Time/Life "Swingtime"
Moderators: Mr Awesomer, JesseMiner, CafeSavoy
Time/Life "Swingtime"
I just got some "junk" mail today from Time/Life that caught my eye. It had Goodman and Krupa on the front with a couple doing an A-Frame in the corner.
It's an advertisement for an extensive compilation of CD's that were made during the 70's in an effort to revisit the Swing Era. I know this may have many people cringing, but the the line-up of musicians is actually decent (see below), and it being recorded during the 70's (hopefully) ensures good recording quality. The pitch says that "Billy May painstakingly re-created the original arrangements, note by note."
The fact is, it might be a nice set, and it might be a waste on overheard pop hits of which the public might enjoy but Lindy Hoppers (and us DJ's) reject. I thought I'd share anyways.
http://www.timelife.com/is-bin/INTERSHO ... =swingtime
(t)Joe Howard, Manny Klein, Cappy Lewis, Shorty Sherock, Zeke Zarchy, Jimmy Zito
(tb) Ed Kusby, Trummy Young, Si Zentner
(valve trombone) Lew McCready
(s)Skeets Hertfurt, Abe Most, Marshall Royal, Zoot Sims, Willie Smith
(cl) Benny Goodman, Abe Most
...
(p) Nat King Cole
(g) Al Hendrickson, Bucky Pizzarelli, George VanEps
(b) Charlie Harris
(d) Gene Krupa
(vibes) Lionel Hampton
(vocals) Tex Beneke, Helen Forrest, Dan Grissom, Jack Leonard, Anita O'Day, Jimmy Rushing, Helen Ward, Trummy Young.
(leaders) Glen Gray, Billy May
To me, it's a thumbs down and I'm tossing the nicely printed piece of mail. The only 2-disc set that looks somewhat appealing to me is the 1938-1939 set. Maybe 1942-1945 set too (not available in the URL above).
It's an advertisement for an extensive compilation of CD's that were made during the 70's in an effort to revisit the Swing Era. I know this may have many people cringing, but the the line-up of musicians is actually decent (see below), and it being recorded during the 70's (hopefully) ensures good recording quality. The pitch says that "Billy May painstakingly re-created the original arrangements, note by note."
The fact is, it might be a nice set, and it might be a waste on overheard pop hits of which the public might enjoy but Lindy Hoppers (and us DJ's) reject. I thought I'd share anyways.
http://www.timelife.com/is-bin/INTERSHO ... =swingtime
(t)Joe Howard, Manny Klein, Cappy Lewis, Shorty Sherock, Zeke Zarchy, Jimmy Zito
(tb) Ed Kusby, Trummy Young, Si Zentner
(valve trombone) Lew McCready
(s)Skeets Hertfurt, Abe Most, Marshall Royal, Zoot Sims, Willie Smith
(cl) Benny Goodman, Abe Most
...
(p) Nat King Cole
(g) Al Hendrickson, Bucky Pizzarelli, George VanEps
(b) Charlie Harris
(d) Gene Krupa
(vibes) Lionel Hampton
(vocals) Tex Beneke, Helen Forrest, Dan Grissom, Jack Leonard, Anita O'Day, Jimmy Rushing, Helen Ward, Trummy Young.
(leaders) Glen Gray, Billy May
To me, it's a thumbs down and I'm tossing the nicely printed piece of mail. The only 2-disc set that looks somewhat appealing to me is the 1938-1939 set. Maybe 1942-1945 set too (not available in the URL above).
Mike Marcotte
I have nearly all of the original LP sets, and I have to say there are quite a few gems in the entire collection.
http://www.timelife.com/is-bin/INTERSHO ... oryName=11
All the Nat King Cole tracks are great, and there are many fun and obscure songs included throughout the series.
The best thing about the LP sets over the CD's, though, is the accompanying books. Not only do they give extensive liner notes, as well as info about the original recordings they were based on, they also have articles and essays on musicians of the day with some great pictures. Also some goofy dance-related fun stuff is included. I found half of mine at my local record shop, five bucks per set (some there are still in their 1970's shrinkwrap!).
http://www.timelife.com/is-bin/INTERSHO ... oryName=11
All the Nat King Cole tracks are great, and there are many fun and obscure songs included throughout the series.
The best thing about the LP sets over the CD's, though, is the accompanying books. Not only do they give extensive liner notes, as well as info about the original recordings they were based on, they also have articles and essays on musicians of the day with some great pictures. Also some goofy dance-related fun stuff is included. I found half of mine at my local record shop, five bucks per set (some there are still in their 1970's shrinkwrap!).
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I have extra sets of the LP's. If anyone is interested in buying them, e- mail me at clarangio@snip.net.
I have the entire set and have to say that it is a great collection, but they all sound like Billy May pieces. Not that this is bad, but despite the large number of songs, it is difficult to play too many (more than one? even one?) in a single night. What I have used them for primarily is to help identify great pieces that I might have been otherwise unaware of, and then search out the originals.
Doug
Doug
- JesseMiner
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There are no overlap on the compilations as far as I have seen. I have 9 of the sets as they were going for $5/set at Amoeba recently in the clearance section (also it was "buy 4, get 1 free"). Are there more than that?
I'm personally not overwhelmed by the energy on some of the recordings, but I figured they would be good to have as the recordings have a different flavor that might be useful at times.
Jesse
I'm personally not overwhelmed by the energy on some of the recordings, but I figured they would be good to have as the recordings have a different flavor that might be useful at times.
Jesse
Actually John, yeah, there are overlaps between the newer CD's and the originally-released double-CD collections (not betw. the multiple volumes of the LP collections). For the same reason I haven't gotten any of the new CD sets, since I would actually end up having triples of some songs (on LP, the collection CDs, and the CD version of the LP). So unless I can sell my current collection and buy all the other CD's at once to cover all I've lost ($$$), I'm not going to 'upgrade' anytime soon. Jesse, I think there are 12 sets altogether, the nine regular sets, plus the 'encore' set, then I believe there are one set each of benny goodman and duke ellington. I could be a little off on that, it's been years since I looked into it.
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Mike wrote:Also some goofy dance-related fun stuff is included. I found half of mine at my local record shop, five bucks per set (some there are still in their 1970's shrinkwrap!).