Create account Log in

Oliver Naylor 1924-1925

[Edit]

Download links and information about Oliver Naylor 1924-1925 by Oliver Naylor. This album was released in 1997 and it belongs to Jazz genres. It contains 21 tracks with total duration of 58:38 minutes.

Artist: Oliver Naylor
Release date: 1997
Genre: Jazz
Tracks: 21
Duration: 58:38
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. High Society 2:55
2. Oh, Johnny! Please Don't, Mom-Ma! 2:53
3. Ringelberg Blues 2:44
4. Hugo (I Go Where You Go) 2:36
5. She Wouldn't Do What I Asked Her To 2:59
6. I've Got a Crossed Eyed Papa (But He Looks Straight to Me) 2:51
7. You 2:51
8. 31st Street Blues 2:35
9. Ain't That Hateful? 2:54
10. Twilight Rose 2:50
11. So I Took the Fifty Thousnd Dollars 2:53
12. Driftwood 2:26
13. Say, Say, Sadie 2:37
14. Susquehanna Home 2:27
15. You and I 2:36
16. Take Me 2:44
17. Bye-Bye, Baby 2:41
18. Headin' for Louisville 3:15
19. Carolina Stomp 2:54
20. Sweet Georgia Brown 2:54
21. Slowin' Down Blues 3:03

Details

[Edit]

Pianist Oliver Naylor's Seven Aces were a fine jazz-influenced dance band that recorded during 1924-25. The emphasis was generally on ensembles (cornetist Edward "Pinky" Gerbrecht rarely got away from the melody even during his short spots) and, although there were occasional solos, the group did not include any jazz geniuses. Trombonist Charles Hartman (who considered Miff Mole his main influence, although he sometimes sounds a little like Kid Ory) is the most interesting individual voice. All of the band's recordings (including two from Naylor's ten-piece orchestra, which has Bob Zurke on second piano, and a pair of related numbers by "Pinkie's Birmingham Five") are on this interesting CD, which finds the group playing in the mainstream of the era. 1920s collectors will want this reissue.