Enter a zip code
CD
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| CD | $6.99 |
More than the music's premier trumpeter and vocalist, Louis Armstrong (1901-1971) was the major wellspring of jazz and American pop, the source from which soloists, singers, and orchestrators alike all learned their basic vocabulary. This three-CD set attempts the daunting task of anthologizing the Great Man's multigenerational career under a single roof. Virtually the only thing that's missing are his breakthrough Hot Five recordings of the mid-'20s, although the era is well sampled via other recordings of the period, and though the original classic "West End Blues" isn't here, a fine later remake is. Otherwise, the whole career is pretty well touched upon,encompassing Armstrong's days as a sideman with Fletcher Henderson ("Copenhagen"), his own recording units of the '20s ("Drop That Sack," with Armstrong's band working under his wife's name); his fine big band of the swing era ("Thanks a Million"); duets and meetings with guest stars (such as Jack Teagarden and the Mills Brothers), his more-Dixieland-styled All Stars units of the later years (the great "New Orleans Function"); his "musical autobiography" of 1956 ("Wild Man Blues") and his many charted hit singles as a pop star in the '50s and '60s ("Kiss to Build a Dream On," "Hello Dolly"). No one had a longer or more diverse career than Armstrong, and no one did more to establish what jazz would sound like, then, now, and forever. Will Friedwald, Barnes & Noble