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  1. Stuff Smith. Considerado niño prodigio, su padre le regaló un violín a los 8 años, y poco después el niño ya tenía su propio grupo. Tras trabajar como bailarín en varias compañías de revista, Stuff Smith (14 de agosto de 1909, Portsmouth, Ohio – 25 de septiembre de 1967, Múnich), formó parte entre 1926 y 1929 de la orquesta de ...

  2. In 1987, five previously unreleased tracks recorded at the same original sessions were added as bonus tracks to the Capitol Records CD re-release titled, The Complete After Midnight Sessions. Some later re-issues, under the title, After Midnight, The Complete Session or simply, After Midnight , also include one or more alternate take(s) with the 17 songs from the original 1956 recording sessions.

  3. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 1957 Vinyl release of "After Midnight" on Discogs.

  4. Album After Midnight originally released in 1957. Recorded August and September, 1956, in Studio A of the Capitol Tower in Hollywood. Remastered at Capitol Recording Studios. Tracks 13 to 17 are previously unreleased selections from the original recording sessions. Another reissue of this album released in 1999 adds an additional alternate take ...

  5. Stuff Smith's humorous, unusually understated violin is a nice touch in "When I Grow Too Old to Dream." It's hard for any Nat King Cole fan to ignore these important sessions. [The original version of this release featured a dozen tracks, later expanded to 17 in the '80s with the discovery of some unreleased material. Yet another track, the alternate take of "You're Looking at Me," was also ...

  6. The Essential Jazz Classics label presents in CD Nat King Coles Complete 1956 After Midnight Sessions - with 4 bonus tracks. Appearing at a time when, for the general public, he was more of a singer and entertainer than a jazz pianist, this album was a reminder of Nats superlative skills as an instrumentalist. For the remainder of his successful career which ended with his sudden death in 1965 ...

  7. Nat King Cole’s splendid LP After Midnight (Capitol W-782) was a primarily instrumental album, which would mark one of his last hits as a pianist (as opposed to a singer and entertainer). It featured the classic Nat King Cole Trio plus his illustrious jazz friends Harry “Sweets” Edison, Willie Smith, Juan Tizol, Stuff Smith, and Lee Young.