Cartano Tony, American Boulevard. From Washington to Los Angeles by the southern route, 1992, Julliard
Notes: Between thunderstorms, black jazzmen homegrown quintet play on a stage erected in Forsyth Park [...] Between the solos of tenor sax and trumpet, later in the gray sky, thunder sounds. The riff drummer seemed ridiculous, but the orchestra friendly do not let them tell, swinging with a vengeance "(p.51-52)" Driven by its ironic wink to the public overheated, Joyce Cobb grabs the microphone in one hand and his harmonica on the other, and began a grass-root devilish blues. The solid quartet of King's Palace Cafe Orchestra supports the surprising swing the black singer [...] So far, Joyce and his musicians are allowed to insert, from time to time, one or two standards of variety among the classics jazz [...] A vocal qualities to Sarah Vaughan, Joyce Cooper combines a temperament worthy of Aretha Franklin. The tone rises, accelerating the syncopations of rhythm & blues damn effective [...] For a long time, since the 1900s, Memphis and Beale Street are at the heart of the history of blues and jazz. (Words in French, Beale Street Blues) So said WC Handy (1873-1958), Father of the Blues [...] Many bluesmen, but not least, knew this, Memphis Slim, Big Joe Williams John Lee Hooker or BB King who comes, moreover, to open a club in Beale Street "(p.69-70)" The Peabody [...] The good old days when customers called William Faulkner, Paul Whiteman (conductor and composer), and Dorothy Lamour in Memphis during the filming of the movie St. Louis Blues in 1939. Orchestras Tommy Dorsey and Harry James created the background [...] White Jazz, played by whites for whites "(p.80)" Clarksdale, mythical birthplace of the blues, singing deep in the Delta! [...] John Lee Hooker, Ike Turner, Little Junior Parker, Sam Cooke and so on, were all born in Clarksdale. The famous Muddy Waters y burned his youth before going to Chicago [...] The Stackhouse, Delta Record Mart [...] Jim O'Neal [...] Rooster Blues [...] Living Blues Magazine [...] The Delta Cats will be at the Blue Diamond [...] Booba Barnes & The Playboys, children of Clarksdale, under the label Rooster. And more extraordinary blues record I heard long ago: Frank Frost Midnight Prowler, under the brand Earwig [...] A juke box starts screaming for a walk swinguée Glenn Miller, although white and military. Sometimes we confuse! [...] The conclusion, I am tempted to give it to Big Jack Jackson told The oil man, who sings the blues in the juke joints of Clarksdale: "It's not as bad as before. The blues became less sad ". And follow up immediately on a verse about the Gulf War. A heart-breaking [...] The genius of local designers, from Faulkner to Eudora Welty for literature, or Muddy Waters to BB King music [...] Seriously injured, the great singer Bessie Smith was transported to the hospital in Clarksdale, where she died [...] In the 60s, the American playwright Edward Albee took a piece of this drama: The Death of Bessie Smith [...] The Blue Spirit Blues, Bessie Smith sang: Now it's ashes to ashes, sweet daddy, dust to dust, / I Said Ashes to ashes, dust to dust I mean / Now show me the man "any woman can trust" (p.93-98) " Stormy weather played a saxophone on the sidewalk [...] Their style, a mixture of poetry inspired by the experience of black Americans at the time of Martin Luther King Jr. and jazz improvisation to Ornette Coleman or Don Cherry "(p.186-187).
Notes: Between thunderstorms, black jazzmen homegrown quintet play on a stage erected in Forsyth Park [...] Between the solos of tenor sax and trumpet, later in the gray sky, thunder sounds. The riff drummer seemed ridiculous, but the orchestra friendly do not let them tell, swinging with a vengeance "(p.51-52)" Driven by its ironic wink to the public overheated, Joyce Cobb grabs the microphone in one hand and his harmonica on the other, and began a grass-root devilish blues. The solid quartet of King's Palace Cafe Orchestra supports the surprising swing the black singer [...] So far, Joyce and his musicians are allowed to insert, from time to time, one or two standards of variety among the classics jazz [...] A vocal qualities to Sarah Vaughan, Joyce Cooper combines a temperament worthy of Aretha Franklin. The tone rises, accelerating the syncopations of rhythm & blues damn effective [...] For a long time, since the 1900s, Memphis and Beale Street are at the heart of the history of blues and jazz. (Words in French, Beale Street Blues) So said WC Handy (1873-1958), Father of the Blues [...] Many bluesmen, but not least, knew this, Memphis Slim, Big Joe Williams John Lee Hooker or BB King who comes, moreover, to open a club in Beale Street "(p.69-70)" The Peabody [...] The good old days when customers called William Faulkner, Paul Whiteman (conductor and composer), and Dorothy Lamour in Memphis during the filming of the movie St. Louis Blues in 1939. Orchestras Tommy Dorsey and Harry James created the background [...] White Jazz, played by whites for whites "(p.80)" Clarksdale, mythical birthplace of the blues, singing deep in the Delta! [...] John Lee Hooker, Ike Turner, Little Junior Parker, Sam Cooke and so on, were all born in Clarksdale. The famous Muddy Waters y burned his youth before going to Chicago [...] The Stackhouse, Delta Record Mart [...] Jim O'Neal [...] Rooster Blues [...] Living Blues Magazine [...] The Delta Cats will be at the Blue Diamond [...] Booba Barnes & The Playboys, children of Clarksdale, under the label Rooster. And more extraordinary blues record I heard long ago: Frank Frost Midnight Prowler, under the brand Earwig [...] A juke box starts screaming for a walk swinguée Glenn Miller, although white and military. Sometimes we confuse! [...] The conclusion, I am tempted to give it to Big Jack Jackson told The oil man, who sings the blues in the juke joints of Clarksdale: "It's not as bad as before. The blues became less sad ". And follow up immediately on a verse about the Gulf War. A heart-breaking [...] The genius of local designers, from Faulkner to Eudora Welty for literature, or Muddy Waters to BB King music [...] Seriously injured, the great singer Bessie Smith was transported to the hospital in Clarksdale, where she died [...] In the 60s, the American playwright Edward Albee took a piece of this drama: The Death of Bessie Smith [...] The Blue Spirit Blues, Bessie Smith sang: Now it's ashes to ashes, sweet daddy, dust to dust, / I Said Ashes to ashes, dust to dust I mean / Now show me the man "any woman can trust" (p.93-98) " Stormy weather played a saxophone on the sidewalk [...] Their style, a mixture of poetry inspired by the experience of black Americans at the time of Martin Luther King Jr. and jazz improvisation to Ornette Coleman or Don Cherry "(p.186-187).
0 comments:
Post a Comment