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Acker Bilk - Meant to Be (2018) [New Orleans Jazz, Dixieland]; FLAC (tracks)

Ragtime, Dixieland, Big Band, New Orleans Jazz, Jump Blues, Neo-Swing
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Mike1985
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Acker Bilk - Meant to Be (2018) [New Orleans Jazz, Dixieland]; FLAC (tracks)

Unread postby Mike1985 » 21 Jan 2021, 19:45


Artist: Acker Bilk
Album: Meant to Be
Genre: New Orleans Jazz, Dixieland
Label: nagel heyer records
Released: 2018
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Tracklist:
  1. Buona Sera
  2. My Heart Belongs to Daddy
  3. Gospel Train
  4. Perdido
  5. Imperial Echoes
  6. Lord, Let Me in the Lifeboat
  7. Summer Set
  8. Stomp off, Let's Go
  9. My Bucket's Got a Hole in It
  10. Papa Dip
  11. Go Tell It on the Mountain
  12. That's My Home
  13. Stars and Stripes Forever
  14. Lazy River
  15. Maryland, My Maryland
  16. Creole Jazz
  17. Sing On
  18. Tishomingo Blues
  19. Frankie and Johnny
  20. Corrine, Corrina
  21. Swing Low, Sweet Chariot
  22. Fancy Pants
  23. Original Dixieland One-Step
  24. Goodnight, Sweet Prince
  25. White Cliffs of Dover
  26. Tiger Rag
  27. High Society
  28. 2:19 Blues
  29. There's a Rainbow 'Round My Shoulder
  30. Milenberg Joys
  31. Bottom of the Bottle
  32. Snag It
  33. Who Rolled the Stone Away
  34. Should I

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Acker Bilk -- or Mr. Acker Bilk, as he was billed -- has won immortality on rock oldies radio for his surprise 1962 hit "Stranger on the Shore," an evocative ballad featuring his heavily quavering low-register clarinet over a bank of strings. To the jazz world, though, he has a longer-running track record as one of the biggest stars of Britain's trad jazz boom, playing in a distinctive early New Orleans manner. After learning his instrument in the British Army, Bilk joined Ken Colyer's trad band in 1954 before stepping out on his own in 1956. By 1960, a record of his, "Summer Set" -- a pun on the name of his home county -- landed on the British pop charts, and Bilk was on his way, clad in the Edwardian clothing and bowler hats that his publicist told his Paramount Jazz Band to wear. Several other British hits followed, but none bigger than "Stranger," which Bilk wrote for his daughter Jenny. The single stayed 55 weeks on the British charts and crossed the sea to America, where it hit number one in an era when radio was open to oddball records of all idioms (Bilk gratefully called "Stranger" "my old-age pension"). Released on English Columbia in Britain, several Bilk albums came out in America on the Atco label, and he continued to have hits until the British rock invasion of 1964 made trad seem quaint. With that, Bilk moved into cabaret and continued to have some success in Europe, leading jazz bands, recording with lush string ensembles, and even scoring another hit, "Aria" (number five in Britain), in 1976. Continuing to perform through the 2000s, Bilk slackened his pace so that he could pursue, like Miles Davis, a hobby of painting.
Richard S. Ginell

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