Louis Prima - The Wildest! [1956] [FLAC]
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- Blues Early Jazz Early Jazz Vocals Early R&b East Coast Blues General Unclassifiable Jazz Jump Blues R&b Regional Blues Swing Traditional Pop Vocal Vocal Jazz
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- 2013-02-06 23:44:53 GMT
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One of the 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die. List taken from then book edited by Robert Dimery. Artist: Release: The Wildest! MusicBrainz: 60b684c0-9ee8-3a0f-9d59-9ee833a23d1a Released: 1956 / 2000-05-16 Label: Capitol Records Catalog#: 72435-26119-2-8 Country: US Packaging: Jewel Case Style: Blues, Early Jazz, Early Jazz Vocals, Early R&b, East Coast Blues, General Unclassifiable, Jazz, Jump Blues, R&b, Regional Blues, Swing, Traditional Pop, Vocal, Vocal Jazz Tracklisting: 01. Medley: Just a Gigolo / I Ain't Got Nobody (04:42) 02. (Nothing's Too Good) For My Baby (02:36) 03. The Lip (02:15) 04. Body and Soul (03:22) 05. Oh Marie (02:25) 06. Medley: Basin Street Blues / When It's Sleepy Time Down South (04:12) 07. Jump, Jive an' Wail (03:28) 08. Buona Sera (02:58) 09. Night Train (02:45) 10. (I'll Be Glad When You're Dead) You Rascal You (03:13) A polular nightclub singer/trumpeter in the 1930s an '40s, initially in his native New Orleans and then in New York, Prima found work had dried up by 1954. With new wife and stage partner Keely Smith in tow - he a rugged 43, she w whitewashed 22 - he called in a favor and landed a gig in the lounge of the Sahara, Las vegas, hiring young New Orleans saxophonist Sam Butera to drill the band. Success came immediately; this sparkling half-hour, cut live in the studio in April 1956, iced the cake. Jazz hounds often dismiss Prima as just an Italanate Louis Armstrong impersonator, perhaps because of the three Satchmo hits here: "You Rascal You", and a medley joining a restrained "Basin Street Blues", to a non- soporific "When It's Sleepy Time Down Youth". But that is to miss the point: this is simply irrepressible music that more than matches its glorious cover shot. Prima is joyous, rumbustious, and irresistible, making even the band chuckle on "Oh Marie", with Smith in contrast, a delightfully straight-laced foil. Butera and pals, meanwhile, set them up with some of the fizziest jump-jive ever recorded. The sound has been imitated often, not least when Brian Setzer's cover of "Jump, Jive, An' Wail" helmed a GAP commercial. Butera, whose arrangement it appropriated, grumbled that he was paid three pairs of pants for the privilege. Prima dies in 1978, but his legacy lives on through daughter Lena, herself seen recently performing at the Sahara, and trough his later turn as a regal, jive-talking orangutan in "The Jungle Book". Truly, the man was the king of swingers. (WF-J) http://dickthespic.org/
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Thanks for sharing this great Steve Hoffman master
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