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Glenn Miller - Greatest Hits

*Est. $6.75 Compare

No Description Available
No Track Information Available
Media Type: CD
Artist: MILLER,GLENN
Title: GREATEST HITS
Street Release Date: 04/16/1996
Domestic
Genre: BIG BAND

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The Very Best of Benny Goodman

*Est. $6.70 Compare

Release Date: 2000-11-07, Audio CD, RCA

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Totally Bubl?

*Est. $7.98 Compare

Soundtrack to the 2001 film "Totally Blonde" in which Bubl, played a nightclub singer. The songs were written by film director Andrew Van Slee and performed by a young Bubl, who had yet to be signed to a label. An interesting chapter in this emerging star's past. 10" clear blue vinyl 45 rpm.

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Big Bad Voodoo Daddy

*Est. $16.58 Compare

Grunge angst got old. We wanted to have fun. Big Bad Voodoo Daddy was there, ready with serviceable, pumped-up swing. Their music is straight, uptempo, dance floor jazz. There's nothing particularly original going on, but the sleazy horns and snappy arrangements get the job done. There's nothing campy or tongue-in-cheek either; the music just barrels ahead...like good rock & roll. --Steve Tignor

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Carnegie Hall Jazz Concert

*Est. $12.85 Compare

In jazz, live recordings not only document an artist or group's sound in its purest form but, in rare cases, herald the arrival of a musical genre. That's the case with this invaluable, two-CD collection that captures clarinetist Benny Goodman's historic 1938 Carnegie Hall concert, which exemplified the so-called "swing era." Originally released in 1950, it contains rare commentary from Goodman and music from the entire event, which was a unique mix of formality and spontaneity. Goodman's perfect intonation and lyrical improvisation front the big band here, featuring the smooth solos of trumpeter Harry James, the percussive power of Gene Krupa--jumping the blues on "Don't Be That Way"--and the Fletcher Henderson- arranged "Sometimes I'm Happy" and "One O'Clock Jump." Another segment of the evening, called "Twenty Years of Jazz," takes Goodman to New Orleans with a lickety-split reading of "Sensation Rag" and "When My Baby Smiles at Me." A spirited jam session follows with Count Basie on the keys, alto, tenor, and baritone saxophonists Johnny Hodges, Lester Young, and Harry Carney, along with trumpeter Buck Clayton. Goodman hangs tough with the crew on a rollicking read of Fats Waller's "Honeysuckle Rose." The spotlight turns to Goodman's color-line breaking small combos. His trio with Krupa and the elegant, fleet-fingered Teddy Wilson on piano delivers a harmonically delicious version of "Body & Soul" that would give Coleman Hawkins's version a run for its money. When vibraphonist Lionel Hampton gets into the mix and makes it a quartet, the standards "Avalon," "The Man I Love," and "I Got Rhythm," as well as "Stompin' at the Savoy," are transformed into timeless vehicles of improvisation. The big band returns with growling grandeur on Irving Berlin's optimistic "Blue Skies" and the British Isle balladry of "Loch Lomond," with the majestic vocals of Martha Tilton. One listen to Goodman and company's rockhouse romp on "Sing, Sing, Sing" will testify to the success of this event, which still reverberates today. --Eugene Holley Jr.

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Tommy Dorsey - Greatest Hits [RCA]

*Est. $50.00 Compare

Release Date: 1996-07-16, Audio CD, RCA

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The Very Best of Artie Shaw

*Est. $11.98 Compare

Release Date: 2001-01-09, Audio CD, RCA

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