Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. 16. Feb. 2009 · Listen to Complete Jazz Series 1947 - 1949 by Erskine Hawkins on Apple Music. Stream songs including Gabriel's Heater (12-23-47), I'd Love to Make Love to You (12-23-47) and more.

  2. 22. Nov. 2017 · Composed by Erskine Hawkins, William Johnson and Julian Dash; arranged by Glenn Miller and Jerry Gray. Recorded by Glenn Miller and His Orchestra on February 5, 1940 for RCA-Bluebird in New York. Glenn Miller, first trombone, directing: John Best, first trumpet; Clyde Hurley, R.D. McMickle and Leigh Knowles, trumpets; Paul Tanner, Frank D ...

  3. 31. Juli 2017 · 553. Jazz great, Erskine Hawkins was born July 26, 1914. Recalling the day of his birth prompts a review of what Hawkins offered to jazz. Songs like “Tuxedo Junction,” “Uproar Shout,” and “Cornbread” attest to Hawkins humor and energetic approach to jazz. Arguably, Hawkins appears to be a sort of unsung hero in the world of jazz.

  4. 3. Nov. 1998 · 1946-1947 by Erskine Hawkins released in 1998. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and more at AllMusic.

  5. 20. Feb. 2018 · Taken as a whole, there is ample evidence here for the Erskine Hawkins Orchestra to be rated as one of the finest (and most underrated) big bands of the 1946-47 period. The key soloists in the orchestra are Hawkins and Sammy Lowe on trumpets, Matthew Gee on trombone, altoist Bobby Smith, Julian Dash on tenor, and baritonist Haywood Henry who is often heard on clarinet. Highlights include ...

  6. Tracks 13 & 15 originally released on Vocalion 3689; tracks 14 & 16 on Vocalion 3668. Tracks 17 to 20 recorded in New York, February 25, 1938. Tracks 17 & 19 originally released on Vocalion 4072; tracks 18 & 20 on Vocalion 4007. Tracks 21 to 24 recorded in New York, September 12, 1938. Tracks 21 & 23 originally released on Bluebird B-7826 ...

  7. The newly minted Erskine Hawkins Orchestra began recording in the late '30s and by 1940, the "20th Century Gabriel" had a smash hit with "Tuxedo Junction," his most famous composition. While the band featured many of the era's best instrumentalists--including pianist Avery Parrish, trumpeter Dub Bascomb, and baritone sax player Haywood Henry--they downsized with the end of the swing era ...