BD Jazz, Volume 2: Louis Armstrong / Camilo Sanin

~ Release by Louis Armstrong (see all versions of this release, 1 available)

Tracklist

CD 1: The Singer
#TitleArtistRatingLength
1C'est si bon
trumpet and lead vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1950-06-26)
orchestra:
Sy Oliver and His Orchestra (on 1950-06-26)
recording of:
C’est si bon (English version) (on 1950-06-26)
lyricist:
André Hornez (in 1947)
composer:
Henri Betti (in 1947)
translator:
Jerry Seelen (in 1949)
publisher:
Éditions Beuscher Arpège
translated version of:
C’est si bon (original French version)
Louis Armstrong with Sy Oliver’s Orchestra3:08
2Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans?
clarinet:
Barney Bigard (on 1946-10-17)
double bass:
Red Callender (on 1946-10-17)
drums (drum set):
Ram "Minor" Hall (on 1946-10-17)
guitar:
Bud Scott (on 1946-10-17)
piano:
Charlie Beal (on 1946-10-17)
trombone:
Kid Ory (on 1946-10-17)
trumpet and lead vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1946-10-17)
performer:
Louis Armstrong & His Dixieland Seven (on 1946-10-17)
recording of:
Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans (on 1946-10-17)
lyricist:
Eddie DeLange and Cathrine Legardh
composer:
Louis Alter
Louis Armstrong and His Dixieland Seven3:05
3You Rascal You
recorded in:
New York, New York, United States (on 1950-08-23)
producer:
Milt Gabler
alto saxophone:
Louis Jordan (US jazz, blues and r&b musician and songwriter) (on 1950-08-23)
double bass:
Bob Bushnell (on 1950-08-23)
drums (drum set):
Joe Morris (Chris Columbus) (1940-50s jazz drummer) (on 1950-08-23)
electric guitar:
Bill Jennings (1950s US blues guitarist) (on 1950-08-23)
piano:
Bill Doggett (on 1950-08-23)
tenor saxophone:
Josh Jackson (tenor saxophone player) (on 1950-08-23)
trumpet:
Louis Armstrong (on 1950-08-23) and Aaron Izenhall (on 1950-08-23)
vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1950-08-23) and Louis Jordan (US jazz, blues and r&b musician and songwriter) (on 1950-08-23)
orchestra:
Louis Jordan and His Tympany Five (on 1950-08-23)
conductor:
Louis Jordan (US jazz, blues and r&b musician and songwriter) (on 1950-08-23)
recording of:
I’ll Be Glad When You’re Dead, You Rascal You (on 1950-08-23)
lyricist and composer:
Sam Theard
publisher:
EMI Music Publishing Ltd. (PRS‐affiliated)
Louis Armstrong with Louis Jordan and His Tympany Five3:12
4On the Sunny Side of the Street
clarinet:
Barney Bigard (on 1947-11-30)
double bass:
Arvell Shaw (on 1947-11-30)
drums (drum set):
Sid Catlett (on 1947-11-30)
piano:
Dick Cary (piano, trumpet, alto horn) (on 1947-11-30)
trombone:
Jack Teagarden (on 1947-11-30)
trumpet and lead vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1947-11-30)
performer:
Louis Armstrong & His All-Stars (on 1947-11-30)
cover recording of:
On the Sunny Side of the Street (on 1947-11-30)
lyricist:
Dorothy Fields (US Tin Pan Alley librettist and lyricist)
composer:
Jimmy McHugh (songwriter)
publisher:
Cotton Club Publishing, EMI Music Publishing Ltd. (PRS‐affiliated), Lawrence Wright Music Co., Ltd., Memory Lane Music Ltd., Shapiro Bernstein & Co. Ltd. and Shapiro, Bernstein & Co., Inc.
sub-publisher:
シンコーミュージック・エンタテイメント A事業部
part of:
American Splendor
Louis Armstrong and the All Stars36:52
5Takes Two to Tango
trumpet and lead vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1952-09-25)
performer:
Sy Oliver and His Orchestra (on 1952-09-25)
recording of:
Takes Two to Tango (on 1952-09-25)
writer:
Al Hoffman (in 1952) and Dick Manning (American songwriter) (in 1952)
Louis Armstrong with Sy Oliver’s Orchestra2:57
6Blueberry Hill
lead vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1949-09-06)
performer:
Gordon Jenkins’ Orchestra and Choir (on 1949-09-06)
cover recording of:
Blueberry Hill (on 1949-09-06)
lyricist:
Al Lewis (Tin Pan Alley era lyricist) and Larry Stock
composer:
Vincent Rose (early-20th century violinist, pianist, composer & bandleader)
publisher:
Chappell & Co., Inc. (USA), Larry Stock Music Co., Redwood Music Ltd. (Carlin), Sovereign Music Company and Victoria Music Publishing Co. Ltd.
part of:
12 Monkeys Soundtrack
Louis Armstrong with Gordon Jenkins’ Orchestra and Choir2:58
7Where the Blues Were Born in New Orleans
clarinet:
Barney Bigard (on 1946-10-17)
double bass:
Red Callender (on 1946-10-17)
drums (drum set):
Ram "Minor" Hall (on 1946-10-17)
guitar:
Bud Scott (on 1946-10-17)
piano:
Charlie Beal (on 1946-10-17)
trombone:
Kid Ory (on 1946-10-17)
trumpet and lead vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1946-10-17)
performer:
Louis Armstrong & His Dixieland Seven (on 1946-10-17)
recording of:
Where the Blues Were Born in New Orleans (on 1946-10-17)
writer:
Bob Carleton and Charlie Dixon (Jazz banjoist)
Louis Armstrong and His Dixieland Seven3:08
8That's for Me
clarinet:
Barney Bigard (on 1950-04-26)
double bass:
Arvell Shaw (on 1950-04-26)
drums (drum set):
Cozy Cole (on 1950-04-26)
piano:
Earl Hines (jazz pianist and bandleader) (on 1950-04-26)
trombone:
Jack Teagarden (on 1950-04-26)
trumpet and lead vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1950-04-26)
performer:
Louis Armstrong & His All-Stars (on 1950-04-26)
cover recording of:
That’s for Me (State Fair) (on 1950-04-26)
lyricist:
Oscar Hammerstein II (of Rodgers & Hammerstein) (in 1945)
composer:
Richard Rodgers (composer) (in 1945)
part of:
State Fair (1945 film soundtrack)
part of:
State Fair (1962 film soundtrack)
part of:
State Fair
Louis Armstrong and the All Stars5:14
9Blues in the South
recorded in:
Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1946-09-06)
clarinet:
Barney Bigard (on 1946-09-06)
double bass:
Red Callender (on 1946-09-06)
drums (drum set):
Zutty Singleton (on 1946-09-06)
guitar:
Allan Reuss (on 1946-09-06)
piano:
Charlie Beal (on 1946-09-06) and Leonard Feather (on 1946-09-06)
trombone:
Vic Dickenson (on 1946-09-06)
trumpet and lead vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1946-09-06)
vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1946-09-06)
performer:
Louis Armstrong and His Hot Seven (on 1946-09-06)
part of:
Swing (by matrix number) (number: D6 VB 2152-1)
recording of:
Blues in the South (on 1946-09-06)
writer:
William Johnstone
Louis Armstrong and His Hot Seven3:07
10I Get Ideas
trumpet and lead vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1951-07-24)
performer:
Sy Oliver and His Orchestra (on 1951-07-24)
cover recording of:
I Get Ideas (on 1951-07-24)
lyricist:
Dorcas Cochran (in 1951)
composer:
Julio César Sanders (in 1927)
version of:
Adiós, muchachos (tango)
Louis Armstrong acc. by Sy Oliver’s Orchestra3:30
11I'll Get Mine Bye and Bye
double bass:
John Williams (jazz bassist) (on 1941-03-10)
drums (drum set):
Sid Catlett (on 1941-03-10)
guitar:
Lawrence Lucie (on 1941-03-10)
piano:
Luis Russell (on 1941-03-10)
tenor saxophone:
Prince Robinson (on 1941-03-10)
trombone:
George Washington (jazz trombonist) (on 1941-03-10)
trumpet and lead vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1941-03-10)
performer:
Louis Armstrong and His Hot Seven (on 1941-03-10)
recording of:
I'll Get Mine Bye and Bye (on 1941-03-10)
writer:
Jimmie Davis (American politician, singer and songwriter)
Louis Armstrong and His Hot Seven3:05
12Black and Blue
clarinet:
Barney Bigard (on 1947-11-30)
double bass:
Arvell Shaw (on 1947-11-30)
drums (drum set):
Sid Catlett (on 1947-11-30)
piano:
Dick Cary (piano, trumpet, alto horn) (on 1947-11-30)
trombone:
Jack Teagarden (on 1947-11-30)
trumpet and lead vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1947-11-30)
performer:
Louis Armstrong & His All-Stars (on 1947-11-30)
cover recording of:
Black and Blue (on 1947-11-30)
lyricist:
Harry Brooks (jazz pianist & songwriter) and Andy Razaf
composer:
Fats Waller
publisher:
Memory Lane Music Ltd. and Redwood Music Ltd. (Carlin)
Louis Armstrong and the All Stars4:21
13A Kiss to Build a Dream On
trumpet and lead vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1951-07-24)
performer:
Sy Oliver and His Orchestra (on 1951-07-24)
recording of:
A Kiss to Build a Dream On (on 1951-07-24)
lyricist:
Oscar Hammerstein II (of Rodgers & Hammerstein) (in 1935) and Bert Kalmar (in 1935)
composer:
Harry Ruby (in 1935)
publisher:
EMI Miller Catalog, Inc.
part of:
The Strip (1951 film)
Louis Armstrong acc. by Sy Oliver’s Orchestra43:05
14When the Saints Go Marching In
recorded in:
New York, New York, United States (on 1938-05-13)
alto saxophone:
Rupert Cole (swing era jazz clarinetist and saxophonist) (on 1938-05-13) and Charlie Holmes (US jazz saxophonist, active 1920s/1930s) (on 1938-05-13)
double bass:
George "Pops" Foster (on 1938-05-13)
drums (drum set):
Paul Barbarin (jazz drummer from New Orleans) (on 1938-05-13)
guitar:
Lee Blair (on 1938-05-13)
piano:
Luis Russell (on 1938-05-13)
tenor saxophone:
Bingie Madison (on 1938-05-13)
trombone:
J.C. Higginbotham (on 1938-05-13)
trumpet:
Louis Armstrong (on 1938-05-13) and Shelton "Scad" Hemphill (on 1938-05-13)
vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1938-05-13)
orchestra:
Louis Armstrong & His Orchestra (on 1938-05-13)
recording of:
When the Saints Go Marching In (Louis Armstrong’s version) (on 1938-05-13)
lyricist and composer:
[traditional] (special purpose artist)
arranger:
Louis Armstrong
version of:
When the Saints Go Marching In
Louis Armstrong and His Orchestra2:43
15La Vie en rose
trumpet and lead vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1950-06-26)
performer:
Sy Oliver and His Orchestra (on 1950-06-26)
cover recording of:
La Vie en rose (English translation) (on 1950-06-26)
lyricist:
Édith Piaf
composer:
Louiguy (French composer Louis Guglielmi)
translator:
Mack David (American lyricist and songwriter)
publisher:
Éditions Beuscher Arpège
sub-publisher:
ピアーミュージック (Japan, subsidiary of Nichion)
translated version of:
La Vie en rose (French original)
Louis Armstrong with Sy Oliver’s Orchestra3:32
16Long Long Journey
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1946-01-10)
clarinet:
Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1946-01-10)
double bass:
Chubby Jackson (on 1946-01-10)
drums (drum set):
Sonny Greer (on 1946-01-10)
guitar:
Remo Palmier (on 1946-01-10)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1946-01-10) and Billy Strayhorn (on 1946-01-10)
tenor saxophone:
Don Byas (on 1946-01-10)
trumpet:
Louis Armstrong (on 1946-01-10) and Charlie Shavers (on 1946-01-10)
lead vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1946-01-10)
performer:
Leonard Feather’s Esquire All‐Americans (on 1946-01-10)
recording of:
Long Long Journey (on 1946-01-10)
lyricist and composer:
Leonard Feather
Leonard Feather's Esquire All-Americans4:28
17Who Walks in When I Walk Out
trumpet:
Louis Armstrong (on 1951-11-23)
vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1951-11-23) and Ella Fitzgerald (on 1951-11-23)
performer:
Ella Fitzgerald and Dave Barbour’s Orchestra (on 1951-11-23)
cover recording of:
Who Walks in When I Walk Out (on 1951-11-23)
lyricist:
Ralph Freed
writer:
Al Goodhart and Al Hoffman
Louis Armstrong & Ella Fitzgerald with Dave Barbour’s Orchestra2:21
18Kiss of Fire
clarinet:
Barney Bigard (on 1952-03-19) and Donald Ruffell (on 1952-03-19)
double bass:
Dale Jones (bass, vocals) (on 1952-03-19)
drums (drum set):
Cozy Cole (on 1952-03-19)
piano:
Marty Napoleon (on 1952-03-19)
trombone:
Russ Phillips (US trombonist) (on 1952-03-19)
trumpet and lead vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1952-03-19)
performer:
Louis Armstrong & His Orchestra (on 1952-03-19)
recording of:
Kiss of Fire (on 1952-03-19)
lyricist:
Lester Allen (wrote “Kiss of Fire”) and Robert Hill (wrote “Kiss of Fire”)
composer:
Ángel Villoldo (Argentinian musician, lyricist and poet)
version of:
El choclo (Villoldo's original version, written circa 1898–1903)
Louis Armstrong and His Orchestra3:07
19Rockin' Chair
recorded in:
New York, New York, United States (on 1947-06-10)
baritone saxophone:
Ernie Caceres (on 1947-06-10)
clarinet:
Ernie Caceres (on 1947-06-10) and Peanuts Hucko (on 1947-06-10)
cornet:
Bobby Hackett (on 1947-06-10)
double bass:
Al Hall (on 1947-06-10)
drums (drum set):
Cozy Cole (on 1947-06-10)
guitar:
Al Casey (US jazz/soul guitarist) (on 1947-06-10)
piano:
Johnny Guarnieri (on 1947-06-10)
tenor saxophone:
Peanuts Hucko (on 1947-06-10)
trombone:
Jack Teagarden (on 1947-06-10)
trumpet and lead vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1947-06-10)
vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1947-06-10) and Jack Teagarden (on 1947-06-10)
performer:
Louis Armstrong & His Orchestra (on 1947-06-10)
recording of:
Rockin’ Chair (1929 Hoagy Carmichael song) (on 1947-06-10)
lyricist:
Hoagy Carmichael
composer:
Hoagy Carmichael (in 1929)
publisher:
Songs of Peer, Ltd. (ASCAP)
Louis Armstrong and His Orchestra3:08
20Back O'Town Blues
clarinet and tenor saxophone:
Peanuts Hucko (on 1947-05-17)
double bass:
Bob Haggart (on 1947-05-17)
drums (drum set):
Sidney Catlett (on 1947-05-17)
piano:
Dick Cary (piano, trumpet, alto horn) (on 1947-05-17)
trombone:
Jack Teagarden (on 1947-05-17)
trumpet:
Louis Armstrong (on 1947-05-17) and Bobby Hackett (on 1947-05-17)
lead vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1947-05-17)
vocals:
Louis Armstrong (on 1947-05-17) and Jack Teagarden (on 1947-05-17)
performer:
Louis Armstrong & His All-Stars (on 1947-05-17)
recorded at:
The Town Hall (New York City) in New York, New York, United States (on 1947-05-17)
live recording of:
Back o’ Town Blues (on 1947-05-17)
writer:
Louis Armstrong and Luis Russell
Louis Armstrong and the All Stars4:15
CD 2: The New Orleans Roots

Credits

Release

design/illustration:Camilo Sanin (from 2002 until 2003)
ASIN:FR: 2849070025 [info]

Release Group

part of:BD Jazz (number: 2) (order: 2)