The Dixie Rebels HIGH QUALITY AUDIO
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- čas přidán 2. 04. 2015
- a-side
1. When the Saints go Marching In (00:10)
2. Saint James Infirmary (3:47)
3. Dixieland Band (8:34)
4. Royal Garden Blues (11:48)
5. Tin Roof Blues (16:09)
6. Clarinet Marmalade (19:38)
b-side
1. Hindustan (23:01)
2. Basin Street Blues (26:23)
3. Panama (30:30)
4. That's A-Plenty (33:52)
5. Fidgety Feet (36:43)
6. South Rampart Street Parade (40:26) - Hudba
Saw Wild Bill Davison at the Bayou in Georgetown DC in 1972. Great Dixie music.I check and the Bayou is still there!! Im sure Wild Bill is not Around anymore.
Culture gone to crap.
If kids today would listen to this style of music like we did when we were young the world would be a better place. Nothing better than "Happy" music.
No era solo la música. Eran otros tiempos.
❤ lovely music !
How can anyone not love this? Great music.
This IS music!!!
Killer album. So good. Really wish this were on disc.
Funny how im obsessed with big band music and i listen to records like this!!! I have this album and i always love playing this song in my car.
Real music played by real musicians. Keep your rap cr*p and hip hop sh*t. This is the Real McCoy!!
Sjajno,bravo!!
❤
Real music. Great music. Unlike the rap crap and hip hop sh*t that passes as music today.
Grałem te standardy na początku lat 60 X wieku. Wspaniały okres pełnej wolności twórczej i interpretacyjnej w muzyce. Tylko muzyka rytm i radość życia... A co teraz ?
Хорошо
This capture from vinyl apparently was straight from the output jack of a turntable, therefore lacking the RIAA equalization provided for the "Phono" input of an audio preamp. The equalization is *Necessary* to compensate for RIAA recording pre-emphasis (a 6 dB per octave bass cut/treble boost) that keeps groove modulation uniform over the spectrum. If you don't go through an RIAA preamp you retain that pre-emphasis, resulting in weak bass, shrill treble and more prominent hiss and clicks than you would hear from the vinyl played on a real phono amplifier. This is definitely not 'HIGH QUALITY AUDIO'.
Don't believe me? Listen to the CZcams video of just the Dixie Rebels "When the Saints Go Marching In" and compare it the first track here of the same piece. That one actually is pretty high quality audio for a vintage vinyl record.
I believe you are mistaken. For one this is not an example of pre-RIAA de-emphasis sound. There is far too much low frequency content. (Have you ever listened to a 'flat' pre-amp output - I know because I use a 'flat' pre-amp and then do the RIAA eq digitally - far more accurate!) The main difference between this and the other quoted example is that this is in mono, the other is stereo, and to my ears the latter has been given a bit of "bath-tub" equalisation to make it sound more 'hi-fi'.
Musicians ?
Jack Teagarden on trombone?
According to an Amazon listing for a double-set of Commander recordings by Pee Wee Erwin, the Dixie Rebels players (over at least two separate sessions) included: Pee Wee Erwin as "Big Jeb Dooley" (trumpet), Kenny Davern (clarinet), Lou McGarity (trombone), Harry DeVito (trombone), Milt Hinton (bass), Jack Lesberg (bass), Johnny Varro (piano), Gene Schroeder (piano), Cliff Leeman (drums), "Mousie" Alexander (drums) and Lee Blair (banjo)
The gatefold includes a 1500-2000 word essay on the roots of Dixieland jazz, but lists none of the players, except a probably fake quote from Erwin as "Big Jeb." Even the cover illiustrator gets a credit, but not the musicians. Odd.