Ten12 Entertainment Music Entertainment Artists Biographies Audiobooks Downloads
Big Band: Stardust by Artie Shaw

Tracks

1
Nightmare
Artie Shaw  
2
Table D'hote
Artie Shaw  
3
Shoot the Likker to Me, Johnny Boy
Artie Shaw  
4
Two Sleepy People
Jack Teagarden  
5
Medley: Washboard Blues / Lazy Bones / Small Fry / Rockin' Chair
Jack Teagarden  
6
That's Right, I'm Wrong
Jack Teagarden  
7
Stardust
Jack Teagarden  
8
Jitterbug
Cab Calloway  
9
Hotcha-Razz-Ma-Tazz
Cab Calloway  
10
Long About Midnight
Cab Calloway  
11
Jitterbut - v2
Cab Calloway  
12
Medley: Mood Indigo / Sophisticated Lady
Duke Ellington  
13
It Don't Mean a Thing (If it Ain't Got that Swing)
Duke Ellington  
14
Don't Get Around Much Anymore
Duke Ellington  
15
Ballerina
Boyd Raeburn  
16
St Louis Blues
Boyd Raeburn  
17
Temptation
Boyd Raeburn  

Big Band: Stardust

Artie Shaw

Shaw, Artie, 1910–2004, American clarinetist and bandleader, b. New York City as Arthur Jacob Arshawsky. He began playing professionally as a teenager, becoming a studio musician in New York after 1929. In 1935 he formed his first band, an unusual grouping that included clarinet, string quartet, and rhythm section, which he used in a critically acclaimed performance of his jazz chamber piece Interlude in B Flat. A year later he established a more orthodox swing band, and with it recorded [more]

Cab Calloway

Calloway, Cab (Cabell Calloway)kal’away, 1907–94, jazz singer and band leader, b. Rochester, N.Y. Known for his inventive creativity, he hired some of the top musicians of his day for his jazz orchestra, including Dizzy Gillespie and Milt Hinton; he also promoted singers Pearl Bailey and Lena Horne. Cab Calloway and his band became famous as a result of radio broadcasts (1931–32) from New York City’s Cotton Club, and were one of the highest earning bands of the 1930s and [more]

Duke Ellington

Ellington, Duke (Edward Kennedy Ellington), 1899–1974, American jazz musician and composer, b. Washington, D.C. Ellington made his first professional appearance as a jazz pianist in 1916. By 1918 he had formed a band, and after appearances in nightclubs in Harlem he became one of the most famous figures in American jazz. Ellington’s orchestra, playing his own and Billy Strayhorn’s compositions and arrangements, achieved a fine unity of style and made many innovations in the [more]

Jack Teagarden

Born in 1905 in Vernon, Texas, Jack Teagarden was an influential jazz trombonist and singer, regarded as the “Father of Jazz Trombone.” His musical abilities were largely self-taught and for that reason, unrestricted. He developed innovative positions and effects on the instrument, and was known for his bluesy-style. He recorded with Louis Armstrong, among other notable jazz players. [more]

Boyd Raeburn

Boyd Raeburn was never much of a soloist, but his short-lived big bands in the mid-'40s featured some of the most advanced arrangements of the time, particularly those of George Handy. Raeburn actually started out leading commercial orchestras in the 1930s, and it was not until 1944 that his music became relevant to jazz. That year, he had a forward-looking swing band that included at various times such players as Benny Harris, the Johnny Hodges-influenced Johnny Bothwell, Serge Chaloff, Roy [more]