Styles: Jazz
Year: 1969
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:47
Size: 82,4 MB
Art: Front
(2:19) 1. Sunny
(2:23) 2. Panama
(3:21) 3. Baby, Won't You Please Come Home
(2:45) 4. Up, Up & Away
(3:24) 5. Ode To Billy Joe
(3:44) 6. Honky Tonk Train
(3:04) 7. A Taste Of Honey
(3:56) 8. Limehouse Blues
(2:40) 9. Big Noise From Winnetka
(2:48) 10. This Is All I Ask
(2:57) 11. Mrs. Robinson
(2:20) 12. Bugle Call Rag
Year: 1969
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:47
Size: 82,4 MB
Art: Front
(2:19) 1. Sunny
(2:23) 2. Panama
(3:21) 3. Baby, Won't You Please Come Home
(2:45) 4. Up, Up & Away
(3:24) 5. Ode To Billy Joe
(3:44) 6. Honky Tonk Train
(3:04) 7. A Taste Of Honey
(3:56) 8. Limehouse Blues
(2:40) 9. Big Noise From Winnetka
(2:48) 10. This Is All I Ask
(2:57) 11. Mrs. Robinson
(2:20) 12. Bugle Call Rag
The World's Greatest Jazz Band was an all-star jazz ensemble active from 1968 to 1978. Dick Gibson founded the group at his sixth Jazz Party, an annual event. The group performed mostly Dixieland jazz and recorded extensively. It was co-led by Yank Lawson and Bob Haggart, and did early jazz standards alongside contemporaneous pop songs done in a Dixieland style. Though the group disbanded in 1978, the name was revived several times by Lawson and Haggart for limited engagements.
More..http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World%27s_Greatest_Jazz_Band
This all-star group was founded in 1968 by Dick Gibson at his sixth annual Jazz Party. Despite the impossibility of living up to its outrageous name, the band was indeed the finest in Dixieland/classic jazz. Co-led by Yank Lawson and Bob Haggart, and also featuring Billy Butterfield, Bud Freeman, Bob Miller, and Ralph Sutton, the WGJB originally alternated standards with Dixiefied versions of current pop tunes like "Mrs. Robinson," but its finest album (Live on Atlantic) sticks to hot jamming. After the personnel changed a bit (Eddie Miller and Dick Wellstood passed through the band), the group broke up in 1978, although reunions by Lawson and Haggart in later years sometimes revived the name. Their recordings for Project 3, Atlantic, and their own World Jazz label are pretty much all worth getting. Bio ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/artist/worlds-greatest-jazz-band-mn0000683075/biography.
This all-star group was founded in 1968 by Dick Gibson at his sixth annual Jazz Party. Despite the impossibility of living up to its outrageous name, the band was indeed the finest in Dixieland/classic jazz. Co-led by Yank Lawson and Bob Haggart, and also featuring Billy Butterfield, Bud Freeman, Bob Miller, and Ralph Sutton, the WGJB originally alternated standards with Dixiefied versions of current pop tunes like "Mrs. Robinson," but its finest album (Live on Atlantic) sticks to hot jamming. After the personnel changed a bit (Eddie Miller and Dick Wellstood passed through the band), the group broke up in 1978, although reunions by Lawson and Haggart in later years sometimes revived the name. Their recordings for Project 3, Atlantic, and their own World Jazz label are pretty much all worth getting. Bio ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/artist/worlds-greatest-jazz-band-mn0000683075/biography.
Thank you Giullia G for your speedy response to my request, you never cease to amaze me! This is good easy listening in the dixieland jazz style.
ReplyDeleteHey Jazzman77, I'm glad you liked!
DeleteThank You!