Artie Shaw & His Orchestra - 1951-1954

Artie Shaw & His Orchestra - 1951-1954
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Album Details

Title: 1951-1954
Artist: Artie Shaw & His Orchestra
Release Date: 3/21/2006
Label: Classics
Album Type(s): Greatest Hits
UPC: 3448967141324
Genre: Jazz
Style: Sweet Bands
Moods: Elegant, Stylish, Bright, Freewheeling, Playful, Sophisticated, Amiable/Good-Natured, Exuberant, Joyous, Refined/Mannered, Carefree, Energetic, Fun
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 1
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. My Kinda Love
  2. Dancing on the Ceiling
  3. I Waited a Little Too Long
  4. I May Hate Myself in the Morning
  5. Travelin'
  6. Where There's Smoke, There's Fire
  7. My Little Nest of Heavenly Blue
  8. These Foolish Things
  9. In the Still of the Night
  10. That Old Black Magic
  11. I'll Be Seeing You
  12. It Could Happen to You
  13. They Can't Take That Away from Me
  14. All the Things You Are
  15. September Song
  16. Besame Mucho
  17. That Old Feeling
  18. Tenderly
  19. Stop and Go Mambo
  20. Sequence in B Flat
  21. I've Got a Crush on You

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2006CDClassics1413

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Volume 16 in the Classics Artie Shaw chronology covers a time line from January 30 1951 to March of 1954, combining ten of his excellent latter-day Gramercy Five recordings with 11 performances by what is now recognized as his last big band. The ensembles used on the sessions that took place in July of 1953 were positively gargantuan, with the group that was squeezed into the studio on July 2 weighing in as Brobdingnagian: 20 pieces + 17 string players = 37 musicians, a jazz orchestra monstrous enough to have handled one of Stan Kenton's Innovations charts, although the arrangements used here were so sugary as to suggest instead a Jackie Gleason midnight cocktail lounge set. Although those who suffer from an allergy to string ensembles might balk at the prospect, Shaw's inspired clarinet technique transforms even the sweetest of these marzipans into an intoxicating daydream of Cinemascopic proportions. The Gramercy Five sides are exceptionally satisfying, with attractive vocals by June Hutton, a mature Connee Boswell and sensuous Trudy Richards, who seems to have modeled her singing style after Dinah Washington. Of the three quintets heard in this part of the chronology, the one Shaw led during September 1953 and again in early 1954 was a particularly fine unit composed of pianist Hank Jones, vibraphonist Joe Roland, guitarist Tal Farlow, bassist Tommy Potter and drummer Irv Kluger, who got to show off during the "Stop and Go Mambo." The nearly nine minute "Sequence in B Flat" is a full-fledged exercise in modern bop. Altogether a fascinating segment of Artie Shaw's late period, this compilation features the last of his Decca recordings, a transitional date for the tiny Bell record label, and the first of Shaw's wonderful collaborations with producer Norman Granz. ~ arwulf arwulf, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Al KlinkSax (Tenor)
Allen ShulmanCello
Anatol SchenkerLiner Notes
Andrew FerrettiTrumpet
Art DrelingerSax (Tenor)
Art RyersonGuitar
Artie ShawArranger, Clarinet
Barry GalbraithGuitar
Bart WallaceTrumpet
Bernie LeightonPiano
Bernie PrivinTrumpet
Bill HolcombeSax (Baritone)
Billy ButterfieldTrumpet
Billy TaylorPiano
Bob HaggartBass
Bob KitsisPiano
Bobby ByrneTrombone
Buddy SchutzDrums
Bunny ShawkerDrums
Chris GriffinTrumpet
Connie BoswellVocals
Dale McMickleTrumpet
Danny PerriGuitar
Don LamondDrums
Felix OrlewitzViolin
George BarnesGuitar
Hank JonesPiano
Harold "Money" JohnsonTrumpet
Harold ColettaViola
Harold FurmanskyViola
Harry GlickmanViolin
Harry MalnikoffViolin
Henderson ChambersTrombone
Hymie SchertzerSax (Alto)
Irv KlugerDrums
Jack SatterfieldTrombone
James BuffingtonFrench Horn
Jimmy NottinghamTrumpet
Joe RolandVibraphone
John BarrowsFrench Horn
Johnny BlowersDrums
June HuttonVocals
Kai WindingTrombone
Lou McGarityTrombone
Mac CepposViolin
Manny GreenViolin
Manny ThalerSax (Baritone)
Maurice BrownCello
Max HollanderViolin
Milt YanerSax (Alto)
Mort BullmanTrombone
Robert AlexanderTrombone
Romeo PenqueSax (Tenor)
Samuel RandViolin
Sandy BlochBass
Stan FreemanPiano
Stan KraftViolin
Sy OliverArranger
Sylvan ShulmanViolin
Tal FarlowGuitar
Tommy PotterBass
Tosha SamaroffViolin
Trigger AlpertBass
Trudy RichardsVocals
Will BradleyTrombone