Sugarbush (Joset Marais) EVE BOSWELL 1952
13. Zambezi (Nico Carstens - Anton Dewaal) . . LOU BUSCH 1958
14. Hernando rejtekhelye! Hernando’s Hideaway (Richard Adler - Jerry Ross) THE JOHNSON BROS 1955
15. Kár, kár! Pity Píty (Ergas - Lawrence - Ascher) PAUL ANKA 1959
16. Híd a Kwai folyón! RiverThe Kwai March (Malcoím Arnold - Kenneth Alford) MITCH MILLER 1958
17. Amikor a fecskék visszatérnek Capistranóba! When The Swallows Come Back (R. Leon) PAT BOONE 1958
18. A világ tetején ülök! l’m Sitting on Top the World (R. Henderson - J. Young - A. Lewis) LES PAUL ü MARY FORD 1953
19. Emléktárgyak! Souvenirs (Cy Coben - Johnny Bartels) BILL RAMSEY 1959
20. Pajkos nő az árnyas úton !The Naughty Lady ot Shady Lane (S. Tepper - R. C. Bennett) THE AMES BROTHERS 1955
21. Grandes Boulevard (Glanzberg - Plante) THE HOT HOTCHA TRIO 1958
22. Viszontlátásra Róma! Arrivederci Roma (Renato Rascell - Garineri - Giovanni) RENATO RASCELL 1954
23. Calcutta (Gaze - Vance - Pockris) VALIANTS 1958
24. Igen, ma éjjel Josephine ! Yes, Tonight Josephine (W. Scott - O. Goodmann) JOHNNIE RAY 1957
25. Párizs szegény népe! Poor People ot Paris (Monnot) WINIFRED ATTWEL 1958
26. Mindenki szeret egy szeretőt! Everybody Loves a Lover (Allen - Adler) GUY MITCHELL 1958
27. Jezebel (Wayne Shanklin) FRANKIE LAINE 1951
28. Várlak! ‘m Waitin’ (Vaughn) BILLY VAUGHN 1958

Frank Sinatra - Live At The Meadowlands


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CD 1

01 - Overture 03:40
02 - Without A Song 04:13
03 - Where Or When 03:41
04 - For Once In My Life 02:48
05 - Nice N' Easy 03:00
06 - My Heart Stood Still 03:14
07 - Change Partners 03:45
08 - It Was A Very Good Year 04:52
09 - You Make Me Feel So Young 03:07
10 - The Gal That Got Away 04:23
11 - Theme From New York, New York 04:12
12 - Monologue 03:03
13 - Come Rain Or Come Shine 03:43
14 - Bewitched 03:36
15 - Moonlight In Vermont 03:53
16 - L.A. Is My Lady 03:07
17 - I've Got You Under My Skin 04:42
18 - Someone To Watch Over Me 03:10
19 - One For My Baby (And One More For The Road) 05:48
20 - Mack The Knife 04:21
21 - New York Bows (Theme From New York, New York) 01:18

CD 2

01 - Let Me Try Again 03:29
02 - Bad, Bad Leroy Brown 02:45
03 - You Are The Sunshine Of My Life 02:51
04 - The House I Live In 06:51


cd1: 77:36
cd2: 15:56
Release Notes:


Recorded live in concert at the legendary Meadowlands Arena in New
Jersey, this is the most sought after Sinatra concert recording.
Housed in a striking package and presented with a 24 page
collectors' book of rare photos and extensive notes by long-time
Sinatra associate Hank Cattaneo, this previously unreleased
recording features 21 digitally remastered songs on one compact
disc, as well as a bonus disc of Sinatra concert classics.

2009. szeptember 26., szombat

Big John Patton - Let Em Roll (1965)


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01 - Let 'Em Roll 6:48
02 - Latona 7:23
03 - The Shadow of Your Smile 6:55
04 - The Turnaround 6:49
05 - Jakey 6:48

Ben Webster Meets Oscar Peterson (1961)


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Ben Webster Meets Oscar Peterson - Bye-Bye, Blackbird
Ben Webster Meets Oscar Peterson - How Deep Is The Ocean
Ben Webster Meets Oscar Peterson - In The Wee, Small Hours Of The Morning
Ben Webster Meets Oscar Peterson - Sunday
Ben Webster Meets Oscar Peterson - The Touch Of Your Lips
Ben Webster Meets Oscar Peterson - This Can't Be Love
Ben Webster Meets Oscar Peterson - When Your Lover Has Gone

Ben Webster and Joe Zawinul - Soulmates (1963)


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01 Too Late Now
02 Soulmates
03 Come Sunday
04 The Governor
05 Frog Legs
06 Trav'lin' Light
07 Like Someone in Love
08 Evol Deklaw Ni

Ben Webster - Gentle Ben


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01 Ben's Blues
02 The Man I Love
03 My Nephew Bent
04 How Long Has This Been Going On
05 Sweet Georgia brown
06 Don't Blame me
07 Did You Call
08 Barcelona Shout

Ben Webster - At Montmartre 1965-1966

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01 Pennies From Heaven
02 Blues In B-Flat
03 My Romance
04 In A Mellow Tone
05 How Long Has Been Going On
06 Sunday
07 Someone To Watch Over Me
08 Cottontail
09 Danny Boy
10 Gone With The Wind
11 Cottontail (version 2)
12 My Romance (version 2)

--------------------------

Ben Webster, tenor saxophone, with:

Tracks 1 - 9:
Piano: Kenny Drew
Bass: Neils-Henning Orsted Pederson
Drums: Alex Riel
Recorded 21 January 1965

Tracks 10 - 12:
Piano: Atli Bjorn
Bass: Neils-Henning Orsted Pederson
Drums: Rune Carlsson
Recorded 12 May 1966

Coleman Hawkins Encounters Ben Webster (Hawkins, Coleman)
Songs I Like to Sing! (Humes, Helen)
Bean & Ben (Hawkins, Coleman)
Bill Harris And His Friends (Harris, Bill)
Battle of the Saxes (Various Artists)
The Complete Gerry Mulligan Meets Ben Webster Sess (Mulligan, Gerry)
Album (+5 Bonus Tracks) (Tatum, Art)
Havin' a Good Time (Williams, Joe)

Artist: Ben Webster
Guest Artists: Kenny Drew; Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen; Alex Riel
Label: Storyville

BBC Big Band - Age Of Swing

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01. BBC - Big Band - Let's Dance
02. BBC - Big Band - One o'clock Jump
03. BBC - Big Band - King Porter Stomp
04. BBC - Big Band - Little brown Jug
05. BBC - Big Band - Sweet Georgia Brown
06. BBC - Big Band - I get a Kick out of You
07. BBC - Big Band - American Patrol
08. BBC - Big Band - Opus in Pastels
09. BBC - Big Band - St. Louis Blues March
10. BBC - Big Band - Swingin' the Blues
11. BBC - Big Band - What is this Thing called Love
12. BBC - Big Band - In the Mood
13. BBC - Big Band - The very Thought of You
14. BBC - Big Band - Boogie Woogie Maxine
15. BBC - Big Band - Serenade in Blue
16. BBC - Big Band - Solitude

2009. szeptember 24., csütörtök

SDS All-Stars - Electone and Brass - Digital transfer, noise cleaning and mixed, at Audio Design Studio Home Sound Recording Studio 2009.


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Gordon Jenkins - In A Tender Mood LP


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01 - I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles
02 - Just One Of Those Things
03 - Gone With The Wind
04 - When Your Lover Has Gone
05 - And The Angels Sing
06 - Blues For Beverly
07 - Hi-Lili, Hi-Lo
08 - Begin The Beguine
09 - Softly, As In A Morning Sunrise
10 - I'll Remember April
11 - Paradise
12 - Stella By Starlight

Benny Goodman - Hello Benny


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01 - Great Day
02 - La Boheme
03 - Call Me Irresponsible
04 - People
05 - Hello Dolly
06 - The Girl From Ipanema
07 - The Pink Panther Theme
08 - The Lamp Is Low
09 - Hallelujah, I Love Her So
10 - Them There Eyes

Hammond and Jazz vol 1


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01 Cissy Strut - Big John Patton
02 D'angelo - Corone Antonio Bento
03 Down Home Funk - Richard 'groove' Holmes
04 Dr Jeckyll & Hyde Park - Alan Hawkshaw
05 Executive Party Dance - Andre Previn
06 Hole In The Wall - The Bar-Kays
07 Hunk 'o' Funk - Jack Mcduff
08 If There's Hell Below - Lou Donaldson
09 Jackie Mittoo - Groovy Spirit
10 Mdd - Mondo Di Domani
11 Real Mother For Ya' - Mel Davis
12 Shirley Scott - Walkin'
13 War - City, Country, City

Danny Hodgson - Non stop Hammond


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01.Medley 1
02.medley 2
03.Medley 3
04.Medley 4
05.medley 5
06.medley 6
07.Medley 7
08.Medley 8

Tommy Morgan and The Warren Barker Orchestra - Tropicale - 1958 LPDigital transfer, noise cleaning and mixed, at Audio Design Studio 2009.


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Side One

101 Baia
102 Bali Ha'i
103 Poinciana
104 Ebb Tide
105 Moon of Manakoora
106 Misirlou

Side Two

201 Beyond the Reef
202 Ruby
203 The Beach
204 The High & The Mighty
205 Off Shore
206 Taboo

Tommy Morgan blows romantic harp over Warren "77 Sunset Strip" Barker's orchestra as they
cover some of the best known Exotica tunes from the 50's.
Considered one of the best harmonica albums ever - judge for yourself!