Carolina Shout [Collectables] James P. Johnson

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CD

  • Release Date: 06/26/2007
  • Sales Rank: 14,842
  • Label: COLLECTABLES
  • UPC: 090431692424
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Carolina Shout [Collectables]

1LISTENSteeplechase Rag 2:28
2LISTENTwilight Rag 2:20
3LISTENCarolina Shout 4:00
4LISTENBaltimore Buzz 2:48
5LISTENGypsy Blues 3:49
6LISTENHarlem Strut 2:59
7LISTENEccentricity 4:06
8LISTENDon't Mess With Me 2:50
9LISTENNervous Blues 3:37
10LISTENOle Miss Blues 3:29
11LISTENI Ain't Givin' Nothin' Away 2:55
12LISTENMuscle Shoals Blues 3:23
13LISTENFarewell Blues 4:15
14LISTENCharleston 2:34

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Carolina Shout is an oddity made possible by multiplicities of licensing James P. Johnson material: a 2007 Collectables re-release of a CD originally released by Biograph Records, now owned by Shout Factory, in 1992, which was itself issued as an LP by Biograph in 1988 and later as a Musical Heritage LP. There is nothing different musically from one package to the next; all of these releases contain the same 14 songs, as pumped by Dan Wilke on an 88-note Melville Clark piano, even the LPs. The main thing that is different about this Collectables reissue is that the booklet is a bit more attractively colored in comparison to the pale black-and-white image used by Biograph, and the notes have been updated, though somewhat carelessly -- George W. Thomas' "Muscle Shoals Blues" is here identified as "Muscle Shoal Blues." As a collection, though, this does have some considerable value. Johnson's 1917-1921 piano rolls are some of the earliest documents of stride ragtime to be found anywhere, and his highly virtuosic renderings of W.C. Handy's "Ole Miss Blues" and "Muscle Shoals Blues" are treasured interpretations of pieces otherwise only recorded rather dimly by dance bands and military units by the time Johnson got to them in 1922. It does contain Johnson's one and only recording of "Charleston," his most famous piece, which is taken from a medley roll of the hit show Runnin' Wild. Johnson did not cut that selection for the phonograph. However, these aren't the best edited piano rolls, full of little slips and other surprises, and by 21st century standards Biograph's recording is rather thin-sounding and nasal -- rather like a down-and-dirty MIDI file of a piano roll, though not quite that bad. Listeners have been spoiled -- since 1988, very high-quality piano roll to CD reproductions have been done on behalf of George Gershwin, Jelly Roll Morton, Zez Confrey, and a few others. While Biograph/Collectables' Carolina Shout is still serviceable as a means to get a basic idea of what James P. Johnson's piano rolls sound like, to experience Johnson as a player the best vehicles are found among the many phonograph recordings he made and not the rolls. Moreover, this will remain the case until someone with such expertise decides to take on the case of Johnson's rolls, document them, edit them properly, and record them well. Uncle Dave Lewis, All Music Guide

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