The Jungle Jubilee (rag novelty, 1910), John W. Bratton.
Put On Your Old Gray Bonnet (1909), Percy Wenrich.
The Jelly Roll Blues (1915), Ferdinand Morton.
Paddy Whack (two-step, 1906), J. Bodewalt Lampe.
The Witching Hour: A Spooky Rag (1915), Charles N. Grant.
The Get-a-Way (march, 1913), George L. Cobb.
My Uncle Sammy Gals (one-step, 1918), F. Henri Klickmann.
The Mississippi Rag (cakewalk, 1897), William H. Krell.
A Ragtime Travesty on "Carmen" (1918), M.L. Lake.
L?Encore (flute & clarinet duo, 1910), Victor Herbert.
Silver Heels (intermezzo, 1905), Charles N. Daniels.
Sweetmeats Rag (two-step,1907), Percy Wenrich.
Some Shape (one-step, 1917), George L. Cobb.
White Star Line ("Titanic") March (1887), J.T. Gardner.
The Hesitating Blues (slow drag, 1915), W.C. Handy.
Swanee (one-step, 1919), George Gershwin.
Big Foot Lou (cakewalk, 1899), Joseph Gearen.
Mona Lisa Valse (1914), George L. Cobb.
By the Beautiful Sea (one-step, 1914), Harry Carroll.
Barnyard Blues (jazz foxtrot, 1917), D.J. La Rocca.
Red Onion Rag (1912), Abe Olman.
Babes in the Wood (foxtrot, 1916), Jerome Kern.
When You Wore a Tulip (one-step, 1914), Percy Wenrich.
Delirium Tremens Rag (1913), F. Henri Klickmann.
"MORE CANDY" is a digital recording of American popular music of the 1880s through the 1910s as performed by today's foremost interpreters of this era - the Paragon Ragtime Orchestra. The music is played from the actual or... more »iginal orchestrations (i.e. orchesta sheet music), using antique instruments and authentic period playing styles. The disc features 26 selections - most not available on record since the age of the Victrola. Included as well are a number of world premiers, including the original versions of George Gershwin's "Swanee" (1919) and Jelly Roll Morton's own 1915 "Jelly Roll Blues" (reputedly the first-ever jazz orchestration). "MORE CANDY" was recorded with the latest in high-definition digital technology in the famous 1857 Mechanic's Hall in Worcester, MA. It is without doubt one of the Paragon Ragtime Orchestra's best recordings.« less
"MORE CANDY" is a digital recording of American popular music of the 1880s through the 1910s as performed by today's foremost interpreters of this era - the Paragon Ragtime Orchestra. The music is played from the actual original orchestrations (i.e. orchesta sheet music), using antique instruments and authentic period playing styles. The disc features 26 selections - most not available on record since the age of the Victrola. Included as well are a number of world premiers, including the original versions of George Gershwin's "Swanee" (1919) and Jelly Roll Morton's own 1915 "Jelly Roll Blues" (reputedly the first-ever jazz orchestration). "MORE CANDY" was recorded with the latest in high-definition digital technology in the famous 1857 Mechanic's Hall in Worcester, MA. It is without doubt one of the Paragon Ragtime Orchestra's best recordings.