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TWO NEW RELEASES
"Hear How They Play in New Orleans Today"
JOHNNY WIGGS
and His New Orleans Music
Johnny Wiggs, cornet; Santo Pecora, trombone. Lester Bouchon, clarinet; Armand Hug, piano; Tony Greco, bass; Fred King, drums.
NO 751 Ultra Canal (A Jazz March) Two Wing Temple in the Sky
NO 752 Congo Square
Bourbon Street Bounce
On Our Own New Orleans Label, Now Available at 79 Cents Each, Including Federal Tax
NEW ORLEANS RECORD SHOP
439 Baronne Street, New Orleans 12, La.
4 NEW SIDES
by the CASTLE JAZZ BAND
Castle 5 Original Dixieland One Castle 6 Loveless Love
Step Sweet Georgia Brown
Sugar Blues
Castle 3 Kansas City Stomps
Darktown Strutters Ball
OTHERS AVAILABLE
Castle 4 No Bop Hop Scop Blues Tiger
PRICE $1.05
DISTRIBUTED BY RAMPART RECORDS IN THE EAST
CASTLE RECORDS
5126 S. E. 37th Avenue
Portland, Oregon
behind the cobwebs
(Continued from Page 8 )
that his horn couldn't be recognized, or else didn't play on it. Dickerson's personnel in 1928 was : Armstrong and Hobson, trumpets ; Fred Robinson, trombone ; Jim Strong, Bert Curry, Crawford Wethington, saxes ; Gene Anderson and Earl Hines, pianos ; Mancy Cara, banjo; Pete Briggs, tuba; Zutty Singleton, drums.
Allen's last group is Elgar's Creole orchestra on Brunswick and Vocation. Titles are Cafe Capers/When Jenny Does Her Lowdown Dance on Vo 15447 and Brotherly Love /Nightmare on Br 3404 and Vo 15478. These are probably Fall, 1926, but Walter wants to know the recording date, instrumentation, masters, and personnel. Elgar, Walter informs us, had a large orchestra of about seventeen pieces, including at this time, Joe Sudler, trumpet ; Omer Simeon, clarinet ; and Cliff King, sax. Simeon told Allen that he had never recorded with Elgar, but Walter has never heard the records and knows nothing more about Elgar's regular personnel of that period.
Label of the month is Olympic. The disc shown above is The Snakes' Hips by the St. Louis Syncopaters. Musically, it's early1920-or-so jazz. It's all ensemble with no solos, but there are a few breaks and a fair tailgate trombone breaking through. But what labels was Olympic tied in with and did the Fletcher Record Company, Inc., of New York, have any connection with Fletcher Henderson? Can anyone tell us anything about the label?
Keep sending your answers, questions, comments, etc., to me at 74 South Road, Harrison, New York, or c/o the Record Changer.
DOC EVANS
in his latest and best
"JAZZ HERITAGE"
"Jazz extends back to our earliest rags and blues, -folk songs, marches and minstrel tunes. In this album Doc Evans, leading one of the finest jazz bands now active, demonstrates how directly the Dixieland of the present derives from certain musical styles of the past."
—J AX
Eight great sides with additional notes
by JOHN LUCAS
$5.00
Sold and Distributed by
THE ART-FLORAL
Second S&ofe
NORTHFIELD, MINNESOTA