Rookie Revue 1941
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Video Source: www.youtube.com/watch?v=1kTKHPgeQ00
Subscribe for the best vintage music http://bit.ly/35VAEKV • Best Vintage Travel Songs For Any Journey https://bit.ly/35y6iz0 • Vintage Big Bands Playlist: 1930s 40s Big Band Orchestras. Toe-tapping music to 'cut a rug' on the dance floor - https://bit.ly/3vBUBmV • Dreamy Vintage Love Songs Playlist: • Dreamy, Smooth Relaxing Vintage Lov... • La vie Parisienne Playlist - Featuring the greatest French stars of the 1930s 40s: https://bit.ly/3cNydOJ • Vintage Cafe Music to Listen to at Home: https://bit.ly/2KvOnCk • The Past Perfect Channel expertly remasters #vintagemusic from the 1920s, 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. French Music, Retro Music, Saxophone Music, Italian Music, Jazz Music, Swing Band Music, Morning Music, Piano and Guitar Music, Music while Cooking, Christmas Music, Background Music, Holiday Music, #BigBands, #DanceBands, Love Songs, Tea Dances, Vintage Parties, Murder Mystery Events, Ballroom Dancing, War Re-enactment Events, Nostalgic Songs. • Past Perfect's passion is for natural, original sound. We track down the finest original recordings and restore them - to enable you to hear the music as it was played, not as it was heard on crackling, hissing 78s. Our albums enjoy a world-wide reputation for their unique clarity and fidelity. • Master Rights Copyright: Past Perfect Limited • Buy the CD / Download the full album: https://bit.ly/2Rkt1s3 • Buy the CD on Amazon: https://amzn.to/2RHW4VE • Various Artists - The Great American Big Bands Released 2006-05-29 on Past Perfect • 1. 00:00:00 Count Basie Sent For You Yesterday • 2. 00:03:00 Jack Teagarden Chicks Is Wonderful • 3. 00:06:22 Benny Carter These Foolish Things • 4. 00:09:26 Chick Webb When I Get Low I Get High • 5. 00:11:56 Benny Goodman Christopher Columbus • 6. 00:15:32 Louis Armstrong I Never Knew • 7. 00:18:21 Joe Venuti Flop • 8. 00:21:04 Duke Ellington Take The 'A' Train • 9. 00:24:02 Harry James Strictly Instrumental • 10. 00:26:57 Jimmy Dorsey All of Me • 11. 00:30:15 Bunny Berigan The Prisoner's Song • 12. 00:34:27 Bob Crosby Barrelhouse Bessie From Basin Street • 13. 00:37:35 Jimmie Lunceford My Blue Heaven • 14. 00:40:51 Glenn Miller A String Of Pearls • 15. 00:44:07 Cab Calloway Run Little Rabbit • 16. 00:47:20 Woody Herman Twin City Blues • 17. 00:50:21 Ted Weems I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now? • 18. 00:53:40 Tommy Dorsey Stop, Look and Listen • 19. 00:59:00 Frankie Trumbauer I Hope Gabriel Likes My Music • 20. 01:02:13 Casa Loma Orchestra A Study In Brown • 21. 01:05:18 Artie Shaw Deep Purple • 22. 01:08:34 Gene Krupa Drummin' Man • 23. 01:11:36 Lionel Hampton Nola • © Past Perfect Limited • ℗ Past Perfect Limited . • This is officially owned content, not a copyright infringement. For any issues, please get in touch with Past Perfect or The Orchard • What is it about big bands which explains their enduring appeal? American writer Gene Lees described their characteristic sound as ‘one that will not go away’. Once heard, never forgotten in other words, and especially true for those who grew up with the idea that the best kind of fun came from dancing to the beat of a big band. The extraordinary popularity of social dancing prompted the formation of a great many travelling orchestras, some linked to a lushly romantic style, others committed to altogether hotter rhythms. There were dance halls on every corner and minor musical masterpieces were turned out by the score, all designed to tap into the upbeat mood of post-Depression America. • While it was entirely possible for these bands to survive and achieve success without ever entering the studios, it is unarguable that major reputations were built (and sustained) through recordings. Twenty-three of these top-rated groups are represented here. Some of them stayed around for decades, others were short-lived; some were led by fine instrumentalists, black and white, and a few by artists who are active still. Although the basic format doesn’t differ much – big bands usually include trumpets, trombones, saxes and a rhythm section – these selections clearly show the stylistic diversity of the idiom. Each offers unique variations of ensemble balance and texture; soloists are recognisably individual. Who said big bands all sound the same?
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