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Jack Teagarden - The Complete Capitol Fifties Sessions (1996) [Dixieland, Swing]; FLAC (tracks+.cue)

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Mike1985
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Jack Teagarden - The Complete Capitol Fifties Sessions (1996) [Dixieland, Swing]; FLAC (tracks+.cue)

Unread postby Mike1985 » 03 Nov 2022, 13:16


Artist: Jack Teagarden
Album: The Complete Capitol Fifties Sessions
Genre: Dixieland, Swing
Label: Mosaic Records
Released: 1996
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue)
    CD 1:
  1. Struttin' with Some Barbecue (3:02)
  2. Muskrat Ramble (3:01)
  3. New Orleans (2:54)
  4. Basin Street Blues (4:39)
  5. St. James Infirmary (4:31)
  6. That's a Plenty (4:31)
  7. I Want a Big Butter and Egg Man (3:13)
  8. Fidgety Feet (3:06)
  9. Royal Garden Blues (4:54)
  10. I Guess I'll Have to Change My Plan (3:21)
  11. Indiana (2:58)
  12. Indiana (mono take) (2:59)
  13. It's Wonderful (3:59)
  14. Way Down Yonder in New Orleans (3:32)
  15. 'S Wonderful (2:44)
  16. 'S Wonderful (mono take) (2:44)
  17. Baby, Won't You Please Come Home (3:03)

    CD 2:
  1. I Found a New Baby (2:42)
  2. Mama's Gone, Goodbye (2:45)
  3. Mama's Gone, Goodbye (mono take) (2:45)
  4. Oh Baby (2:28)
  5. Sunday (2:29)
  6. Everybody Loves My Baby (2:28)
  7. 55th and Broadway (3:40)
  8. 55th and Broadway (mono take) (4:41)
  9. Mobile Blues (3:37)
  10. Wolverine Blues (3:50)
  11. Tishomingo Blues (4:31)
  12. Someday You'll Be Sorry (3:07)
  13. Rippa-Tutti (2:45)
  14. Weary River (2:31)
  15. Dallas Blues (3:04)
  16. Casanova's Lament (4:53)
  17. Walleritis (3:23)
  18. Doctor Jazz (2:58)
  19. China Boy (3:18)

    CD 3:
  1. Stars Fell on Alabama (3:00)
  2. Old Pigeon-Toed Joad (2:30)
  3. My Kinda Love (2:13)
  4. Peg o' My Heart (2:32)
  5. Beale Street Blues (2:30)
  6. If I Could Be with You (2:41)
  7. I'm Coming Virginia (2:34)
  8. Fare Thee Well to Harlem (3:07)
  9. Aunt Hagar's Children Blues (2:56)
  10. After You've Gone (2:11)
  11. A Monday Date (2:35)
  12. The Sheik of Araby (2:35)
  13. Goin' Home (3:02)
  14. Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen (3:23)
  15. Deep River (2:32)
  16. Get on Board, Little Children (2:35)
  17. Joshua Fit the Battle of Jericho (2:23)
  18. This Train (2:21)

    CD 4:
  1. Ezekiel Saw the Wheel (2:23)
  2. Gonna Shout All over God's Heaven (2:06)
  3. Shadrack (2:31)
  4. Sing and Shout (2:36)
  5. Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child (2:36)
  6. Swing Low, Sweet Chariot (2:10)
  7. Cabin in the Sky (2:54)
  8. Diane (2:37)
  9. Diane (mono take) (2:37)
  10. Autumn Leaves (2:17)
  11. Autumn Leaves (mono take) (2:16)
  12. While We're Young (3:08)
  13. Alone Together (2:33)
  14. Autumn Serenade (2:21)
  15. If Love Is Good to Me (2:42)
  16. Street of Tears (2:31)
  17. Junk Man (2:46)
  18. Junk Man (mono take) (2:46)
  19. Strange (2:04)
  20. Someone Else's Love (2:51)
  21. Mixed Emotions (2:23)

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Jack Teagarden was the top jazz trombonist to emerge before World War II. While his most innovative days were in the late '20s and '30s, he remained a viable and highly enjoyable jazzman (and a popular attraction on the Dixieland circuit) up until his death in 1964. In the 1950s, he recorded six albums for Capitol, and they are reissued in full (plus some alternate takes and a "new" version of "St. James Infirmary") on Mosaic's four-CD box set. Teagarden is heard on two hot Dixieland dates (Coast Concert and Jazz Ultimate) with cornetist Bobby Hackett and either Matty Matlock or Peanuts Hucko on clarinet. An outing by his own working group (Big T's Dixieland Band) is a surprising disappointment, for the sextet is hamstrung by dully arranged ensembles instead of getting a chance to really stretch out. However, Teagarden's three albums with larger groups are all better than expected. This Is Teagarden revisits some older material, Swing Low, Sweet Spiritual (even with the dumb background singers) is generally successful, and the instrumental mood record Shades of Night has some beautiful trombone playing on the ballads. Although Teagarden was no longer a pacesetter in the 1950s, he is heard throughout in prime form. Dixieland collectors can consider this box to be essential.
Review by Scott Yanow

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