EKE BBB Posted October 11, 2005 Report Posted October 11, 2005 Just received this from the RedHotJazz mailing list: Lost Sounds: Blacks and the Birth of the Recording Industry, 1891-1922 [ARCH 1005] $29.99 $26.99 Lost Sounds: Blacks and the Birth of the Recording Industry, 1891-1922 Fifty-four tracks by 43 artists, and 60 pages of in-depth commentary and analysis: Lost Sounds is a monumental achievement that stretches back to the faint beginnings of commercial recordings and travels to the brink of the Jazz Age to trace the contributions of black artists on American records. Sometimes noisy and raucous, sometimes quiet and austere, these recordings demonstrate the deep involvement and lasting influence of African Americans in the nascent recording industry. From Book to Audio First published by the University of Illinois Press in 1994, Tim Brooks' mammoth Lost Sounds brought before the world the stories of pioneering black recording artists who had been consigned to permanent obscurity. Now Archeophone gives these artists their voice on this ambitious two-CD set. Every major artist covered in the book (except for one whose recordings have never been found) and several minor ones are represented here. Never before has such an overview been attempted, and many of the recordings found here have literally not been heard in over 100 years. Historic Recordings The release of Lost Sounds is nothing short of historic. You have heard of many of these singers, musicians, and public figures, but you probably haven't heard the sonic documents they left behind. Here for the first time is Thomas Craig, "the colored basso," stage star Opal Cooper, boxer Jack Johnson, and Tuskegee Institute founder Booker T. Washington. Also featured are five operatic performers who made records for Broome Special Phonograph Records, ca. 1919, and who led distinguished musical careers: Harry Burleigh, Edward Boatner, Florence Cole–Talbert, Nathaniel Dett, and Clarence Cameron White. Lost Sounds also includes one of the ultra-rare personal records made by Roland Hayes, "Vesti la giubba," that helped him jump-start his career. Newly Discovered Gems With the help of gracious collectors we have also unearthed rarities whose importance cannot be overstated. Here for the first time is heard an African-American vocal group from 1895: the Oriole Quartette doing "Brother Michael, Won't You Hand Down that Rope?" Also included is one of the earliest minstrel records in existence; from 1894, it's Spencer, Williams & Quinn's Imperial Minstrels doing their Minstrel First Part and featuring George W. Johnson's great "Laughing Song." Those who have heard Cousins and DeMoss doing "Poor Mourner" for Berliner in 1898 have a treat in store with their rousing rendition of "Who Broke the Lock" also from 1898. These guys were making rock records before anybody knew what that meant. Four Distinct Genres Four distinct musical genres emerged when the recordings were laid out: Vocal Harmonies, Minstrel & Vaudeville Traditions, Aspirational Motives, and Dance Rhythms. The two CDs are arranged according to these themes, with a full trajectory of nearly 30 years' worth of material covered in each section. Several musical superstars are represented: Bert Williams, Wilbur Sweatman, Jim Europe's bands, and W. C. Handy. But other lesser-known pioneers are here too. Under the "Vocal" section come the celebrated Unique Quartette, here heard on the superior-sounding "Mamma's Black Baby Boy" from 1893 and "Who Broke the Lock" from about 1895 (comparing the two versions of the song raises questions about vernacular performances from the 1890s). The "Minstrel" section takes us, meanwhile, from rough "coon" songs, introduces Williams and Walker, and ends with "Great Camp Meetin' Day," by Noble Sissle, one-half of the most popular black team of the 1920s. The "Aspirational" section chronicles efforts by black artists to overcome circumstance and establish themselves among the world's "serious" music, seen for instance in "Swing Along," by Will Marion Cook's Afro-American Folk Song Singers. In the "Dance" genre, we have great performances by Clef Club members on the Europe Society Band's "Down Home Rag" and the Joan Sawyer Orchestra's version of "Bregeiro," led by Dan Kildare. One standout is one of Eubie Blake's first records, "Sarah from Sahara," performed by the Blake Trio in 1917. Also featured is the rarely reissued Ford Dabney Band, doing the infectious "Camp Meeting Blues" from 1919. The Complete Musical Story of George W. Johnson Of special interest on Lost Sounds is George W. Johnson, the first black man to record. "Lost Sounds" includes all eight of his extant recordings, from the 1891 North American cylinder of "The Whistling Coon" and "The Laughing Song," which features unusually early ragtime piano accompaniment, to "The Whistling Girl," "The Laughing Coon" and the ultra-rare "Carving the Duck" from 1903 - a record that had not surfaced until earlier this year. Lesser-known and uncommon recordings by Johnson are his whistling solo for Berliner of "The Mocking Bird" and his speaking cameo on Len Spencer's "Merry Mail Man," the last original routine the elderly Johnson appeared on. Attractive Booklet, Detailed Notes With notes by Tim Brooks and David Giovannoni, the accompanying 60-page booklet is nearly worth the price alone. Beautifully illustrated, and featuring many rare photos, the booklet (it's really a book!) brings the music and the actors alive. We've included a general introduction, four genre introductions, selected mini-biographies, copious track notes and lyrics on selected songs, along with a handful of other special features. This stunning book is sure to make Lost Sounds a deeply rewarding experience for you. A Testament to the Power of Preservation Lost Sounds makes a persuasive case for preserving old recordings before it is too late. Some of these newly-rescued sounds bear the marks of their tortured history, while others somehow made it to the present day surprisingly pristine. Archeophone is proud to be at the vanguard of these preservation attempts, and we encourage other collectors, as they enjoy this sonic history that was nearly lost, to take the time to preserve their old recordings and to share them with the world. Archeophone stands ready to aid you in your efforts! CD Details * Catalogue number: ARCH 1005 * UPC: 777215109025 * Original Release Date: October 9, 2005 * Running length: 154:06 / 54 tracks (2 CD set) * Booklet: 60-page * Tracks recorded: 1891-1922 * Contains racially derogatory language * In Archeophone's Genres series. Track Listing and Sound Samples Disc One 1. Mamma's Black Baby Boy - Unique Quartet (1893) 2. Keep Movin' - Standard Quartet (1894) 3. Who Broke the Lock - Unique Quartet (ca. 1895) 4. Brother Michael, Won't You Hand Down that Rope - Oriole Quartette (ca. 1895-1896) 5. Poor Mourner - Cousins and DeMoss (1898) 6. Who Broke the Lock - Cousins and DeMoss (1898) 7. Down on the Old Camp Ground - Dinwiddie Colored Quartet (1902) 8. Jerusalem Mornin' - Polk Miller and His Old South Quartet (1909) 9. Little David / Shout All Over God's Heaven - Fisk University Jubilee Quartet (1909) 10. Swing Low, Sweet Chariot - Apollo Jubilee Quartet (1912) 11. Shout All Over God's Heaven - Apollo Jubilee Quartet (1912) 12. Good News - Tuskegee Institute Singers (1914) 13. The Rain Song - Right Quintette (1915) 14. Goodnight Angeline - Four Harmony Kings (1921) 15. Experiences in the Show Business - Charley Case (1909) 16. The Whistling Coon - George W. Johnson (1891) 17. Adam and Eve and de Winter Apple (excerpt) - Louis Vasnier (ca. 1893) 18. The Laughing Song - George W. Johnson (ca. 1894-98) 19. Minstrel First Part, featuring "The Laughing Song" - Spencer, Williams & Quinn's Imperial Minstrels (ca. 1894) 20. Listen to the Mocking Bird - George W. Johnson (1896) 21. The Laughing Coon - George W. Johnson (ca. 1898) 22. The Whistling Girl - George W. Johnson (1898) 23. My Little Zulu Babe - Williams and Walker (1901) 24. Carving the Duck - George W. Johnson (1903) 25. The Merry Mail Man - Len Spencer and George W. Johnson (1906) 26. Nobody - Bert Williams (1906) 27. My Own Story of the Big Fight (part 1) - Jack Johnson (1910) 28. Beans, Beans, Beans - Opal Cooper (1917) 29. Great Camp Meetin' Day - Noble Sissle (1920) Disc Two 1. Atlanta Exposition Speech - Booker T. Washington (1908) 2. Old Black Joe - Thomas Craig (1898) 3. Old Dog Tray - Carroll Clark (1910) 4. I Surrender All - Daisy Tapley and Carroll Clark (1910) 5. Swing Along - Afro-American Folk Song Singers (1914) 6. The Rain Song - Afro-American Folk Song Singers (1914) 7. Exhortation - Right Quintette (1915) 8. Vesti la Giubba - Roland Hayes (1918) 9. Go Down Moses - Harry T. Burleigh (1919) 10. Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child - Edward H. S. Boatner (1919) 11. Villanelle - Florence Cole–Talbert (1919) 12. Barcarolle - R. Nathaniel Dett (1919) 13. Lament - Clarence Cameron White (1919) 14. When de Co'n Pone's Hot / Possum - Edward Sterling Wright (1913) 15. Down Home Rag - Europe's Society Orchestra (1913) 16. Bregeiro (Rio Brazilian Maxixe) - Joan Sawyer's Persian Garden Orchestra (1914) 17. On the Shore at Le-Lei-Wei - Ciro's Club Coon Orchestra (1916) 18. Down Home Rag - Wilbur Sweatman (1916) 19. Some Jazz Blues - Memphis Pickaninny Band (1917) 20. Sarah from Sahara - Eubie Blake Trio (1917) 21. The Jazz Dance - Blake's Jazzone Orchestra (1917) 22. Ev'rybody's Crazy 'Bout the Doggone Blues - Wilbur Sweatman's Original Jazz Band (1918) 23. Darktown Strutters' Ball - Lieut. Jim Europe's 369th U. S. Infantry "Hell Fighters" Band (1919) 24. Camp Meeting Blues - Ford Dabney's Band (1919) 25. St. Louis Blues - W. C. Handy's Memphis Blues Band (1922) Quote
LAL Posted October 11, 2005 Report Posted October 11, 2005 Thanks for the heads up EKE. More stuff to add to the wish list. Here's the Archeophone website. Quote
7/4 Posted October 11, 2005 Report Posted October 11, 2005 Looks interesting, I'm getting more interested real old American music. So much to listen to, so little time. Quote
AllenLowe Posted October 11, 2005 Report Posted October 11, 2005 (edited) the Cousins and Demoss is the most interesting and significant of these, as it contains two African American singers accompanying themselves on banjo; Poor Mourner (which was located by the great musicologist Dick Spottswood some years ago) is of a significant, if largley misunderstood category of song; as Spottswood lables it, it is Gospel song written for the Minstrel stage, and a great performance. Tim Brooks is extremely knowlegeable and a good guy; his book has been out a while now. One thing that has hindered it, unfortunately, is that it is WAY too long and almost un-edited, difficult to read and gramatically/stylistically a bit of a mess (as an example, the OPENING sentence of the book contains a gramatical gaffe); read it, but prepare to skim. Edited October 11, 2005 by AllenLowe Quote
John L Posted October 11, 2005 Report Posted October 11, 2005 Fascinating. Where can this be purchased? Quote
AllenLowe Posted October 11, 2005 Report Posted October 11, 2005 I think Archaeophone has it out now - check their web site - Quote
DukeCity Posted October 11, 2005 Report Posted October 11, 2005 This looks interesting. I've often heard that the "first jazz record" was of the Original Dixieland Jass Band, in 1917. Looking at these recordings, do any of them (prticularly Disc 2, tracks 19,20,21) qualify is "jazz" recordings that might pre-date the ODJB dates? Like many, I've always found it more than a little backward that a group of white guys (ODJB) got the credit for the first jazz record. Quote
AllenLowe Posted October 12, 2005 Report Posted October 12, 2005 (edited) yes and no, per the ODJB, which is a much maligned but excellent group - there are 1921 recordings by Mamie Smith's Jazz Hounds (with Johnny Dunn) which might qualify post-ODJB as the first black band, and there are early recordings by James Reese Eureope (1913 and 1919) and Wilbur Sweatman that we might argue about (ca. 1917+)- Edited October 12, 2005 by AllenLowe Quote
JSngry Posted October 12, 2005 Report Posted October 12, 2005 Allen - I've not heard but a very few of Europe's Castle Orchestra recordings, just one or two online clips (one of them "The Ragtime Druumer" - or some similar title - with an amazing drum solo). How would you rate their "jazziness" in comparison the the Hellfighters ones (of which I have the Memphis Archives set)? Europe was a fascinating man, from what I've learned about him. Quote
medjuck Posted October 12, 2005 Report Posted October 12, 2005 (edited) And what did W.C. Handy's band sound like? I once saw a cd but never bought it. (non-buyer's remorse .) Edited October 12, 2005 by medjuck Quote
AllenLowe Posted October 12, 2005 Report Posted October 12, 2005 (edited) 1) I like both of Europe's bands, but the 1913 group is really the most exciting - their drummer was Buddy Gilmore, very advanced, very propulsive - I don't know if you can get those recordings anywhere; I have them on an old Victor black&white French/ragtime LP which I was very lucky to find in NYC in the 1980s - 2) I happened to also love Sweatman's band - Archeophone has a CD of their recordings, well worth getting - very peppy, clearly a black ragtime band in its swing and feel - Edited October 12, 2005 by AllenLowe Quote
JSngry Posted October 12, 2005 Report Posted October 12, 2005 Thanks Allen! A few Real Audio clips of Europe's Society Orchestra can be found here: http://www.redhotjazz.com/eso.html Quote
Harold_Z Posted October 12, 2005 Report Posted October 12, 2005 And what did W.C. Handy's band sound like? I once saw a cd but never bought it. (non-buyer's remorse .) ← What I've heard sounds very ragtimey. Hard to describe, but it's not early jazz "yet". Maybe an apt analogy would be Scott Joplin progressing to James P. Johnson. Quote
jazzbo Posted October 12, 2005 Report Posted October 12, 2005 I like Sweatman's recordings a LOT as well. Jazz Oracle fairly recenlty reissued a wonderful sounding two cd set with extensive booklet: http://www.jazzoracle.com/catalogue/BDW_8046.asp Quote
Fer Urbina Posted October 13, 2005 Report Posted October 13, 2005 Agustín Gracias for the heads up. In my wish list with Allen Lowe's upcoming set. F Quote
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