Wednesday, July 15, 2020

ETHEL AZAMA - Cool Heat (1960) MONO / lp / Mp3


 
A jazz vocalist who recorded sessions with the Marty Paich orchestra in 1960, from which resulted one album for Liberty, Cool Heat. Some members of Paich's orchestra included Art Pepper, Russ Freeman and Mel Lewis. by Ron Wynn
Tracklist:
A1    Johnny One Note    2:00
A2    Like Someone In Love    3:28
A3    Surrey With The Fringe On Top    2:47
A4    You Smell So Good    2:45
A5    I'm Glad There Is You    2:35
A6    My Ship    4:08
B1    Squeeze Me    3:16
B2    Daybreak    2:43
B3    All I Need Is You    2:19
B4    When The Sun Comes Out    3:54
B5    You're So Bad For Me    2:15
B6    Time After Time    3:02
Credits:
Alto Saxophone – Art Pepper
Conductor – Marty Paich
Vocals – Ethel Azama

THE ANDREWS SISTERS - Sing the Dancing 20's + Fresh and Fancy Free (2002) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless


After the Andrews Sisters reunited in 1956, they joined Capitol Records, which initially had them re-record their big Decca hits for the LP The Andrews Sisters in Hi-Fi, then followed with a more conventional effort, Fresh and Fancy Free, and a concept album, The Andrews Sisters Sing the Dancing 20's. Those last two Capitol collections are paired on this CD in reverse chronological order. That means, however, that the material itself is in rough chronological order by date of composition, since Dancing 20's, of course, finds the sisters covering songs from the decade before they became popular, albeit in souped-up arrangements by Billy May. All concerned have fun with songs like "That Naughty Waltz" and "Barney Google." Fresh and Fancy Free, on the other hand, is typical of the kind of albums Capitol labelmates like Frank Sinatra and Nat King Cole were making around the same time. Again, Billy May handles the charts and the baton, and the songwriting credits are full of names like Gershwin, Kern, and Porter. May has the singers take the rarely used introductory verses to "Of Thee I Sing" and "Tea for Two" to give them a different feel. He introduces a Latin rhythm into "Let There Be Love," pacing the arrangement with bongo drums, and has the strings play in a Japanese tonality for "Younger Than Springtime" to evoke the Oriental aspect of the song from South Pacific. It is notable that, unlike so many of the Andrews Sisters' Decca recordings, these performances do not feature Patty Andrews singing a solo lead, accompanied by her two harmonizing sisters, Maxene and LaVerne. Instead, almost invariably, the songs are sung in three-part harmony throughout; only in rare instances is there a brief solo line. Maybe that was a condition of the reunion, since the sisters' early-‘50s breakup was precipitated by Patty Andrews' departure for a solo career; she is not spotlighted at the expense of her siblings here. by William Ruhlmann 
Tracklist:
Sing the Dancing 20's  (1958)
1    Don't Bring Lulu 2:47   
Lew Brown / Ray Henderson / Billy Rose
2    Me Too (Ho-Ho! Ha-Ha!) 2:34  
Al Sherman / Charles Tobias / Harry Woods
3    That Naughty Waltz 2:59  
Sol P. Levy / Edwin Stanley
4    A Smile Will Go a Long, Long Way 2:11     
Harry Akst / Benny Davis
5    Barney Google 1:54  
Con Conrad / Billy Rose
6    Collegiate 2:37  
Nat Bonx / Lew Brown / Moe Jaffe
7    Last Night on the Back Porch 2:40   
Lew Brown / Carl Schraubstader
8    When Francis Dances With Me 2:11       
Billy May / Ben Ryan / Sol Violinsky
9    Back in Your Own Backyard 3:21  
Dave Dreyer / Al Jolson / Billy Rose
10    Keep Your Skirts Down, Mary Ann 2:00   
Ray Henderson / Robert A. King / Billy May / Andrew B. Sterling
11    The Japanese Sandman 3:11
Raymond B. Egan / Richard A. Whiting
12    Show Me the Way to Go Home 2:52  
Jimmy Campbell / Reginald Connelly
 Fresh and Fancy Free (1957)
13    The Song Is You 2:17
Oscar Hammerstein II / Jerome Kern
14    You Do Something to Me 2:52 
Cole Porter
The Andrews Sisters feat: Billy May

15    Comes Love 2:42   
Lew Brown / Sam H. Stept / Charles Tobias
The Andrews Sisters feat: Billy May

16    Nevertheless 3:02  
Bert Kalmar / Harry Ruby
The Andrews Sisters feat: Billy May

17    With Every Breath I Take 3:00
Ralph Rainger / Leo Robin
The Andrews Sisters feat: Billy May

18    Of Thee I Sing 2:16 
George Gershwin / Ira Gershwin
The Andrews Sisters feat: Billy May

19    Hooray for Love 2:11
Harold Arlen / Leo Robin
The Andrews Sisters feat: Billy May

20    My Romance 2:42  
Lorenz Hart / Richard Rodgers
The Andrews Sisters feat: Billy May

21    Tea for Two 2:27   
Irving Caesar / Vincent Youmans
The Andrews Sisters feat: Billy May

22    I Could Write a Book 2:14
Lorenz Hart / Richard Rodgers
The Andrews Sisters feat: Billy May

23    Let There Be Love 2:57    
Ian Grant / Lionel Rand
The Andrews Sisters feat: Billy May

24    Younger Than Springtime 3:10    
Oscar Hammerstein II / Richard Rodgers
The Andrews Sisters feat: Billy May

 

Tuesday, July 14, 2020

ANNETTE HANSHAW - Lovable & Sweet : 25 Vintage Hits (1997) FLAC (tracks), lossless

 
Annette Hanshaw was one of the finest jazz singers of the late '20s. All of her recordings deserve to be reissued complete and in chronological order. But in lieu of that, this single CD is an excellent introduction to Hanshaw's talents. Covering virtually her entire career, from when she was still 15 up until just two years before her premature retirement at age 26, the disc features Hanshaw in a variety of settings. She accompanies herself on piano on "Falling in Love With You" and is backed by such jazz all-stars as cornetist Red Nichols, trombonist Miff Mole, clarinetist Jimmy Lytell, Tommy Dorsey (on trumpet), clarinetist Benny Goodman, Jimmy Dorsey on clarinet and alto, the orchestras of Will Osborne and Victor Young, and even Frank Ferera's Hawaiian Trio. Highlights of the fine sampler include "Black Bottom," "Big City Blues," "Little White Lies," "Walkin' My Baby Back Home," and "Let's Fall in Love," but these 25 numbers are only the tip of the iceberg. by Scott Yanow
Tracklist:
1 Black Bottom 3:07
Lew Brown / Buddy DeSylva / Ray Henderson
2 Six Feet of Papa 3:13
3 Falling in Love With You 3:20
Joe Davis
4 Do Do Do 3:09
George Gershwin / Ira Gershwin
5 Ev'rything's Made for Love 2:54
Howard Johnson / Al Sherman / Charles Tobias
6 Ain't He Sweet 2:21
Milton Ager / Jack Yellen
7 Here or There 2:46
Joe Davis
8 Nothin' 2:26
Lou Handman / Roy Turk
9 You Wouldn't Fool Me, Would You? 2:41
Lew Brown / Buddy DeSylva / Ray Henderson
10 That's You, Baby 2:52
Con Conrad / Archie Gottler / Sam Mitchell
11 Big City Blues 3:05
Con Conrad / Archie Gottler / Sam Mitchell
12 Pagan Love Song 3:10
Nacio Herb Brown / Arthur Freed
13 Ua No a Like (Sweet Constancy) 3:17
Unknown Blues Band
14 Lovable and Sweet 2:49
Sidney Clare / Oscar Levant
15 The Right Kind of Man 3:22
16 Telling It to the Daisies 3:14
Harry Warren / Joe Young
17 Little White Lies 2:56
Walter Donaldson
18 Body and Soul 3:05
Frank Eyton / Johnny Green / Edward Heyman / Robert Sour
19 Would You Like to Take a Walk? 3:38
Mort Dixon / Billy Rose / Harry Warren
20 Walkin' My Baby Back Home 2:45
Fred E. Ahlert / Roy Turk
21 Ho Hum! 3:04
Edward Heyman / Dana Suesse
22 Fit as a Fiddle 3:01
Arthur Freed / Al Goodhart / Al Hoffman
23 Moon Song 2:55
Sam Coslow / Arthur Johnston
24 We Just Couldn't Say Goodbye 3:01
Harry Woods
25 Let's Fall in Love 2:50
Harold Arlen / Ted Koehler

RUTH ETTING - Ten Cents a Dance (1981) MONO / FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless


The nightclubs, theatres, hotel cabarets and speakeasies of the mid-twenties brought forward several delectable young ladies who looked good and sounded even better when alone on stage with only a pianist and a solitary lime spotlight. Libby Holman, Marion Harris, Lee Morse and Annette Hanshaw were among the most sought after, but the girl who combined the maximum of smoochiness, pathos and sharp attack was the startlingly attractive Ruth Etting.

She arrived in Chicago at the age of seventeen from her hometown of David City, Nebraska, and enrolled at the Chicago Academy Of Fine Arts, where she studied costume design. To help pay the tuition fees she got a part-time job as a milliner in a hat shop owned by Maybelle and Milton Weil. Unbeknown to Ruth, they also ran a successful music publishing company and very taken with her striking good looks, they arranged an audition for her as a chorus girl at Chicago’s Rainbow Gardens. To her suprise, she got the job and was soon working hard as a dancer, with occasional singing sessions in hotels and other nightclubs.

In 1922 she married Martin Snyder, otherwise ‘Moe The Gimp’, and with the aid of his somewhat dubious connections landed a radio job, broadcasting with Abe Lyman’s California Orchestra over WSL Chicago. The broadcasts were heard by Frank Walker, head of Artists and Repertoire for Columbia Records who promptly signed her for the label. Her first release in mid-1926 were all up-tempo ‘Flapper’ numbers, featuring the musical character of a liberated young American woman – equal, if not better than any young man she might meet, and anticipating Women’s lib by fifty years. Could I?,  I Certainly Could!, Lonesome And Sorry and But I Do, You Know I Do heard on this album are all from this period and Ruth is deftly accompanied by Rube Bloom, possibly the busiest piano player around at the time. He played for Ruth Etting on almost every recording date until 1929 and even after his regular place in the studio had been taken over by Frank Signorelli he still turned up to play whenever he was available. Frank Walker and his bosses were delighted by the sales of the discs and with some timely publicity and marketing created the public persona of Ruth Etting as ‘The Recording Sweetheart. ‘

In 1927, Ruth and Moe moved to New York. Although their personal life was horrendous, Moe was an excellent manager and fixer and persuaded the great Florenz Ziegfeld to cast her in his ‘Ziegfeld Follies of 1927.’ This was her big break, and she took it with enthusiasm. On her first night at the New Amdsterdam Theatre she stopped the show with her sexy, rocking performance of Irving Berlin’s Shakin’ The Blues Away. After this success Ruth had a short season at the Paramount Theatre with Paul Whiteman’s Orchestra, where she sang with the band’s young crooner, Bing Crosby, and met the talented members of the Whiteman entourage, many of whom became good friends and accompanied her on later recording dates.

Convinced that he had a new star, Ziegfeld gave her the female lead in the new Eddie Cantor vehicle ‘Whoopee!’ In spite of the jovial title, the musical was based on Owen Davis’s play ‘The Nervous Wreck’ with Cantor playing the part of a twitching hypochondriac. For Ruth’s big spot, Walter Donaldson and Gus Kahn came up with Love Me Or Leave Me which became an immediate hit. The lyric uncomfortably mirrored her own home life with Moe The Gimp, and twenty-seven years later was used as the title and theme of the film biography of Ruth Etting, starring Doris Day and James Cagney. Her most popular and durable song came in 1930 when she starred in Ed Wynn’s ‘Simple Simon’ and Rodgers and Hart gave her the entrancing Ten Cents A Dance, the story of a dance-hall hostess at the Palace Ballroom, one step up from prostitution, forced to dance with all corners for the price of a dime ticket. By the close of the Twenties, Ruth Etting in a show was a guarantee of success.

In the Thirties, Ruth Etting’s career continued in revues and musical comedies and she branched out into radio in shows sponsored by Chesterfield Cigarettes, Oldsmobile and Kelloggs and into films such as ‘Roman Scandals’, ‘Hips, Hips, Hooray’ and ‘Gift Of The Gab.’ She made a memorable visit to Britain in 1936 when she starred at the Adelphi in Transatlantic Rhythm and made records with Jay Wilbur’s Band for Rex at the Crystalate Studios in West Hampstead. (They would in time become the Decca studios.) She made a few more sides in New York the following year, but tastes were changing and her wistful songs of unrequited love were going out of fashion in the new era of mechanised swing bands. Sensibly, she retired while still at the top, and apart from a few guest appearances has enjoyed forty years of semi-seclusion on her ranch in Colorado Springs, free from the shadows of Chicago gangsters, living a happy and fulfilled life.

Throughout her ten-year recording career, Ruth Etting had the pick of America’s songwriters and musicians working with her. The list of composers and lyricists reads like a Who’s Who of Tin Pan Alley – Irving Berlin, Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart, the ukulele-playing Buddy de Sylva, Lew Brown, Ray Henderson, Johnny Green, Yip Harburg, Al Dubin, Joe Burke, Jack Yellen, Milton Ager, Gus Kahn and Walter Donaldson offered her the pick of their output and in return she produced definitive classic performances. Although by no means a jazz singer, she had that incredible sense of warmth, timing and projection that is always associated with the best rhythm singers. She worked with the finest jazz sidemen around; Venuti and Lang, the Dorseys, Joe Tarto, Frank Signorelli, Arthur Schutt, Dick McDonough, Rube and Mickey Bloom and Manny Klein can all be heard on the tracks of this album, as well as two speciality performers, accordion ace Mario Perry on Shakin’ The Blues Away and a very, very, young Larry Adler embellishing Turner Layton’s If I Could Be With You One Hour Tonight with his unique harmonica styling.

Like most of the popular singers in the Twenties, Ruth Etting occasionally turned up on record as the vocalist with dance-bands, her name in tiny print under that of the band, if in fact credited at all. She worked with several of the most popular bands, including Ben Selvin and Ted Lewis, but the example heard on this album is Hello Baby recorded in July 1926 with the little known Art Kahn Orchestra. Her brief ‘vocal refrain’ is delivered with great verve and is atypical of the peppy outgoing songs with which Ruth delighted audiences in the bootleg era. Her later, classic recordings present a deeper, wiser voice, reflecting sadly and introspectively on what were often problems very close to her own life. But cheerful or sad, fox-trot or ballad, both sides of Ruth Etting’s repertoire are always offered with truth, feeling and an abiding sense of the composer’s intentions. Quite simply, she was great… by Kevin Daly.
Tracklist:
1 Ten Cents a Dance 3:14
Lorenz Hart / Richard Rodgers
2 Button up Your Overcoat 2:47
Lew Brown / Buddy DeSylva / Ray Henderson
3 Funny, Dear, What Love Can Do 3:04
Little Jack Little
4 But I Do, You Know I Do! 2:37
Walter Donaldson / Gus Kahn
5 Mean to Me 3:25
Fred E. Ahlert / Roy Turk
6 I'm Yours 3:22
Johnny Green / E.Y. "Yip" Harburg
7 If I Could Be With You (One Hour Tonight) 2:57
Henry Creamer / James P. Johnson / Turner Layton
8 Don't Tell Him What Happened to Me 3:19
Lew Brown / Buddy DeSylva / Ray Henderson
9 Body and Soul 3:20
Frank Eyton / Johnny Green / Edward Heyman / Robert Sour
10 Sam, the Old Accordion Man 3:11
Walter Donaldson
11 Dancing With Tears in My Eyes 2:42
Joe Burke / Al Dubin
12 Hello, Baby! 2:42
Seymour Simons
13 What Wouldn't I Do for That Man 3:17
E.Y. "Yip" Harburg
14 Could I? I Certainly Could! 2:38
Milton Ager / Jack Yellen
15 The Kiss Waltz 2:54
Joe Burke / Al Dubin
16 Shaking the Blues Away 3:09
Irving Berlin
17 You're the Cream in My Coffee 3:05
Lew Brown / Buddy DeSylva / Ray Henderson
18 Lonesome and Sorry 3:10
Con Conrad / Benny Davis
19 Laughing at Life 2:51
Bob Todd / Cornell Todd
20 Love Me or Leave Me 3:22
Walter Donaldson / Gus Kahn