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  1. 8. März 2002 · Artie Shaw was a huge musical star during the 1930s and '40s, but the jazz clarinetist and bandleader says he didn't enjoy the glamour and fame. So he walked away from it. Shaw explains why in a ...

  2. Artie Shaw was an American clarinetist and big bandleader. Artie Shaw’s first public appearance leading his own band was in his native New York City on May 24th, 1936. Shaw became one of the biggest names in jazz during the heyday of swing in the 1930’s and 1940’s. Two of Shaw’s earliest and biggest hits were in 1938.

  3. Artie Shaw and His Orchestra - Vocal Refrain by Helen Forrest: December 14, 1938: Blues in the Night REC,REL: Artie Shaw and His Orchestra - Vocal Refrain and trumpet by "Hot Lips" Page: October 3, 1941 (293 artists) Originally by William Gillespie BRD: Dreaming Out Loud: Artie Shaw and His Orchestra - Vocal Martha Tilton (Artie Shaw, Martha ...

  4. 25. Jan. 2022 · A version of ‘Begin the Beguine’ written by Cole Porter and arranged by Artie Shaw is the song that launched Artie Shaw to stardom in the fall of 1938. Porter composed the song in 1935 while onboard a cruise ship in the South Pacific between Fiji and Indonesia. The RCA recording of the song was issued by Bluebird Records in 1938 and would ...

  5. Artie Shaw and his Orchestra : Begin the Beguine ‘Begin the Beguine’, written by Cole Porter, was not well received when it was included in the 1935 musical, “Jubilee.” However, three years later in July of 1938 on recording day for the record ‘Indian Love Call’, Artie Shaw insisted that they record ‘Begin the Beguine’ for the ‘B’ side.

  6. Artie Shaw (born May 23, 1910, New York City, New York, USA - died December 30, 2004, Thousand Oaks, California, USA) was an American clarinetist and bandleader. His first public appearance leading his own band was in his native New York City on the 24th of May, 1936 and he became one of the biggest names in jazz and popular music during the late 1930's and 1940's swing heyday.

  7. Originally titled ‘Ubangi’, ‘The Chant’ is Artie Shaw’s very bluesy version of ‘St. James Infirmary Blues’ with a trumpet solo by “Hot Lips” Page. The origin of ‘St. James Infirmary Blues’ has never been satisfactorily determined. Sometimes ‘St. James Infirmary Blues’ was credited to a composer known as Joe Primrose, who would later claim the rights to the song. Many ...