Review:
While Fletcher Henderson made the bulk of his important recordings for Columbia, gathered on A Study in Frustration, he also recorded some significant music for the Decca label, recording as both the Connie's Inn Orchestra and under his own name. There are two sessions from 1931 and three from 1934,and they all show Henderson's group as the prototype of the big swing bands. The eight tracks from 1931 are particularly interesting for their demonstration of the Henderson band's increasing ability to actually "swing," largely through the playing of drummer Walter Johnson and John Kirby's remarkably fluid tuba work. The band includes trumpeter Rex Stewart and tenor saxophonist Coleman Hawkins, whose dominant presence is apparent in the solo on "House of David Blues." There are 12 tracks from 1934 and there's increasing sophistication in the arrangements by Benny Carter, Henderson, and his brother Horace. Horace's aggressive arrangement of Fletcher's "Hotter than Hell" is the highlight, but there's always plenty of spirit from the band, which includes trumpeter Red Allen, clarinetist Buster Bailey, and a young Ben Webster striving to fill Hawkins's absence.
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Tracklist:
I'm Crazy 'Bout My Baby
Sugar Foot Stomp
Just Blues
Singin' The Blues (Till My Daddy Comes Home)
Low Down On The Bayou
The House Of David Blues
Radio Rhythm
You Rascal You
Limehouse Blues
Shanghai Shuffle
Big John's Special
Happy As The Day Is Long
Tidal Wave
Down South Camp Meetin'
Wrappin' It Up (The Lindy Glide)
Memphis Blues
Memphis Blues
Wild Party
Rug Cutter's Swing
Hotter Than 'Ell
Liza (All The Clouds'll Roll Away)
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Beethoven
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(10)
Benny Goodman
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Billie Holiday
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Blues
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Cancer
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Change
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Charlie Christian
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Charlie Parker
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Chicago
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Child Prodigy
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Childhood
(22)
Classical Music
(14)
Coleman Hawkins
(4)
Commercialism
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Cotton Club
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Count Basie
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Death
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Difficulty
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Direction
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Drums
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Europe
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(4)
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(1)
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Ray Brown
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(2)
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(12)
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Television
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Tenor Sax
(3)
The Beatles
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Time
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Trumpet
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(4)
Violin
(4)
Vocals
(3)
Wisdom
(4)
Women
(16)
Work
(11)
Wynton Marsalis
(12)
Young Musicians
(13)
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