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  1. Live at the Supper Club by Carl Kress, Jo Stafford. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and more at AllMusic.

  2. Jo Stafford chronology. At the Supper Club (2010) At the Supper Club Part II (2011) This compact disc was created from transcriptions of The Chesterfield Supper Club recorded for the Armed Forces Radio Service (AFRS) in May 1946. [1] Others featured on the broadcasts are Carl Kress and his Orchestra, [2] Helen Carroll and the Satisfiers.

    • Vocal
  3. Live Language English Location US / CA / Hollywood Liner Notes Michael Highton (3) Conductor Carl Kress (2) Performer Helen Carroll (8), Jo Stafford (182) Notes The 'live' recordings on this compact disc were made with Carl Kress And His Orchestra with Helen Carroll And The Satisfiers at The Supper Club during May 1946 for The Armed Forces ...

  4. Carl Kress (October 20, 1907 – June 10, 1965), along with Eddie Lang, can be considered THE founding father of jazz guitar. While Lang pioneered the use of single-string horn inspired lines, Carl’s method was that of chord soloing. Carl got his start as banjoist for the Paul Whiteman Orchestra in 1926, which also featured Bix Beiderbecke ...

  5. 26. Sept. 2023 · Carl Kress, Dick McDonough and George Barnes each spent major parts of their careers as studio guitarists, uplifting the music of others while only having occasional sessions of their own. While Lang (1902-33) set the standard for acoustic guitarists of the 1920s, by 1926 Kress and McDonough were following a similar path of balancing jazz and dance band dates. Barnes was from a later ...

  6. This compact disk was created from transcriptions of The Chesterfield Supper Club recorded for the Armed Forces Radio Service (AFRS) in March and April 1946. Others featured on the broadcasts are Carl Kress and his Orchestra, Helen Carroll and the Satisfiers, and Lloyd Shaffer and his Orchestra.

  7. Kress often teamed up with fellow guitarist Dick McDonough in the 1930s, he co-owned the Onyx Club on 52nd Street for a time, and continued working in the studios into the 1960s, playing during his last years in a duo with George Barnes. Most of Carl Kress’ solo and duet (with McDonough) recordings from the 1930s are long overdue to be reissued. ~ Scott Yanow