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Eddie Condon - Jam Session: Coast-to-Coast (1954/2005) [Dixieland]; FLAC (image+.cue)

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Mike1985
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Eddie Condon - Jam Session: Coast-to-Coast (1954/2005) [Dixieland]; FLAC (image+.cue)

Unread postby Mike1985 » 30 Dec 2022, 14:39


Artist: Eddie Condon's All-Stars / The Rampart Street Paraders
Album: Jam Session: Coast-to-Coast
Genre: Dixieland
Label: Documents
Released: 1954/2005
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue)
Tracklist:
  1. Beale Street Blues (Handy) - 4:17
  2. Medley: Emaline (Perkins)/Don't Worry 'Bout Me (Bloom-Koehler)/I Can't Give You Anything But Love (Fields-McHugh) - 5:28
  3. Riverboat Shuffle (Voynow-Carmichael-Mills-Parish) - 4:45
  4. Jam Session Blues (Trad.)/Ole Miss (Handy) - 9:30
  5. Black and Blue (Razaf-Waller-Brooks) - 3:09
  6. I Ain't Gonna Give Nobody None O' This Jelly Roll (Williams-Williams) - 4:28
  7. Ja-Da (Carleton) - 6:58
  8. The Sheik of Araby (Smith-Wheeler-Snyder) - 3:42
  9. Squeeze Me (Williams-Waller) - 2:59
  10. South Rampart Street Parade (Bauduc-Haggart) - 3:14

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Eddie Condon and his band -- including Wild Bill Davison (cornet), Cutty Cutshall (trombone), Edmond Hall (clarinet), Gene Schroeder (piano), Walter Page (bass), Dick Cary (trumpet), Lou McGarrity (trombone), Peanuts Hucko (clarinet), Cliff Leeman (drums), and George Wettling (drums) for the extended "Jam Session Blues" -- cut four tracks for this LP (which they shared with the Rampart Street Paraders). The four Condon numbers are extraordinary pieces, capturing a working band that played nightly at Condon's during their peak, and though they're in the studio they might as well have been playing live for all of the spirit and verve captured on these sides. "Beale Street Blues" is so spot-on perfect from its opening note that it sounds like it has to be cut into as part of a larger jam, which it was not; this band was simply so tight and swinging that they created the illusion. The band also turns to some beautiful balladry on "Emaline," which features a choice solo by trombonist Cutshall, before sliding into "I Can't Give You Anything but Love" featuring Davison and Hall. If there's a real highlight on this album, however, then it's the ten-minute-plus "Jam Session Blues"/"Ole Miss," which features solos by the entire band, jamming in a laid-back fashion to the opening blues before switching gears to the more quick-tempo W.C. Handy-authored second half.
Review by Bruce Eder

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